System Coin
1. Summary
The Coin contract is the user-facing ERC20 token maintaining the accounting for external system coin balances. Most functions are standard for a token with changing supply, but it also has notable features such as the ability to approve transfers based on signed messages.
2. Contract Details & Functions
Variables
namesymbolversiondecimalschangeData- if1governance can change thenameand/orsymboland no one can usepermit(); if different than1governance cannot changenameorsymbolanymore andpermit()can be usedtotalSupply- total coin supplybalanceOf(usr: address)- user balanceallowance(src: address, dst: address)- approvalsnonces(usr: address)- permit noncewad- fixed point decimal with 18 decimals (for basic quantities, e.g. balances).
Functions
mint(usr: address,amount: uint256)- mint coins to an addressburn(usr: address,amount: uint256)- burn at an addresspush(usr: address,amount: uint256)- transferpull(usr: address,amount: uint256)- transfer frommove(src: address,dst: address,amount: uint256)- transfer fromapprove(usr: address,amount: uint256)- allow pulls and movesmodifyParameters(parameter: bytes32,data: uint256)- modify the value ofchangeDatasetName(name_: string)- change the token'snameifchangeDatais1setSymbol(symbol_: string)- change the token'ssymbolifchangeDatais1permit(holder: address,spender: address,nonce: uint256,expiry: uint256,allowed: bool, v: uint8,r: bytes32,s: bytes32)- approve by signature; only callable ifchangeData != 1transfer(dst: address,amount: uint256)- transfers coins frommsg.sendertodst
3. Walkthrough
For the most part, coin.sol functions as a typical ERC20 token although it has a couple of core differences:
push,pull&moveare aliases fortransferFromin the form oftransferFrom(msg.sender, usr, amount),transferFrom(usr, msg.sender, amount)&transferFrom(src, dst, amount).permitis a signature-based approval function. This allows an end-user to sign a message which can then be relayed by another party to submit their approval. This can be useful for applications in which the end-user does not need to hold ETH to pay for gas.
4. Gotchas (Potential Source of User Error)
Unlimited allowance is a relatively common practice. This could be something used to trick a user by a malicious contract into giving access to all their Coin. This is concerning in upgradeable contracts where the contract may appear innocent until upgraded to a malicious contract.
Coin is also susceptible to the known ERC20 race condition, but should not normally be an issue with unlimited approval. We recommend any users using the approval for a specific amount be aware of this particular issue and use caution when authorizing other contracts to perform transfers on their behalf.
There is a slight deviation in transferFrom functionality: If the src == msg.sender the function does not require approval first and treats it as a normal transfer from the msg.sender to the dst.
Built-in meta-transaction functionality of Coin
The Coin token provides offchain approval, which means that as an owner of an ETH address, you can sign a permission (using the permit() function) which basically grants allowance to another ETH address. The ETH address that you provide permission to can then take care of the execution of the transfer but has an allowance.
5. Failure Modes (Bounds on Operating Conditions & External Risk Factors)
- N/a