For Aave, one of the main current and future goals is growth of liquidity and user base. As seen on side-chains with low transaction cost like Polygon or Avalanche, there is high demand to use the Aave protocol with small amounts to earn high yield. That's why we brought to you an initial phase of the Aave <> Starknet integration allowing deposit/withdrawal on Aave Ethereum by exclusively transacting on Starknet.
The bridge allows users to deposit and withdraw their aTokens, and only aTokens
, on StarkNet and get
static_a_tokens
- wrappers converting balance-increasing aTokens
into
exchange-rate-increasing static_a_tokens
. We assume that L1 tokens approved by the bridge are pre-validated tokens, and that they are not deflationary.
The bridge is also shaped for liquidity providers who are able to assume the
Ethereum gas cost of deposits and withdrawals as they transact large enough
amounts. They will deposit on Aave Ethereum, bridge the static_a_tokens
to
Starknet and make them available for users there to buy and hold, accruing this
way yield from L1.
L1
Bridge
- handles rewards update, deposit & withdrawal ofstatic_a_tokens
, their correspondingaTokens
and their underlying assetsProxy
- A proxy implementation
L2
static_a_token
- exchange-rate-increasing wrapper ofaTokens
on Starknetincentivized_erc20
- tracks users' claimable rewards and current reward index for eachstatic_a_token
rewAAVE
- ERC20 representing the rewards on L2bridge
- bridge responsible for:- minting and burning
static_a_tokens
on message from L1 - bridging
rewAAVE
tokens back to L1 - updating
rewards_index
for eachstatic_a_token
on message from L1
- minting and burning
proxy
- generic implementation of a proxy in cairo
Natively, Aave tokens grow in balance, not in value. To be able to create this kind of model, it is important to wrap them before bridging, converting them in a token that grows in value, not in balance.
static_a_tokens
are an implementation of the wrapped aTokens
that will
continuously increase in value on Starknet because they are backed by the
increasing aTokens
amounts locked in the bridge contract on Ethereum.
static_a_tokens
can then be bridged back to aTokens
.
All calls made to the following contracts will be handled by a proxy who delegates the calls to the available implementation of these contracts.
bridge
on L2static_a_token
s on L2Bridge
on L1rewAAVE
token on L2
static_a_token
s are controlled by L2bridge
.rewAAVE
token is owned by L2bridge
.
Approve bridge tokens
L1 aTokens are approved on the bridge at initiliaze
where _approveBridgeTokens
is called internally to approve the provided array of aTokens in an array along with their corresponding static_a_tokens on L2.
Transfer from L1 to L2
Users can either bridge their aToken
(let's say aDai) or deposit the
underlying asset (i.e Dai). Users will have to approve the bridge to spend the
underlying asset
tokens or aTokens
, depending on the provided value for
fromUnderlyingAsset
argument when depositing.
Calling deposit
allows users deposit aTokens
or their underlying asset
:
If depositing underlying asset
:
- The
asset
token will be transferred from the user account to the L1 bridge. - The bridge will then deposit the
asset
token in the aToken. - A message will be sent to the L2 bridge with the amount of
static_a_token
to be transferred, the L1 token address, the recipient address, the block number and the rewards index. - The token bridge on L2 will then be minting the corresponding
static_a_token
of the L1 token to the user.
If depositing aTokens
:
- The
aTokens
will be transferred from the user account to the L1 bridge. - A message will be sent to the L2 bridge with the amount to be transferred, the L1 token address and the recipient address as parameters.
- The token bridge on L2 will then be minting the corresponding
static_a_token
of the L1 token to the user.
Transfer L2 to L1
To bridge their aTokens
back to L1, users need to initiate a withdrawal on the L2 token bridge.
Calling initiate_withdraw
will result in the following:
- The amount to withdraw will be burned by the bridge
- A message will be sent to L1 with the L1 token address, the L1 recipient, the L2 rewards index and the amount
- The L1 bridge will then transfer the
aTokens
to the L1 recipient - The L1 bridge also checks for any difference in the L1/L2 rewards index and transfers any unclaimed rewards to the L1 user
Starknet users will continue to enjoy the same rewards as on L1 after bridging
their assets. To achieve that we continuously update the rewards_index
of all
static_a_token
s to match the value of their respective aTokens
on L1, by
tracking the reward index on departure of the static_a_token
and sending the
rewards accrued during the bridging process to the recipients address.
To claim rewards users need to call claim_rewards
on static_a_token contract
which calls the bridge in return to mint the due rewAAVE
tokens to the user.
Calling bridge_rewards
on L2 token bridge results in:
- The bridged amount of
rewAAVE
tokens will be burned. - The L1 bridge receives the bridging message and claims the rewards amount to
self by calling
claimRewards
on theIncentivesController
contract. - The rewards are then transferred to the L1 recipient.
Install Node 16
Our codebase relies on Node 16. To install it, you can first install nvm and then run the following commands:
nvm install 16
nvm use
Install Python 3.7.12
Our codebase relies on Python 3.7.12. To install it, you can first install pyenv and then run the following commands:
pyenv install 3.7.12
pyenv local 3.7.12
Install GMP (needed for Cairo)
Before installing Cairo you need to install GMP. Run one of the following command depending on your OS.
sudo apt install -y libgmp3-dev # linux
brew install gmp # mac
Install Node dependencies
Let's install all our project dependencies:
yarn install
Install Python dependencies
Let’s create a virtual environment to isolate your project’s requirements from your global Python environment.
python -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate
Install poetry for dependencies management
python -m pip install --upgrade pip
pip install poetry
poetry install
Solidity files are automatically compiled before running the tests, but Cairo files are not. To compile them, run:
yarn compile:l2
We recommend to run L1 and L2 testnets in different terminals.
Start L2 testnet
In a terminal where venv
is activated, run:
yarn testnet:l2
Start L1 testnet
Create a .env
file from the sample (cp .env.sample .env
), and fill a value for the variable ALCHEMY KEY
- you can get one here. Then, load all the environment variables.
source .env
And start L1 testnet in the same terminal by running:
yarn testnet:l1
The project is tested using hardhat, the starknet hardhat plugin and starknet-devnet. We created a Docker Compose file to run tests easily: we start L1 and L2 test networks in two separate containers and run the tests from a third one. To run all tests, simply run the following commands:
docker compose up --build
docker exec -ti $(docker ps -f name=test-runner -q) bash
yarn test
First make sure to set the aTokens addresses to be approved on the bridge as well as the metadata related to the staticATokens
to be deployed on l2 in ./scripts/allowlistedTokens.ts
.
yarn deploy-bridge:testnet #deploys bridge on l1 & l2 testnets
Contributors