eth_getBlockByHash - LISK RPC Method
Retrieve complete block data by block hash on LISK. Essential for RWA developers, DePIN builders, and teams targeting Southeast Asia and Africa markets building on the first L1-to-Superchain L2 focused on real-world assets and emerging markets.
Returns information about a block by hash on LISK.
Why LISK? Build on the first L1-to-Superchain L2 focused on real-world assets and emerging markets with OP Stack Superchain integration, Gelato rollup-as-a-service, 500K OP grant, and LSK token migration from L1.
When to Use This Method
eth_getBlockByHash is essential for RWA developers, DePIN builders, and teams targeting Southeast Asia and Africa markets:
- Block verification using deterministic hash lookup: Retrieve block data by its unique, immutable hash on LISK
- Chain reorganization handling: Track blocks reliably by hash during reorgs on the first L1-to-Superchain L2 focused on real-world assets and emerging markets
- Cross-chain bridge finality verification: Confirm block existence by its canonical hash for real-world asset tokenization, decentralized physical infrastructure (DePIN), and emerging market financial access
- Deterministic queries when block number may change: Ensure consistent results for applications that need stable references regardless of chain state
Common Use Cases
1. Verify a Specific Block from a Transaction's blockHash Field
When a transaction response includes blockHash, use eth_getBlockByHash to retrieve the full parent block. This cross-references the transaction's context and confirms which block it was included in on LISK.
import { JsonRpcProvider } from 'ethers';
const provider = new JsonRpcProvider('https://api-lisk-mainnet.n.dwellir.com/YOUR_API_KEY');
async function verifyBlockFromTx(txHash) {
const tx = await provider.getTransaction(txHash);
if (!tx || !tx.blockHash) return null;
const block = await provider.getBlock(tx.blockHash);
console.log(`Transaction ${txHash} in block #${block.number}`);
console.log(`Block hash: ${block.hash}`);
console.log(`Block timestamp: ${new Date(block.timestamp * 1000).toISOString()}`);
return block;
}
verifyBlockFromTx('0xc4ae02aa92a92ec161500444ec71945530760e062742f1745c0969a4fce864b9');2. Cross-Reference Blocks During Chain Reorganization
During a chain reorganization, block numbers can shift but block hashes remain unique identifiers. Use eth_getBlockByHash to verify the canonical chain state and detect whether a previously observed block has been orphaned on the first L1-to-Superchain L2 focused on real-world assets and emerging markets.
from web3 import Web3
w3 = Web3(Web3.HTTPProvider('https://api-lisk-mainnet.n.dwellir.com/YOUR_API_KEY'))
def verify_block_still_canonical(block_hash):
block = w3.eth.get_block(block_hash)
if block is None:
print(f'Block {block_hash} has been pruned or orphaned')
return False
print(f'Block {block_hash} still canonical at height #{block.number}')
return True
# Check a known block hash
verify_block_still_canonical('0x064ed396ec4bb9cd919f1ae9726064a32907a39da179a89fda4d094f0c0a89cf')3. Audit Block Data by Known Hash Reference
For compliance and audit workflows, store block hashes as permanent references. Re-querying eth_getBlockByHash with a stored hash guarantees you retrieve the exact same block data, even months later on LISK.
package main
import (
"context"
"fmt"
"log"
"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/common"
"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/ethclient"
)
func main() {
client, _ := ethclient.Dial("https://api-lisk-mainnet.n.dwellir.com/YOUR_API_KEY")
knownHash := common.HexToHash("0x064ed396ec4bb9cd919f1ae9726064a32907a39da179a89fda4d094f0c0a89cf")
block, err := client.BlockByHash(context.Background(), knownHash)
if err != nil || block == nil {
log.Fatal("Block not found: may be pruned from node")
}
fmt.Printf("Audited block #%d\n", block.Number().Uint64())
fmt.Printf("Hash: %s\n", block.Hash().Hex())
fmt.Printf("Transactions: %d\n", len(block.Transactions()))
}Best Practices
- Hash-based lookups are more reliable during chain reorgs than number-based: A block hash uniquely identifies one canonical block, while a block number may shift to a different block after a reorg
- Store block hashes in your database for future verification: Persisting the hash alongside related records enables deterministic re-querying for audits and data integrity checks
- Handle
nullresults gracefully: Blocks can be pruned by the node, especially on non-archive endpoints; your application should treat a null response as a missing or unavailable block - For L2 optimistic rollups, verify the L1 anchor hash separately: The hash on the L2 chain references a different block space than the L1 anchor; validate both independently for full finality confidence
Code Examples
Error Handling
| Error Code | Message | Description |
|---|---|---|
| -32602 | Invalid params | Invalid block hash format |
| -32000 | Block not found | Block with this hash does not exist |
Related Methods
eth_getBlockByNumber- Get block by numbereth_blockNumber- Get latest block number
eth_getBlockByNumber
Retrieve complete block data by block number on LISK. Perfect for RWA developers, DePIN builders, and teams targeting Southeast Asia and Africa markets building on the first L1-to-Superchain L2 focused on real-world assets and emerging markets.
eth_getBlockReceipts
Return every transaction receipt in a block on LISK. Useful for indexers, analytics pipelines, and event backfills across real-world asset tokenization, decentralized physical infrastructure (DePIN), and emerging market financial access.