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
Contracts deployed to L2
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 @eth-optimism/contracts-bedrock
Development
Dependencies
We work on this repository with a combination of Hardhat and Foundry.
-
Install Foundry by following the instructions located here.
-
Install node modules with yarn (v1) and Node.js (16+):
yarn install
Build
yarn build
Tests
yarn test
Deployment
Configuration
- Create or modify a file
<network-name>.json
inside of the deploy-config
folder. - Fill out this file according to the
deployConfigSpec
located inside of the `hardhat.config.ts
Execution
- Copy
.env.example
into .env
- Fill out the
L1_RPC
and PRIVATE_KEY_DEPLOYER
environment variables in .env
- Run
npx hardhat deploy --network <network-name>
to deploy the L1 contracts - Run
npx hardhat etherscan-verify --network <network-name> --sleep
to verify contracts on Etherscan
Standards and Conventions
Style
We use Seaport-style comments with some minor modifications.
Some basic rules:
- Always use
@notice
since it has the same general effect as @dev
but avoids confusion about when to use one over the other. - Include a newline between
@notice
and the first @param
. - Include a newline between
@param
and 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
require
statements when making simple assertions. - Use
revert
if 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}"
where message
is 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
Initializable
base contract. - Include a
uint8 public constant VERSION = X
at the TOP of your contract. - Include a function
initialize
with the modifier reinitializer(VERSION)
. - In the
constructor
, set any immutable
variables and call the initialize
function 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:
patch
releases are to be used only for changes that do NOT modify contract bytecode (such as updating comments).minor
releases 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.major
releases 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.