eth_getProof - Berachain

The eth_getProof is an Berachain JSON-RPC method that retrieves the Merkle-Patricia proof for an account, storage key-value pairs, and account transaction count. It allows developers to verify the state of an account or storage value at a specific block without needing the entire Berachain state trie. This method is particularly useful for light clients or off-chain applications that require proof of an account's state or specific storage values.

Recent Requests
Log in to see full request history
TimeStatusUser Agent
Retrieving recent requests…
LoadingLoading…
Body Params
integer
Defaults to 1
string
Defaults to 2.0
string
Defaults to eth_getProof
params
array
length between 1 and 1
  1. String - 20 Bytes - Address of the account
  2. Array - 32 Bytes - array of storage-keys which should be proofed and included
  3. String - Either the hex value of a block number OR One of the following block tags:
  • pending - A sample next block built by the client on top of latest and containing the set of transactions usually taken from local mempool. Intuitively, you can think of these as blocks that have not been mined yet.
  • latest - The most recent block in the canonical chain observed by the client, this block may be re-orged out of the canonical chain even under healthy/normal conditions.
  • safe - The most recent crypto-economically secure block, cannot be re-orged outside of manual intervention driven by community coordination. Intuitively, this block is “unlikely” to be re-orged.
  • finalized - The most recent crypto-economically secure block, that has been accepted by >2/3 of validators. Cannot be re-orged outside of manual intervention driven by community coordination. Intuitively, this block is very unlikely to be re-orged.
  • earliest - The lowest numbered block the client has available. Intuitively, you can think of this as the first block created.
params
Response

Language
Credentials
Header
URL
LoadingLoading…
Response
Click Try It! to start a request and see the response here! Or choose an example:
application/json