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jp4g

Ethereum Wingman

by jp4g · GitHub ↗ · v0.1.0
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Install in OpenClaw
/install ethereum-wingman
Description
Ethereum development tutor and builder for Scaffold-ETH 2 projects. Triggers on "build", "create", "dApp", "smart contract", "Solidity", "DeFi", "Ethereum", "web3", or any blockchain development task. ALWAYS uses fork mode to test against real protocol state.
README (SKILL.md)

Ethereum Wingman

Comprehensive Ethereum development guide for AI agents. Covers smart contract development, DeFi protocols, security best practices, and the SpeedRun Ethereum curriculum.


AI AGENT INSTRUCTIONS - READ THIS FIRST

Default Stack: Scaffold-ETH 2 with Fork Mode

When a user wants to BUILD any Ethereum project, follow these steps:

Step 1: Create Project

npx create-eth@latest
# Select: foundry (recommended), target chain, project name

Step 2: Fix Polling Interval

Edit packages/nextjs/scaffold.config.ts and change:

pollingInterval: 30000,  // Default: 30 seconds (way too slow!)

to:

pollingInterval: 3000,   // 3 seconds (much better for development)

Step 3: Install & Fork a Live Network

cd \x3Cproject-name>
yarn install
yarn fork --network base  # or mainnet, arbitrum, optimism, polygon

Step 4: Enable Auto Block Mining (REQUIRED!)

# In a new terminal, enable interval mining (1 block/second)
cast rpc anvil_setIntervalMining 1

Without this, block.timestamp stays FROZEN and time-dependent logic breaks!

Optional: Make it permanent by editing packages/foundry/package.json to add --block-time 1 to the fork script.

Step 5: Deploy to Local Fork (FREE!)

yarn deploy

Step 6: Start Frontend

yarn start

Step 7: Test the Frontend

After the frontend is running, open a browser and test the app:

  1. Navigate to http://localhost:3000
  2. Take a snapshot to get page elements (burner wallet address is in header)
  3. Click the faucet to fund the burner wallet with ETH
  4. Transfer tokens from whales if needed (use burner address from page)
  5. Click through the app to verify functionality

Use the cursor-browser-extension MCP tools for browser automation. See tools/testing/frontend-testing.md for detailed workflows.

DO NOT:

  • Run yarn chain (use yarn fork --network \x3Cchain> instead!)
  • Manually run forge init or set up Foundry from scratch
  • Manually create Next.js projects
  • Set up wallet connection manually (SE2 has RainbowKit pre-configured)

Why Fork Mode?

yarn chain (WRONG)              yarn fork --network base (CORRECT)
└─ Empty local chain            └─ Fork of real Base mainnet
└─ No protocols                 └─ Uniswap, Aave, etc. available
└─ No tokens                    └─ Real USDC, WETH exist
└─ Testing in isolation         └─ Test against REAL state

Address Data Available

Token, protocol, and whale addresses are in data/addresses/:

  • tokens.json - WETH, USDC, DAI, etc. per chain
  • protocols.json - Uniswap, Aave, Chainlink per chain
  • whales.json - Large token holders for test funding

THE MOST CRITICAL CONCEPT

NOTHING IS AUTOMATIC ON ETHEREUM.

Smart contracts cannot execute themselves. There is no cron job, no scheduler, no background process. For EVERY function that "needs to happen":

  1. Make it callable by ANYONE (not just admin)
  2. Give callers a REASON (profit, reward, their own interest)
  3. Make the incentive SUFFICIENT to cover gas + profit

Always ask: "Who calls this function? Why would they pay gas?"

If you can't answer this, your function won't get called.

Examples of Proper Incentive Design

// LIQUIDATIONS: Caller gets bonus collateral
function liquidate(address user) external {
    require(getHealthFactor(user) \x3C 1e18, "Healthy");
    uint256 bonus = collateral * 5 / 100; // 5% bonus
    collateralToken.transfer(msg.sender, collateral + bonus);
}

// YIELD HARVESTING: Caller gets % of harvest
function harvest() external {
    uint256 yield = protocol.claimRewards();
    uint256 callerReward = yield / 100; // 1%
    token.transfer(msg.sender, callerReward);
}

// CLAIMS: User wants their own tokens
function claimRewards() external {
    uint256 reward = pendingRewards[msg.sender];
    pendingRewards[msg.sender] = 0;
    token.transfer(msg.sender, reward);
}

Critical Gotchas (Memorize These)

1. Token Decimals Vary

USDC = 6 decimals, not 18!

