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Universal Resolution #11
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--- | ||
description: A universal entrypoint for resolving ENS names. | ||
contributors: | ||
- taytems.eth | ||
ensip: | ||
created: "2024-10-14" | ||
status: draft | ||
--- | ||
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# ENSIP-X: Universal Resolution | ||
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## Abstract | ||
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This ENSIP defines a universal entrypoint for resolving ENS names, via an interface (i.e the UniversalResolver). | ||
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## Motivation | ||
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The process of resolving ENS names traditionally requires multiple onchain calls, and that an implementing developer has in-depth knowledge of ENS. | ||
This is becoming more prevalent over time, especially with the introduction of wildcard resolution (ENSIP-10), and more recently cross-chain reverse resolution (ENSIP-19). | ||
These factors mean there is a relatively high burden to implement ENS, with high latency, and a large amount of developer hours to spend to understand and implement the correct resolution process. | ||
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Given these factors, there are significant incentives for incorrect/incomplete ENS implementations, or implementations that do not rely on Ethereum as the source of truth. | ||
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Beyond the implementation burdens, maintaining many resolution implementations means that any change to ENS resolution that an ENSIP might provide becomes a challenging task to propagate amongst the ecosystem, and as such significantly limits the growth of the ENS protocol with novel concepts. | ||
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As a solution for these challenges, this specification proposes an interface that allows universally resolving any ENS name, or any reverse name. | ||
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## Specification | ||
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A compliant implementation of the UniversalResolver must implement the following interface: | ||
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```solidity | ||
interface IUniversalResolver { | ||
function resolve(bytes calldata name, bytes calldata data) external view returns (bytes memory result, address resolver); | ||
function reverse(bytes calldata lookupAddress, uint256 coinType) external view returns (string memory name, address resolver, address reverseResolver); | ||
} | ||
``` | ||
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### resolve | ||
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The `resolve` function should be used by any ENS client as a complete replacement for offchain resolution methods. | ||
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Similar to that of ENSIP-10, this function takes two parameters: | ||
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- `name`: The DNS-encoded name to resolve | ||
- `data`: The encoded calldata for a resolver function | ||
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If intending to resolve multiple requests, the `data` parameter can be encoded via the following multicall interface: | ||
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```solidity | ||
interface IMulticallable { | ||
function multicall(bytes[] calldata data) external view returns (bytes[] memory results); | ||
} | ||
``` | ||
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Decoding the result of a multicall should be done by using the output of the same interface. | ||
Errors are returned in the results array of a multicall, and can be checked with `len(result) % 32 == 4`. | ||
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Example of a multicall: | ||
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```typescript | ||
function getData(name: string) { | ||
const encodedMulticallData = encodeFunctionData({ | ||
name: "multicall", | ||
args: [ | ||
[ | ||
encodeFunctionData({ | ||
name: "addr", | ||
args: [namehash(name)], | ||
}), | ||
encodeFunctionData({ | ||
name: "text", | ||
args: [namehash(name), "url"], | ||
}), | ||
], | ||
], | ||
}); | ||
const [encodedMulticallResult, resolverAddress] = | ||
await universalResolver.resolve(dnsEncodeName(name), encodedMulticallData); | ||
const decodedMulticallResults = decodeFunctionResult({ | ||
name: "multicall", | ||
data: encodedMulticallResult, | ||
}); | ||
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decodedMulticallResults.forEach((result) => { | ||
if (result.length % 32 === 4) { | ||
throw new Error("Error in result"); | ||
} | ||
}); | ||
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return { | ||
results: decodedMulticallResults, | ||
resolverAddress, | ||
}; | ||
} | ||
``` | ||
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The output of this function is: | ||
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- `bytes`: The data returned by the resolver | ||
- `address`: The address of the resolver that resolved the name | ||
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### reverse | ||
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Can |
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The `reverse` function can be used by any ENS client as a complete replacement for offchain reverse name resolution methods. | ||
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This function takes two parameters: | ||
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- `lookupAddress`: The address to resolve the name for, in **encoded** form. | ||
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. This should clarify what encoding - text? Binary? Examples for, eg, Ethereum and Bitcoin would be valuable. |
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- `coinType`: The coin type to resolve the name for, as defined by ENSIP-9 and ENSIP-11. | ||
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The output of this function is: | ||
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- `name`: The verified reverse resolved name. | ||
- `resolver`: The address of the resolver that resolved the `addr` record for the name (i.e. forward verification). | ||
- `reverseResolver`: The address of the resolver that resolved the `name` record. | ||
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## Backwards Compatibility | ||
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The UniversalResolver is intended to be a complete replacement for offchain resolution methods, and should be used as such. | ||
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## Security Considerations | ||
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None. | ||
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## Copyright | ||
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Copyright and related rights waived via [CC0](https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). |
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