We’re going to be looking at sending multiple transactions in a single request using multicall3

The function aggregate3 takes an array of Calls3 to encode the request can be a little bit tricky.

struct Call3 {
    // Target contract to call.
    address target;
    // If false, the entire call will revert if the call fails.
    bool allowFailure;
    // Data to call on the target contract.
    bytes callData;
}

struct Result {
    // True if the call succeeded, false otherwise.
    bool success;
    // Return data if the call succeeded, or revert data if the call reverted.
    bytes returnData;
}

/// @notice Aggregate calls, ensuring each returns success if required
/// @param calls An array of Call3 structs
/// @return returnData An array of Result structs
function aggregate3(Call3[] calldata calls) public payable returns (Result[] memory returnData);

First, we will encode the functions we want to perform in the multicall.

const hello = web3.eth.abi.encodeFunctionCall({ 
    name: 'setGreeting',
    type: 'function',
    inputs: [{
        type: 'string',
        name: '_greeting'
    }]
}, ['bonjour'])

const goodbye = web3.eth.abi.encodeFunctionCall({ 
    name: 'setGreeting',
    type: 'function',
    inputs: [{
        type: 'string',
        name: '_greeting'
}]
}, ['au revoir'])

const greet = web3.eth.abi.encodeFunctionCall({
    name: 'greet',
    type: 'function'
})

We’re then going to encode our call to the multicall contract. First, we need to put together our abi data.


const abi = {
	"stateMutability": "payable",
	"type": "function",
	"name": "aggregate3",
	"inputs": [{
		"components": [{
				"internalType": "address",
				"name": "target",
				"type": "address"
			},
			{
				"internalType": "bool",
				"name": "allowFailure",
				"type": "bool"
			},
			{
				"internalType": "bytes",
				"name": "callData",
				"type": "bytes"
			}
		],
		"internalType": "struct Multicall3.Call3[]",
		"name": "calls",
		"type": "tuple[]"
	}],
	"outputs": [{
		"components": [{
				"internalType": "bool",
				"name": "success",
				"type": "bool"
			},
			{
				"internalType": "bytes",
				"name": "returnData",
				"type": "bytes"
			}
		],
		"internalType": "struct Multicall3.Result[]",
		"name": "returnData",
		"type": "tuple[]"
	}]
}

Now we can put together our multicall using web3js


const multiCall = web3.eth.abi.encodeFunctionCall(abi, [[
    { 'target': '0x8d9fBC02598e32C8d594bbEF4257846653ff4732', 'allowFailure': false, "callData": hello },
    { 'target': '0x8d9fBC02598e32C8d594bbEF4257846653ff4732', 'allowFailure': false, "callData": greet },
    { 'target': '0x8d9fBC02598e32C8d594bbEF4257846653ff4732', 'allowFailure': false, "callData": goodbye },
    { 'target': '0x8d9fBC02598e32C8d594bbEF4257846653ff4732', 'allowFailure': false, "callData": greet },
]])

Note the encodeFunctionCall takes an array of parameters. In our case, the first parameter of the function call is an array of type Call3. To correctly encode the function call, the property names must match abi name.

Now we have encoded our multicall function, we can go ahead and simulate the transaction with eth_call

 const hexString = await web3.eth.call({
      from: '0x673D2EBe4B6BAA946345C7b1F8d3Cc2FfB3429Bf',
      to: '0xa252BaE8352949C85606d77D3E1d44B71a202a32',
      data: multiCall,
  })

Then we need to decode the response again.

const multiCallResult = web3.eth.abi.decodeParameters(abi.outputs, hexString).returnData

Et Voila!

Full gist available here