// BAD: Assumes 18 decimals - transfers 1 TRILLION USDC!
uint256 oneToken = 1e18;

// GOOD: Check decimals
uint256 oneToken = 10 ** token.decimals();

Common decimals:

  • USDC, USDT: 6 decimals
  • WBTC: 8 decimals
  • Most tokens (DAI, WETH): 18 decimals

2. ERC-20 Approve Pattern Required

Contracts cannot pull tokens directly. Two-step process:

// Step 1: User approves
token.approve(spenderContract, amount);

// Step 2: Contract pulls tokens
token.transferFrom(user, address(this), amount);

Never use infinite approvals:

// DANGEROUS
token.approve(spender, type(uint256).max);

// SAFE
token.approve(spender, exactAmount);

3. No Floating Point in Solidity

Use basis points (1 bp = 0.01%):

// BAD: This equals 0
uint256 fivePercent = 5 / 100;

// GOOD: Basis points
uint256 FEE_BPS = 500; // 5% = 500 basis points
uint256 fee = (amount * FEE_BPS) / 10000;

4. Reentrancy Attacks

External calls can call back into your contract:

// SAFE: Checks-Effects-Interactions pattern
function withdraw() external nonReentrant {
    uint256 bal = balances[msg.sender];
    balances[msg.sender] = 0; // Effect BEFORE interaction
    (bool success,) = msg.sender.call{value: bal}("");
    require(success);
}

Always use OpenZeppelin's ReentrancyGuard.

5. Never Use DEX Spot Prices as Oracles

Flash loans can manipulate spot prices instantly:

// SAFE: Use Chainlink
function getPrice() internal view returns (uint256) {
    (, int256 price,, uint256 updatedAt,) = priceFeed.latestRoundData();
    require(block.timestamp - updatedAt \x3C 3600, "Stale");
    require(price > 0, "Invalid");
    return uint256(price);
}

6. Vault Inflation Attack

First depositor can steal funds via share manipulation:

// Mitigation: Virtual offset
function convertToShares(uint256 assets) public view returns (uint256) {
    return assets.mulDiv(totalSupply() + 1e3, totalAssets() + 1);
}

7. Use SafeERC20

Some tokens (USDT) don't return bool on transfer:

import "@openzeppelin/contracts/token/ERC20/utils/SafeERC20.sol";
using SafeERC20 for IERC20;

token.safeTransfer(to, amount); // Handles non-standard tokens

Scaffold-ETH 2 Development

Project Structure

packages/
├── foundry/              # Smart contracts
│   ├── contracts/        # Your Solidity files
│   └── script/           # Deploy scripts
└── nextjs/
    ├── app/              # React pages
    └── contracts/        # Generated ABIs + externalContracts.ts

Essential Hooks

// Read contract data
const { data } = useScaffoldReadContract({
  contractName: "YourContract",
  functionName: "greeting",
});

// Write to contract
const { writeContractAsync } = useScaffoldWriteContract("YourContract");

// Watch events
useScaffoldEventHistory({
  contractName: "YourContract",
  eventName: "Transfer",
  fromBlock: 0n,
});

SpeedRun Ethereum Challenges

Reference these for hands-on learning:

Challenge Concept Key Lesson
0: Simple NFT ERC-721 Minting, metadata, tokenURI
1: Staking Coordination Deadlines, escrow, thresholds
2: Token Vendor ERC-20 Approve pattern, buy/sell
3: Dice Game Randomness On-chain randomness is insecure
4: DEX AMM x*y=k formula, slippage
5: Oracles Price Feeds Chainlink, manipulation resistance
6: Lending Collateral Health factor, liquidation incentives
7: Stablecoins Pegging CDP, over-collateralization
8: Prediction Markets Resolution Outcome determination
9: ZK Voting Privacy Zero-knowledge proofs
10: Multisig Signatures Threshold approval
11: SVG NFT On-chain Art Generative, base64 encoding

DeFi Protocol Patterns

Uniswap (AMM)

  • Constant product formula: x * y = k
  • Slippage protection required
  • LP tokens represent pool share

Aave (Lending)

  • Supply collateral, borrow assets
  • Health factor = collateral value / debt value
  • Liquidation when health factor \x3C 1

ERC-4626 (Tokenized Vaults)

  • Standard interface for yield-bearing vaults
  • deposit/withdraw with share accounting
  • Protect against inflation attacks

Security Review Checklist

Before deployment, verify:

  • Access control on all admin functions
  • Reentrancy protection (CEI + nonReentrant)
  • Token decimal handling correct
  • Oracle manipulation resistant
  • Integer overflow handled (0.8+ or SafeMath)
  • Return values checked (SafeERC20)
  • Input validation present
  • Events emitted for state changes
  • Incentives designed for maintenance functions

Response Guidelines

When helping developers:

