// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT// OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v4.9.0) (utils/Address.sol)pragmasolidity ^0.8.1;/**
* @dev Collection of functions related to the address type
*/libraryAddress{
/**
* @dev Returns true if `account` is a contract.
*
* [IMPORTANT]
* ====
* It is unsafe to assume that an address for which this function returns
* false is an externally-owned account (EOA) and not a contract.
*
* Among others, `isContract` will return false for the following
* types of addresses:
*
* - an externally-owned account
* - a contract in construction
* - an address where a contract will be created
* - an address where a contract lived, but was destroyed
*
* Furthermore, `isContract` will also return true if the target contract within
* the same transaction is already scheduled for destruction by `SELFDESTRUCT`,
* which only has an effect at the end of a transaction.
* ====
*
* [IMPORTANT]
* ====
* You shouldn't rely on `isContract` to protect against flash loan attacks!
*
* Preventing calls from contracts is highly discouraged. It breaks composability, breaks support for smart wallets
* like Gnosis Safe, and does not provide security since it can be circumvented by calling from a contract
* constructor.
* ====
*/functionisContract(address account) internalviewreturns (bool) {
// This method relies on extcodesize/address.code.length, which returns 0// for contracts in construction, since the code is only stored at the end// of the constructor execution.return account.code.length>0;
}
/**
* @dev Replacement for Solidity's `transfer`: sends `amount` wei to
* `recipient`, forwarding all available gas and reverting on errors.
*
* https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-1884[EIP1884] increases the gas cost
* of certain opcodes, possibly making contracts go over the 2300 gas limit
* imposed by `transfer`, making them unable to receive funds via
* `transfer`. {sendValue} removes this limitation.
*
* https://consensys.net/diligence/blog/2019/09/stop-using-soliditys-transfer-now/[Learn more].
*
* IMPORTANT: because control is transferred to `recipient`, care must be
* taken to not create reentrancy vulnerabilities. Consider using
* {ReentrancyGuard} or the
* https://solidity.readthedocs.io/en/v0.8.0/security-considerations.html#use-the-checks-effects-interactions-pattern[checks-effects-interactions pattern].
*/functionsendValue(addresspayable recipient, uint256 amount) internal{
require(address(this).balance>= amount, "Address: insufficient balance");
(bool success, ) = recipient.call{value: amount}("");
require(success, "Address: unable to send value, recipient may have reverted");
}
/**
* @dev Performs a Solidity function call using a low level `call`. A
* plain `call` is an unsafe replacement for a function call: use this
* function instead.
*
* If `target` reverts with a revert reason, it is bubbled up by this
* function (like regular Solidity function calls).
*
* Returns the raw returned data. To convert to the expected return value,
* use https://solidity.readthedocs.io/en/latest/units-and-global-variables.html?highlight=abi.decode#abi-encoding-and-decoding-functions[`abi.decode`].
*
* Requirements:
*
* - `target` must be a contract.
* - calling `target` with `data` must not revert.
*
* _Available since v3.1._
*/functionfunctionCall(address target, bytesmemory data) internalreturns (bytesmemory) {
return functionCallWithValue(target, data, 0, "Address: low-level call failed");
}
/**
* @dev Same as {xref-Address-functionCall-address-bytes-}[`functionCall`], but with
* `errorMessage` as a fallback revert reason when `target` reverts.
*
* _Available since v3.1._
*/functionfunctionCall(address target,
bytesmemory data,
stringmemory errorMessage
) internalreturns (bytesmemory) {
return functionCallWithValue(target, data, 0, errorMessage);
}
/**
* @dev Same as {xref-Address-functionCall-address-bytes-}[`functionCall`],
* but also transferring `value` wei to `target`.
*
* Requirements:
*
* - the calling contract must have an ETH balance of at least `value`.
* - the called Solidity function must be `payable`.
*
* _Available since v3.1._
*/functionfunctionCallWithValue(address target, bytesmemory data, uint256 value) internalreturns (bytesmemory) {
return functionCallWithValue(target, data, value, "Address: low-level call with value failed");
}
/**
* @dev Same as {xref-Address-functionCallWithValue-address-bytes-uint256-}[`functionCallWithValue`], but
* with `errorMessage` as a fallback revert reason when `target` reverts.
