@mantleio/contracts-bedrock v0.1.0
Optimism Smart Contracts (Bedrock)
This package contains the smart contracts that compose the on-chain component of Optimism's upcoming Bedrock upgrade. We've tried to maintain 100% backwards compatibility with the existing system while also introducing new useful features. You can find detailed specifications for the contracts contained within this package here.
Contracts Overview
Contracts deployed to L1
| Name | Proxy Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
L1CrossDomainMessenger | ResolvedDelegateProxy | High-level interface for sending messages to and receiving messages from Optimism |
L1StandardBridge | L1ChugSplashProxy | Standardized system for transfering ERC20 tokens to/from Optimism |
L2OutputOracle | Proxy | Stores commitments to the state of Optimism which can be used by contracts on L1 to access L2 state |
OptimismPortal | Proxy | Low-level message passing interface |
OptimismMintableERC20Factory | Proxy | Deploys standard OptimismMintableERC20 tokens that are compatible with either StandardBridge |
ProxyAdmin | - | Contract that can upgrade L1 contracts |
Contracts deployed to L2
| Name | Proxy Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
GasPriceOracle | Proxy | Stores L2 gas price configuration values |
L1Block | Proxy | Stores L1 block context information (e.g., latest known L1 block hash) |
L2CrossDomainMessenger | Proxy | High-level interface for sending messages to and receiving messages from L1 |
L2StandardBridge | Proxy | Standardized system for transferring ERC20 tokens to/from L1 |
L2ToL1MessagePasser | Proxy | Low-level message passing interface |
SequencerFeeVault | Proxy | Vault for L2 transaction fees |
OptimismMintableERC20Factory | Proxy | Deploys standard OptimismMintableERC20 tokens that are compatible with either StandardBridge |
L2ProxyAdmin | - | Contract that can upgrade L2 contracts when sent a transaction from L1 |
Legacy and deprecated contracts
| Name | Location | Proxy Type | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
AddressManager | L1 | - | Legacy upgrade mechanism (unused in Bedrock) |
DeployerWhitelist | L2 | Proxy | Legacy contract for managing allowed deployers (unused since EVM Equivalence upgrade) |
L1BlockNumber | L2 | Proxy | Legacy contract for accessing latest known L1 block number, replaced by L1Block |
Installation
We export contract ABIs, contract source code, and contract deployment information for this package via npm:
npm install @mantleio/contracts-bedrockDevelopment
Dependencies
We work on this repository with a combination of Hardhat and Foundry.
- Install Foundry by following the instructions located here.
A specific version must be used.
foundryup -C da2392e58bb8a7fefeba46b40c4df1afad8ccd22 Install node modules with yarn (v1) and Node.js (16+):
yarn install
Build
yarn buildTests
yarn testRunning Echidna tests
You must have Echidna installed.
Contracts targetted for Echidna testing are located in ./contracts/echidna
Each target contract is tested with a separate yarn command, for example:
yarn echidna:aliasingDeployment
Configuration
- Create or modify a file
<network-name>.tsinside of thedeploy-configfolder. - Fill out this file according to the
deployConfigSpeclocated inside of the `hardhat.config.ts - Optionally: Run
npx hardhat generate-deploy-config --network <network-name>to generate the associated JSON file. This is required if usingop-chain-ops.
Execution
- Copy
.env.exampleinto.env - Fill out the
L1_RPCandPRIVATE_KEY_DEPLOYERenvironment variables in.env - Run
npx hardhat deploy --network <network-name>to deploy the L1 contracts - Run
npx hardhat etherscan-verify --network <network-name> --sleepto verify contracts on Etherscan
Tools
Layout Locking
We use a system called "layout locking" as a safety mechanism to prevent certain contract variables from being moved to different storage slots accidentally.
To lock a contract variable, add it to the layout-lock.json file which has the following format:
{
"MyContractName": {
"myVariableName": {
"slot": 1,
"offset": 0,
"length": 32
}
}
}With the above config, the validate-spacers hardhat task will check that we have a contract called MyContractName, that the contract has a variable named myVariableName, and that the variable is in the correct position as defined in the lock file.
You should add things to the layout-lock.json file when you want those variables to never change.
Layout locking should be used in combination with diffing the .storage-layout file in CI.
Standards and Conventions
Style
Comments
We use Seaport-style comments with some minor modifications. Some basic rules:
- Always use
@noticesince it has the same general effect as@devbut avoids confusion about when to use one over the other. - Include a newline between
@noticeand the first@param. - Include a newline between
@paramand the first@return. - Use a line-length of 100 characters.