  1. Follow the fork workflow - Always use yarn fork, never yarn chain
  2. Answer directly - Address their question first
  3. Show code - Provide working examples
  4. Warn about gotchas - Proactively mention relevant pitfalls
  5. Reference challenges - Point to SpeedRun Ethereum for practice
  6. Ask about incentives - For any "automatic" function, ask who calls it and why
Usage Guidance
Before installing or running this skill: 1) Verify origin and author (metadata claims BuidlGuidl but scripts reference austintgriffith and other names). 2) Inspect the scripts locally (init-project.sh, check-gotchas.sh, setup-cursor.sh) and run them in a sandboxed directory — do not run them in a production repo or your home directory. 3) Ensure you have the required toolchain (Node/npm or npx, yarn, Foundry tools: anvil/cast, and a fork RPC URL) and do not paste private keys or production RPC secrets into examples until you trust the source. 4) Resolve contradictory guidance (e.g., 'DO NOT run yarn chain' vs init script suggestions) with the author or by examining the Scaffold-ETH docs. 5) If you plan to use the cursor setup, be aware it will create/overwrite a .cursorrules symlink in the current directory. If you cannot confirm the skill's provenance or fix the metadata inconsistencies, treat it as untrusted and avoid running scripts that alter node state or impersonate accounts.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: ethereum-wingman Version: 0.1.0 The skill bundle provides comprehensive instructions and scripts for an AI agent to assist with Ethereum development using Scaffold-ETH 2. While the `SKILL.md` and `AGENTS.md` files contain extensive and prescriptive instructions for the AI agent, including direct shell command execution (`npx`, `yarn`, `cast`) and browser automation tools, all these actions are explicitly aligned with the stated purpose of local dApp development and testing in a 'fork mode' environment. Commands like `cast rpc anvil_impersonateAccount` are powerful but are used against a local Anvil fork for testing, not a live network. There is no evidence of intentional harmful behavior such as data exfiltration, persistence, or subversion of the agent's core function beyond its role as a development assistant.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The declared purpose (Scaffold-ETH 2 / forked local testing) matches the instructions and scripts, but the package metadata declares no required binaries or env vars while the SKILL.md and scripts clearly assume Node (npx), yarn, Foundry/cast/anvil, and an RPC URL. Also the skill's files and setup scripts reference different authors/repos (metadata lists BuidlGuidl; setup script and README text reference austintgriffith and other names), creating provenance inconsistencies.
Instruction Scope
Instructions direct the agent/user to create projects, run local forks, enable interval mining, impersonate whale accounts, and manipulate local node state (setBalance, impersonateAccount) — all reasonable for fork testing but intrusive. There are contradictory steps: SKILL.md explicitly says 'DO NOT run yarn chain' (use yarn fork) while scripts/init-project.sh prints a 'Next steps' flow that includes 'yarn chain'. The setup script will create a .cursorrules symlink in the working directory, which modifies user disk state. The SKILL.md references tools/files not included (e.g., cursor MCP tools, tools/testing/frontend-testing.md).
Install Mechanism
No remote install/downloads or archive extraction are specified (instruction-only with helper scripts), so there is no high-risk install mechanism. The included shell scripts are simple automation helpers and greps; nothing in the files downloads or executes code from untrusted network locations.
Credentials
The skill declares no required environment variables, yet the instructions and examples reference $RPC_URL (anvil --fork-url $RPC_URL) and call out tools that need unlocked nodes and possibly local credentials. The scripts assume developer toolchain presence (npx, yarn, cast, anvil) but don't declare them. No secrets are explicitly requested, but the mismatch between declared and actual requirements is a red flag — you should not provide RPC keys or private keys until you validate the source.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and the skill does not request elevated platform privileges. However, the setup script will create/overwrite a .cursorrules symlink in the current working directory, which is persistent on disk. The skill does not modify other skills' configs or request permanent agent-wide presence, but you should expect local filesystem changes when running its setup scripts.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install ethereum-wingman
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /ethereum-wingman
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v0.1.0
Initial release: Ethereum development tutor and builder for Scaffold-ETH 2 projects. Key features: - Comprehensive step-by-step guide for building and testing Ethereum dApps using Scaffold-ETH 2, always in fork mode for real protocol state. - Covers smart contract development, DeFi protocols, security best practices, and common Solidity gotchas. - Provides detailed instructions for auto block mining, frontend testing, and leveraging real token and protocol addresses. - Emphasizes critical blockchain concepts like incentive design, contract limitations, and security checks. - Includes SpeedRun Ethereum challenge references for hands-on learning.
Metadata
Slug ethereum-wingman
Version 0.1.0
License
All-time Installs 5
Active Installs 5
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Ethereum Wingman?

Ethereum development tutor and builder for Scaffold-ETH 2 projects. Triggers on "build", "create", "dApp", "smart contract", "Solidity", "DeFi", "Ethereum", "web3", or any blockchain development task. ALWAYS uses fork mode to test against real protocol state. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 1915 downloads so far.

How do I install Ethereum Wingman?

Run "/install ethereum-wingman" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Ethereum Wingman free?

Yes, Ethereum Wingman is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Ethereum Wingman support?

Ethereum Wingman is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Ethereum Wingman?

It is built and maintained by jp4g (@jp4g); the current version is v0.1.0.

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