*
* _Available since v3.1._
*/functionfunctionCallWithValue(address target,
bytesmemory data,
uint256 value,
stringmemory errorMessage
) internalreturns (bytesmemory) {
require(address(this).balance>= value, "Address: insufficient balance for call");
(bool success, bytesmemory returndata) = target.call{value: value}(data);
return verifyCallResultFromTarget(target, success, returndata, errorMessage);
}
/**
* @dev Same as {xref-Address-functionCall-address-bytes-}[`functionCall`],
* but performing a static call.
*
* _Available since v3.3._
*/functionfunctionStaticCall(address target, bytesmemory data) internalviewreturns (bytesmemory) {
return functionStaticCall(target, data, "Address: low-level static call failed");
}
/**
* @dev Same as {xref-Address-functionCall-address-bytes-string-}[`functionCall`],
* but performing a static call.
*
* _Available since v3.3._
*/functionfunctionStaticCall(address target,
bytesmemory data,
stringmemory errorMessage
) internalviewreturns (bytesmemory) {
(bool success, bytesmemory returndata) = target.staticcall(data);
return verifyCallResultFromTarget(target, success, returndata, errorMessage);
}
/**
* @dev Same as {xref-Address-functionCall-address-bytes-}[`functionCall`],
* but performing a delegate call.
*
* _Available since v3.4._
*/functionfunctionDelegateCall(address target, bytesmemory data) internalreturns (bytesmemory) {
return functionDelegateCall(target, data, "Address: low-level delegate call failed");
}
/**
* @dev Same as {xref-Address-functionCall-address-bytes-string-}[`functionCall`],
* but performing a delegate call.
*
* _Available since v3.4._
*/functionfunctionDelegateCall(address target,
bytesmemory data,
stringmemory errorMessage
) internalreturns (bytesmemory) {
(bool success, bytesmemory returndata) = target.delegatecall(data);
return verifyCallResultFromTarget(target, success, returndata, errorMessage);
}
/**
* @dev Tool to verify that a low level call to smart-contract was successful, and revert (either by bubbling
* the revert reason or using the provided one) in case of unsuccessful call or if target was not a contract.
*
* _Available since v4.8._
*/functionverifyCallResultFromTarget(address target,
bool success,
bytesmemory returndata,
stringmemory errorMessage
) internalviewreturns (bytesmemory) {
if (success) {
if (returndata.length==0) {
// only check isContract if the call was successful and the return data is empty// otherwise we already know that it was a contractrequire(isContract(target), "Address: call to non-contract");
}
return returndata;
} else {
_revert(returndata, errorMessage);
}
}
/**
* @dev Tool to verify that a low level call was successful, and revert if it wasn't, either by bubbling the
* revert reason or using the provided one.
*
* _Available since v4.3._
*/functionverifyCallResult(bool success,
bytesmemory returndata,
stringmemory errorMessage
) internalpurereturns (bytesmemory) {
if (success) {
return returndata;
} else {
_revert(returndata, errorMessage);
}
}
function_revert(bytesmemory returndata, stringmemory errorMessage) privatepure{
// Look for revert reason and bubble it up if presentif (returndata.length>0) {
// The easiest way to bubble the revert reason is using memory via assembly/// @solidity memory-safe-assemblyassembly {
let returndata_size :=mload(returndata)
revert(add(32, returndata), returndata_size)
}
} else {
revert(errorMessage);
}
}
}
Contract Source Code
File 2 of 23: Allowlist.sol
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MITpragmasolidity ^0.8.9;import"@openzeppelin/contracts/access/Ownable.sol";
contractOnChainAllowListisOwnable{
mapping(address=>bool) public allowlist;
/**
* @dev Throws if called by any account other than the owner.