We also have the following custom tags:
@custom:proxied: Add to a contract whenever it's meant to live behind a proxy.@custom:upgradeable: Add to a contract whenever it's meant to be used in an upgradeable contract.@custom:semver: Add to a constructor to indicate the version of a contract.@custom:legacy: Add to an event or function when it only exists for legacy support.
Errors
- Use
requirestatements when making simple assertions. - Use
revertif throwing an error where an assertion is not being made (no custom errors). See here for an example of this in practice. - Error strings MUST have the format
"{ContractName}: {message}"wheremessageis a lower case string.
Function Parameters
- Function parameters should be prefixed with an underscore.
Event Parameters
- Event parameters should NOT be prefixed with an underscore.
Spacers
We use spacer variables to account for old storage slots that are no longer being used.
The name of a spacer variable MUST be in the format spacer_<slot>_<offset>_<length> where <slot> is the original storage slot number, <offset> is the original offset position within the storage slot, and <length> is the original size of the variable.
Spacers MUST be private.
Proxy by Default
All contracts should be assumed to live behind proxies (except in certain special circumstances).
This means that new contracts MUST be built under the assumption of upgradeability.
We use a minimal Proxy contract designed to be owned by a corresponding ProxyAdmin which follow the interfaces of OpenZeppelin's Proxy and ProxyAdmin contracts, respectively.
Unless explicitly discussed otherwise, you MUST include the following basic upgradeability pattern for each new implementation contract:
- Extend OpenZeppelin's
Initializablebase contract. - Include a
uint8 public constant VERSION = Xat the TOP of your contract. - Include a function
initializewith the modifierreinitializer(VERSION). - In the
constructor, set anyimmutablevariables and call theinitializefunction for setting mutables.
Versioning
All (non-library and non-abstract) contracts MUST extend the Semver base contract which exposes a version() function that returns a semver-compliant version string.
During the Bedrock development process the Semver value for all contracts SHOULD return 0.0.1 (this is not particularly important, but it's an easy standard to follow).
When the initial Bedrock upgrade is released, the Semver value MUST be updated to 1.0.0.
After the initial Bedrock upgrade, contracts MUST use the following versioning scheme:
patchreleases are to be used only for changes that do NOT modify contract bytecode (such as updating comments).minorreleases are to be used for changes that modify bytecode OR changes that expand the contract ABI provided that these changes do NOT break the existing interface.majorreleases are to be used for changes that break the existing contract interface OR changes that modify the security model of a contract.
Exceptions
We have made an exception to the Semver rule for the WETH contract to avoid making changes to a well-known, simple, and recognizable contract.
Dependencies
Where basic functionality is already supported by an existing contract in the OpenZeppelin library, we should default to using the Upgradeable version of that contract.
Tests
Tests are written using Foundry.
All test contracts and functions should be organized and named according to the following guidelines.
These guidelines are also encoded in a script which can be run with:
ts-node scripts/forge-test-names.tsNote: This is a work in progress, not all test files are compliant with these guidelines.
Organizing Principles
- Solidity
contracts are used to organize the test suite similar to how mocha uses describe. - Every non-trivial state changing function should have a separate contract for happy and sad path tests. This helps to make it very obvious where there are not yet sad path tests.
- Simpler functions like getters and setters are grouped together into test contracts.
Test function naming convention
Test function names are split by underscores, into 3 or 4 parts. An example function name is test_onlyOwner_callerIsNotOwner_reverts().
The parts are: [method]_[FunctionName]_[reason]_[success], where:
[method]is eithertest,testFuzz, ortestDiff[FunctionName]is the name of the function or higher level behavior being tested.[reason]is an optional description for the behavior being tested.[status]must be one of:succeeds: used for most happy path casesreverts: used for most sad path casesworks: used for tests which include a mix of happy and sad assertions (these should be broken up if possible)fails: used for tests which 'fail' in some way other than revertingbenchmark: used for tests intended to establish gas costs
Contract Naming Conventions
Test contracts should be named one of the following according to their use:
TargetContract_Initfor contracts that perform basic setup to be reused in other test contracts.TargetContract_Function_Testfor contracts containing happy path tests for a given function.TargetContract_Function_TestFailfor contracts containing sad path tests for a given function.
Withdrawaing From Fee Vaults
See the file scripts/FeeVaultWithdrawal.s.sol to withdraw from the L2 fee vaults. It includes
instructions on how to run it. foundry is required.
2 years ago