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Efficient, all-vs-all dispute protocol for Optimistic Rollups

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BOLD

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This repository implements Offchain Labs' BOLD (Bounded Liquidity Delay) Protocol: a dispute system to enable permissionless validation of Arbitrum chains. It is an efficient, all-vs-all challenge protocol that enables anyone on Ethereum to challenge invalid rollup state transitions.

BOLD provides a fixed, upper-bound on challenge confirmations for Arbitrum chains.

Given state transitions are deterministic, this guarantees only one correct result for any given assertion. An honest participant will always win against malicious entities when challenging assertions posted to the settlement chain.

Repository Structure

For our research specification of BOLD, see BOLDChallengeProtocol.pdf.

For our a technical deep dive into BOLD, see TechnicalDeepDive.pdf

For documentation on the economics of BOLD, see Economics.pdf

For detailed information on how our code is architected, see ARCHITECTURE.md.

api/ 
    API for monitoring and visualizing challenges
assertions/
    Logic for scanning and posting assertions
chain-abstraction/
    High-level wrappers around Solidity bindings for the Rollup contracts
challenge-manager/
    All logic related to challenging, managing challenges
containers/
    Data structures used in the repository, including FSMs
contracts/
    All Rollup / challenge smart contracts
docs/
    Diagrams and architecture
layer2-state-provider/
    Interface to request state and proofs from an L2 backend
math/
    Utilities for challenge calculations
runtime/
    Tools for managing function lifecycles
state-commitments/
    Proofs, history commitments, and Merkleizatins
testing/
    All non-production code
third_party/
    Build artifacts for dependencies
time/
    Abstract time utilities

Research Specification

BOLD has an accompanying research specification that outlines the foundations of the protocol in more detail, found under docs/research-specs/BOLDChallengeProtocol.pdf.

Using BOLD

BOLD is meant to be imported as a dependency in Arbitrum chains' validator software as follows:

import (
    "github.com/OffchainLabs/bold/challenge-manager"
)

...

manager, err := challengemanager.New(
    ctx,
    chain, // Bindings to the challenge manager contracts.
    client, // Ethereum chain client.
    stateManager, // L2 state provider.
    rollupAddress, // Address of the RollupCore contract.
    challengemanager.WithMode(types.WatchtowerMode), // Validation mode.
)
if err != nil {
    return nil, err
}
go manager.Start(ctx)

When provided with an L2 state provider, such as an Arbitrum Nitro validator, the challenge manager from BOLD can be started as a background routine that is in charge of asserting states on Ethereum, initiating challenges on malicious assertions, confirming assertions, and winning challenges against malicious parties.

Building

Go Code

Install Go v1.20. Then:

git clone https://github.com/OffchainLabs/bold.git && cd bold

The project can be built with either the Go tool or the Bazel build system. We use Bazel internally because it provides a hermetic, deterministic environment for building our project and gives us access to many tools including a suite of static analysis checks, and a great dependency management approach.

With Go

To build, simply do:

go build ./...
With Bazel

We recommend getting the Bazelisk tool to install the Bazel build system. Bazelisk can be installed globally using the Go tool:

go install github.com/bazelbuild/bazelisk@latest

Then, we recommend aliasing the bazel command to bazelisk

alias bazel=bazelisk

To build with Bazel,

bazel build //...

To build a specific target, do

bazel build //util/prefix-proofs:go_default_library

More documentation on common Bazel commands can be found here

The project can also be ordinarily built with the Go tool

Testing

Running Go Tests

Install Foundry to get the anvil command locally, which allows setting up a local Ethereum chain for testing purposes. Next:

go test ./...

Alternatively, tests can be ran with Bazel as follows:

bazel test //...

To run a specific target, do:

bazel test //util/prefix-proofs:go_default_library

To see outputs, run the test multiple times, or pass in specific arguments to the Go test:

bazel test //util/prefix-proofs:go_default_test --runs_per_test=10 --test_filter=<TEST_NAME_HERE> --test_output=streamed

Running Solidity Tests

Solidity tests can be run using hardhat, but we recommend using Foundry as the tool of choice

In the contracts folder, run:

forge test

Output:

Test result: ok. 42 passed; 0 failed; finished in 1.60s

Generating Solidity Bindings

With node version 14 and npm, install yarn

npm i -g yarn

Then install Node dependencies

cd contracts && yarn install

Building the contracts can be done with:

yarn --cwd contracts build

To generate the Go bindings to the contracts, at the top-level directory, run:

go run ./solgen/main.go

You should now have Go bindings inside of solgen/go

Documentation

Go doc reference is available at [pkg.go.dev][https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/OffchainLabs/bold], and all documentation about the codebase can be found under docs/

Security Audit

BOLD has been audited by Trail of Bits as of commit 60f97068c12cca73c45117a05ba1922f949fd6ae, and a more updated audit is being completed, to be finalized in the coming few weeks.

The audit report can be found under docs/audits/TrailOfBitsAudit.

License

BOLD uses Business Source License 1.1

Credits

Huge credits on this project go to those who created BOLD and were involved in its implementation: Ed Felten, Yafah Edelman, Chris Buckland, Harry Ng, Lee Bousfield, Terence Tsao, Mario Alvarez, Preston Van Loon, Mahimna Kelkar, Aman Sanghi, Daniel Goldman, Raul Jordan, Henry Arneson, Derek Lee, Victor Shoup

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