*/modifieronlyInAllowlist(address _addresses) {
_checkAllowlist(_addresses);
_;
}
/**
* @notice Add to allowlist
*/functionaddToAllowlist(address address_) externalonlyOwner{
allowlist[address_] =true;
}
/**
* @notice Add to allowlist in batch
*/functionaddToAllowlistBatch(address[] calldata addresses) externalonlyOwner{
for (uint i =0; i < addresses.length; i++) {
allowlist[addresses[i]] =true;
}
}
/**
* @notice Remove from allowlist
*/functionremoveFromAllowlist(address address_) externalonlyOwner{
delete allowlist[address_];
}
/**
* @notice Remove from allowlist in batch
*/functionremoveFromAllowlistBatch(address[] calldata addresses) externalonlyOwner{
for (uint i =0; i < addresses.length; i++) {
delete allowlist[addresses[i]];
}
}
/**
* @notice Function with allowlist
*/functionaddressInAllowlist(address address_) externalviewreturns(bool)
{
return allowlist[address_];
}
/**
* @dev Throws if address is not in allowlist
*/function_checkAllowlist(address address_) internalviewvirtual{
require(allowlist[address_], "Address is not in allowlist");
}
}
Contract Source Code
File 3 of 23: Context.sol
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT// OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v4.9.4) (utils/Context.sol)pragmasolidity ^0.8.0;/**
* @dev Provides information about the current execution context, including the
* sender of the transaction and its data. While these are generally available
* via msg.sender and msg.data, they should not be accessed in such a direct
* manner, since when dealing with meta-transactions the account sending and
* paying for execution may not be the actual sender (as far as an application
* is concerned).
*
* This contract is only required for intermediate, library-like contracts.
*/abstractcontractContext{
function_msgSender() internalviewvirtualreturns (address) {
returnmsg.sender;
}
function_msgData() internalviewvirtualreturns (bytescalldata) {
returnmsg.data;
}
function_contextSuffixLength() internalviewvirtualreturns (uint256) {
return0;
}
}
Contract Source Code
File 4 of 23: DataTypes.sol
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MITpragmasolidity >=0.8.9;/**
* @title DataTypes
* @dev Definition of shared types
*/libraryDataTypes{
/// @notice Type for representing a swapping status typeenumSwapStatus {
Null,
Succeeded,
Failed,
Fallback
}
enumContractCallStatus {
Null,
Succeeded,
Failed,
Fallback
}
/// @notice Type for representing a paraswap usage statusenumParaswapUsageStatus {
None,
OnSrcChain,
OnDestChain,
Both
}
/// @notice Split Swap paramsstructSplitSwapInfo {
uint256 amount;
address swapContract;
address spender;
bytes swapData;
}
/// @notice Swap paramsstructSwapInfo {
address srcToken;
address dstToken;
bytes aggregatorInfo; // Dex aggregation swap info
}
structContractCallInfo {
address toContractAddress; // The address of the contract to interact with.address toApprovalAddress; // the approval address for contract calladdress contractOutputsToken; // Some contract interactions will output a token (e.g. staking)uint32 toContractGasLimit; // The estimated gas used by the destination call.bytes toContractCallData; // The callData to be sent to the contract for the interaction on the destination chain.
}
structContractCallRequest {
bytes32 id;
bytes32 bridge;
address srcToken;
address bridgeToken;
address callToken;
address recipient;
uint256 srcAmount;
uint256 bridgeDstAmount;
uint256 estimatedCallAmount;
uint256[] dstDistribution;
bytes dstParaswapData;
ContractCallInfo callInfo;
ParaswapUsageStatus paraswapUsageStatus;
}
/// @notice Dex Aggregator Swap InfostructFullSwapData {
address swapContract;
address spender;
bytes swapData;
}
}
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT// OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v4.9.0) (token/ERC20/IERC20.sol)pragmasolidity ^0.8.0;/**
* @dev Interface of the ERC20 standard as defined in the EIP.
*/interfaceIERC20{
/**
* @dev Emitted when `value` tokens are moved from one account (`from`) to
* another (`to`).
*
* Note that `value` may be zero.
*/eventTransfer(addressindexedfrom, addressindexed to, uint256 value);
/**
* @dev Emitted when the allowance of a `spender` for an `owner` is set by
* a call to {approve}. `value` is the new allowance.
*/eventApproval(addressindexed owner, addressindexed spender, uint256 value);
/**
* @dev Returns the amount of tokens in existence.
