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 transferring 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
For all information about working on and contributing to Optimism's smart contracts, please see CONTRIBUTING.md
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.
The addresses in the deployments
directory will be read into the script based on the backend's chain id.
To manually define the set of addresses used in the script, set the CONTRACT_ADDRESSES_PATH
env var to a path on the local
filesystem that points to a JSON file full of key value pairs where the keys are names of contracts and the
values are addresses. This works well with the JSON files in superchain-ops
.
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
.
Before deploying the contracts, you can verify the state diff produced by the deploy script using the runWithStateDiff()
function signature which produces the outputs inside snapshots/state-diff/
.
Run the deployment with state diffs by executing: forge script -vvv scripts/Deploy.s.sol:Deploy --sig 'runWithStateDiff()' --rpc-url $ETH_RPC_URL --broadcast --private-key $PRIVATE_KEY
.
- 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.
The Solidity unit tests use the same codepaths to set up state that are used in production. The same L1 deploy script is used to deploy the L1 contracts for the in memory tests
and the L2 state is set up using the same L2 genesis generation code that is used for production and then loaded into foundry via the vm.loadAllocs
cheatcode. This helps
to reduce the overhead of maintaining multiple ways to set up the state as well as give additional coverage to the "actual" way that the contracts are deployed.
The L1 contract addresses are held in deployments/hardhat/.deploy
and the L2 test state is held in a .testdata
directory. The L1 addresses are used to create the L2 state
and it is possible for stale addresses to be pulled into the L2 state, causing tests to fail. Stale addresses may happen if the order of the L1 deployments happen differently
since some contracts are deployed using CREATE
. Run pnpm clean
and rerun the tests if they are failing for an unknown reason.
contracts-bedrock
uses slither as its primary static analysis tool.
Slither will be run against PRs as part of CI, and new findings will be reported as a comment on the PR.
CI will fail if there are any new findings of medium or higher severity, as configured in the repo's Settings > Code Security and Analysis > Code Scanning > Protection rules setting.
There are two corresponding jobs in CI: one calls "Slither Analysis" and one called "Code scanning results / Slither". The former will always pass if Slither runs successfully, and the latter will fail if there are any new findings of medium or higher severity.
Existing findings can be found in the repo's Security tab > Code Scanning section.
You can view findings for a specific PR using the pr:{number}
filter, such pr:9405
.
For each finding, either fix it locally and push a new commit, or dismiss it through the PR comment's UI.
Note that you can run slither locally by running slither .
, but because it does not contain the triaged results from GitHub, it will be noisy.
Instead, you should run slither ./path/to/contract.sol
to run it against a specific file.