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.
A style guide we follow for writing contracts can be found here.
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 |
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 |
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 |
We export contract ABIs, contract source code, and contract deployment information for this package via npm
:
npm install @eth-optimism/contracts-bedrock
We work on this repository with a combination of Hardhat and Foundry.
- Install node modules with pnpm (v8) and Node.js (16+):
pnpm install
- Install the correct version of foundry (defined in the .foundryrc file in the root of this repo.
pnpm install:foundry
pnpm build
pnpm test
The smart contracts are deployed using foundry
with a hardhat-deploy
compatibility layer. When the contracts are deployed,
they will write a temp file to disk that can then be formatted into a hardhat-deploy
style artifact by calling another script.
Create or modify a file <network-name>.json
inside of the deploy-config
folder.
By default, the network name will be selected automatically based on the chainid. Alternatively, the DEPLOYMENT_CONTEXT
env var can be used to override the network name.
The spec for the deploy config is defined by the deployConfigSpec
located inside of the hardhat.config.ts
.
- Set the env vars
ETH_RPC_URL
,PRIVATE_KEY
andETHERSCAN_API_KEY
if contract verification is desired - Deploy the contracts with
forge script -vvv scripts/Deploy.s.sol:Deploy --rpc-url $ETH_RPC_URL --broadcast --private-key $PRIVATE_KEY
Pass the--verify
flag to verify the deployments automatically with Etherscan. - Generate the hardhat deploy artifacts with
forge script -vvv scripts/Deploy.s.sol:Deploy --sig 'sync()' --rpc-url $ETH_RPC_URL --broadcast --private-key $PRIVATE_KEY
All of the functions for deploying a single contract are public
meaning that the --sig
argument to forge script
can be used to
target the deployment of a single contract.
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.