*/functiontotalSupply() externalviewreturns (uint256);
/**
* @dev Returns the amount of tokens owned by `account`.
*/functionbalanceOf(address account) externalviewreturns (uint256);
/**
* @dev Moves `amount` tokens from the caller's account to `to`.
*
* Returns a boolean value indicating whether the operation succeeded.
*
* Emits a {Transfer} event.
*/functiontransfer(address to, uint256 amount) externalreturns (bool);
/**
* @dev Returns the remaining number of tokens that `spender` will be
* allowed to spend on behalf of `owner` through {transferFrom}. This is
* zero by default.
*
* This value changes when {approve} or {transferFrom} are called.
*/functionallowance(address owner, address spender) externalviewreturns (uint256);
/**
* @dev Sets `amount` as the allowance of `spender` over the caller's tokens.
*
* Returns a boolean value indicating whether the operation succeeded.
*
* IMPORTANT: Beware that changing an allowance with this method brings the risk
* that someone may use both the old and the new allowance by unfortunate
* transaction ordering. One possible solution to mitigate this race
* condition is to first reduce the spender's allowance to 0 and set the
* desired value afterwards:
* https://github.com/ethereum/EIPs/issues/20#issuecomment-263524729
*
* Emits an {Approval} event.
*/functionapprove(address spender, uint256 amount) externalreturns (bool);
/**
* @dev Moves `amount` tokens from `from` to `to` using the
* allowance mechanism. `amount` is then deducted from the caller's
* allowance.
*
* Returns a boolean value indicating whether the operation succeeded.
*
* Emits a {Transfer} event.
*/functiontransferFrom(addressfrom, address to, uint256 amount) externalreturns (bool);
}
Contract Source Code
File 7 of 23: IERC20Permit.sol
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT// OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v4.9.4) (token/ERC20/extensions/IERC20Permit.sol)pragmasolidity ^0.8.0;/**
* @dev Interface of the ERC20 Permit extension allowing approvals to be made via signatures, as defined in
* https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-2612[EIP-2612].
*
* Adds the {permit} method, which can be used to change an account's ERC20 allowance (see {IERC20-allowance}) by
* presenting a message signed by the account. By not relying on {IERC20-approve}, the token holder account doesn't
* need to send a transaction, and thus is not required to hold Ether at all.
*
* ==== Security Considerations
*
* There are two important considerations concerning the use of `permit`. The first is that a valid permit signature
* expresses an allowance, and it should not be assumed to convey additional meaning. In particular, it should not be
* considered as an intention to spend the allowance in any specific way. The second is that because permits have
* built-in replay protection and can be submitted by anyone, they can be frontrun. A protocol that uses permits should
* take this into consideration and allow a `permit` call to fail. Combining these two aspects, a pattern that may be
* generally recommended is:
*
* ```solidity
* function doThingWithPermit(..., uint256 value, uint256 deadline, uint8 v, bytes32 r, bytes32 s) public {
* try token.permit(msg.sender, address(this), value, deadline, v, r, s) {} catch {}
* doThing(..., value);
* }
*
* function doThing(..., uint256 value) public {
* token.safeTransferFrom(msg.sender, address(this), value);
* ...
* }
* ```
*
* Observe that: 1) `msg.sender` is used as the owner, leaving no ambiguity as to the signer intent, and 2) the use of
* `try/catch` allows the permit to fail and makes the code tolerant to frontrunning. (See also
* {SafeERC20-safeTransferFrom}).
*
* Additionally, note that smart contract wallets (such as Argent or Safe) are not able to produce permit signatures, so
* contracts should have entry points that don't rely on permit.
*/interfaceIERC20Permit{
/**
* @dev Sets `value` as the allowance of `spender` over ``owner``'s tokens,
* given ``owner``'s signed approval.
*
* IMPORTANT: The same issues {IERC20-approve} has related to transaction
* ordering also apply here.
*
* Emits an {Approval} event.
*
* Requirements:
*
* - `spender` cannot be the zero address.
* - `deadline` must be a timestamp in the future.
* - `v`, `r` and `s` must be a valid `secp256k1` signature from `owner`
* over the EIP712-formatted function arguments.
* - the signature must use ``owner``'s current nonce (see {nonces}).
*
* For more information on the signature format, see the
* https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-2612#specification[relevant EIP
* section].
*
* CAUTION: See Security Considerations above.
*/functionpermit(address owner,
address spender,
uint256 value,
uint256 deadline,
uint8 v,
bytes32 r,
bytes32 s
) external;
/**
* @dev Returns the current nonce for `owner`. This value must be
* included whenever a signature is generated for {permit}.
*
* Every successful call to {permit} increases ``owner``'s nonce by one. This
* prevents a signature from being used multiple times.
*/functionnonces(address owner) externalviewreturns (uint256);
/**
* @dev Returns the domain separator used in the encoding of the signature for {permit}, as defined by {EIP712}.
*/// solhint-disable-next-line func-name-mixedcasefunctionDOMAIN_SEPARATOR() externalviewreturns (bytes32);
}
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MITpragmasolidity >=0.8.9;libraryMath{
/**
* @dev Returns the largest of two numbers.
*/functionmax(uint256 a, uint256 b) internalpurereturns (uint256) {
return a >= b ? a : b;
}
/**
* @dev Returns the smallest of two numbers.
*/functionmin(uint256 a, uint256 b) internalpurereturns (uint256) {
return a < b ? a : b;
}
/**
* @dev Returns the average of two numbers. The result is rounded towards
* zero.
*/functionaverage(uint256 a, uint256 b) internalpurereturns (uint256) {
// (a + b) / 2 can overflow, so we distributereturn (a /2) + (b /2) + ((a %2+ b %2) /2);
}
}
Contract Source Code
File 16 of 23: Ownable.sol
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT// OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v4.9.0) (access/Ownable.sol)pragmasolidity ^0.8.0;import"../utils/Context.sol";
/**
* @dev Contract module which provides a basic access control mechanism, where
* there is an account (an owner) that can be granted exclusive access to
* specific functions.
*
* By default, the owner account will be the one that deploys the contract. This
* can later be changed with {transferOwnership}.
*
* This module is used through inheritance. It will make available the modifier
* `onlyOwner`, which can be applied to your functions to restrict their use to
* the owner.
*/abstractcontractOwnableisContext{
addressprivate _owner;
eventOwnershipTransferred(addressindexed previousOwner, addressindexed newOwner);
/**
* @dev Initializes the contract setting the deployer as the initial owner.
*/constructor() {
_transferOwnership(_msgSender());
}
/**
* @dev Throws if called by any account other than the owner.
*/modifieronlyOwner() {
_checkOwner();
_;
}
/**
* @dev Returns the address of the current owner.
*/functionowner() publicviewvirtualreturns (address) {
return _owner;
}
/**
* @dev Throws if the sender is not the owner.
*/function_checkOwner() internalviewvirtual{
require(owner() == _msgSender(), "Ownable: caller is not the owner");
}
/**
* @dev Leaves the contract without owner. It will not be possible to call
* `onlyOwner` functions. Can only be called by the current owner.
*
* NOTE: Renouncing ownership will leave the contract without an owner,
* thereby disabling any functionality that is only available to the owner.
*/functionrenounceOwnership() publicvirtualonlyOwner{
_transferOwnership(address(0));
}
/**
* @dev Transfers ownership of the contract to a new account (`newOwner`).
* Can only be called by the current owner.
*/functiontransferOwnership(address newOwner) publicvirtualonlyOwner{
require(newOwner !=address(0), "Ownable: new owner is the zero address");
_transferOwnership(newOwner);
}
/**
* @dev Transfers ownership of the contract to a new account (`newOwner`).
* Internal function without access restriction.
*/function_transferOwnership(address newOwner) internalvirtual{
address oldOwner = _owner;
_owner = newOwner;
emit OwnershipTransferred(oldOwner, newOwner);
}
}
Contract Source Code
File 17 of 23: ReentrancyGuard.sol
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT// OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v4.9.0) (security/ReentrancyGuard.sol)pragmasolidity ^0.8.0;/**
* @dev Contract module that helps prevent reentrant calls to a function.
*
* Inheriting from `ReentrancyGuard` will make the {nonReentrant} modifier
* available, which can be applied to functions to make sure there are no nested
* (reentrant) calls to them.
*
* Note that because there is a single `nonReentrant` guard, functions marked as
* `nonReentrant` may not call one another. This can be worked around by making
* those functions `private`, and then adding `external` `nonReentrant` entry
* points to them.
*
* TIP: If you would like to learn more about reentrancy and alternative ways
* to protect against it, check out our blog post
* https://blog.openzeppelin.com/reentrancy-after-istanbul/[Reentrancy After Istanbul].
*/abstractcontractReentrancyGuard{
// Booleans are more expensive than uint256 or any type that takes up a full// word because each write operation emits an extra SLOAD to first read the// slot's contents, replace the bits taken up by the boolean, and then write// back. This is the compiler's defense against contract upgrades and// pointer aliasing, and it cannot be disabled.// The values being non-zero value makes deployment a bit more expensive,// but in exchange the refund on every call to nonReentrant will be lower in// amount. Since refunds are capped to a percentage of the total// transaction's gas, it is best to keep them low in cases like this one, to// increase the likelihood of the full refund coming into effect.uint256privateconstant _NOT_ENTERED =1;
uint256privateconstant _ENTERED =2;
uint256private _status;
constructor() {
_status = _NOT_ENTERED;
}
/**
* @dev Prevents a contract from calling itself, directly or indirectly.
* Calling a `nonReentrant` function from another `nonReentrant`
* function is not supported. It is possible to prevent this from happening
* by making the `nonReentrant` function external, and making it call a
* `private` function that does the actual work.
*/modifiernonReentrant() {
_nonReentrantBefore();
_;
_nonReentrantAfter();
}
function_nonReentrantBefore() private{
// On the first call to nonReentrant, _status will be _NOT_ENTEREDrequire(_status != _ENTERED, "ReentrancyGuard: reentrant call");
// Any calls to nonReentrant after this point will fail
_status = _ENTERED;
}
function_nonReentrantAfter() private{
// By storing the original value once again, a refund is triggered (see// https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-2200)
_status = _NOT_ENTERED;
}
/**
* @dev Returns true if the reentrancy guard is currently set to "entered", which indicates there is a
* `nonReentrant` function in the call stack.
*/function_reentrancyGuardEntered() internalviewreturns (bool) {
return _status == _ENTERED;
}
}
Contract Source Code
File 18 of 23: SafeERC20.sol
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT// OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v4.9.3) (token/ERC20/utils/SafeERC20.sol)pragmasolidity ^0.8.0;import"../IERC20.sol";
import"../extensions/IERC20Permit.sol";
import"../../../utils/Address.sol";
/**
* @title SafeERC20
* @dev Wrappers around ERC20 operations that throw on failure (when the token
* contract returns false). Tokens that return no value (and instead revert or
* throw on failure) are also supported, non-reverting calls are assumed to be
* successful.
* To use this library you can add a `using SafeERC20 for IERC20;` statement to your contract,
* which allows you to call the safe operations as `token.safeTransfer(...)`, etc.
*/librarySafeERC20{
usingAddressforaddress;
/**
* @dev Transfer `value` amount of `token` from the calling contract to `to`. If `token` returns no value,
* non-reverting calls are assumed to be successful.
*/functionsafeTransfer(IERC20 token, address to, uint256 value) internal{
_callOptionalReturn(token, abi.encodeWithSelector(token.transfer.selector, to, value));
}
/**
* @dev Transfer `value` amount of `token` from `from` to `to`, spending the approval given by `from` to the
* calling contract. If `token` returns no value, non-reverting calls are assumed to be successful.
*/functionsafeTransferFrom(IERC20 token, addressfrom, address to, uint256 value) internal{
_callOptionalReturn(token, abi.encodeWithSelector(token.transferFrom.selector, from, to, value));
}
/**
* @dev Deprecated. This function has issues similar to the ones found in
* {IERC20-approve}, and its usage is discouraged.
*
* Whenever possible, use {safeIncreaseAllowance} and
* {safeDecreaseAllowance} instead.
*/functionsafeApprove(IERC20 token, address spender, uint256 value) internal{
// safeApprove should only be called when setting an initial allowance,// or when resetting it to zero. To increase and decrease it, use// 'safeIncreaseAllowance' and 'safeDecreaseAllowance'require(
(value ==0) || (token.allowance(address(this), spender) ==0),
"SafeERC20: approve from non-zero to non-zero allowance"
);
_callOptionalReturn(token, abi.encodeWithSelector(token.approve.selector, spender, value));
}
/**
* @dev Increase the calling contract's allowance toward `spender` by `value`. If `token` returns no value,
* non-reverting calls are assumed to be successful.
*/functionsafeIncreaseAllowance(IERC20 token, address spender, uint256 value) internal{
uint256 oldAllowance = token.allowance(address(this), spender);
_callOptionalReturn(token, abi.encodeWithSelector(token.approve.selector, spender, oldAllowance + value));
}
/**
* @dev Decrease the calling contract's allowance toward `spender` by `value`. If `token` returns no value,
* non-reverting calls are assumed to be successful.
*/functionsafeDecreaseAllowance(IERC20 token, address spender, uint256 value) internal{
unchecked {
uint256 oldAllowance = token.allowance(address(this), spender);
require(oldAllowance >= value, "SafeERC20: decreased allowance below zero");
_callOptionalReturn(token, abi.encodeWithSelector(token.approve.selector, spender, oldAllowance - value));
}
}
/**
* @dev Set the calling contract's allowance toward `spender` to `value`. If `token` returns no value,
* non-reverting calls are assumed to be successful. Meant to be used with tokens that require the approval
* to be set to zero before setting it to a non-zero value, such as USDT.
*/functionforceApprove(IERC20 token, address spender, uint256 value) internal{
bytesmemory approvalCall =abi.encodeWithSelector(token.approve.selector, spender, value);
if (!_callOptionalReturnBool(token, approvalCall)) {
_callOptionalReturn(token, abi.encodeWithSelector(token.approve.selector, spender, 0));
_callOptionalReturn(token, approvalCall);
}
}
/**
* @dev Use a ERC-2612 signature to set the `owner` approval toward `spender` on `token`.
* Revert on invalid signature.
*/functionsafePermit(
IERC20Permit token,
address owner,
address spender,
uint256 value,
uint256 deadline,
uint8 v,
bytes32 r,
bytes32 s
) internal{
uint256 nonceBefore = token.nonces(owner);
token.permit(owner, spender, value, deadline, v, r, s);
uint256 nonceAfter = token.nonces(owner);
require(nonceAfter == nonceBefore +1, "SafeERC20: permit did not succeed");
}
/**
* @dev Imitates a Solidity high-level call (i.e. a regular function call to a contract), relaxing the requirement
* on the return value: the return value is optional (but if data is returned, it must not be false).
* @param token The token targeted by the call.
* @param data The call data (encoded using abi.encode or one of its variants).
*/function_callOptionalReturn(IERC20 token, bytesmemory data) private{
// We need to perform a low level call here, to bypass Solidity's return data size checking mechanism, since// we're implementing it ourselves. We use {Address-functionCall} to perform this call, which verifies that// the target address contains contract code and also asserts for success in the low-level call.bytesmemory returndata =address(token).functionCall(data, "SafeERC20: low-level call failed");
require(returndata.length==0||abi.decode(returndata, (bool)), "SafeERC20: ERC20 operation did not succeed");
}
/**
* @dev Imitates a Solidity high-level call (i.e. a regular function call to a contract), relaxing the requirement
* on the return value: the return value is optional (but if data is returned, it must not be false).
* @param token The token targeted by the call.
* @param data The call data (encoded using abi.encode or one of its variants).
*
* This is a variant of {_callOptionalReturn} that silents catches all reverts and returns a bool instead.
*/function_callOptionalReturnBool(IERC20 token, bytesmemory data) privatereturns (bool) {
// We need to perform a low level call here, to bypass Solidity's return data size checking mechanism, since// we're implementing it ourselves. We cannot use {Address-functionCall} here since this should return false// and not revert is the subcall reverts.
(bool success, bytesmemory returndata) =address(token).call(data);
return
success && (returndata.length==0||abi.decode(returndata, (bool))) && Address.isContract(address(token));
}
}