"Anyone can be rich for an instant." or "Perfect credit from atomicity."
A video recording of a 1-hour presentation on this project can be found here.
Slides for that presentation can be found here.
The FlashWETH contract is on mainnet at: 0xf7705C1413CffCE6CfC0fcEfe3F3A12F38CB29dA
The Exchange contract is on mainnet at: 0x5d84fC93A6a8161873a315C233Fbd79A88280079
The contracts are simple but have not been audited. Be careful.
Flash-mintable token (FMTs) are ERC20-compliant tokens that allow flash minting: the ability for anyone to mint an arbitrary number of new tokens into their account, as long as they also burn the same number of tokens from their account before the end of the same transaction.
A minimal example FMT can be seen here:
pragma solidity 0.5.16;
import "https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/openzeppelin-contracts/blob/release-v2.5.0/contracts/token/ERC20/ERC20.sol";
interface IBorrower {
function executeOnFlashMint(uint256 amount) external;
}
contract FlashMintableToken is ERC20 {
function flashMint(uint256 amount) public {
// mint tokens
_mint(msg.sender, amount);
// hand control to borrower
IBorrower(msg.sender).executeOnFlashMint(amount);
// burn tokens
_burn(msg.sender, amount); // reverts if `msg.sender` does not have enough units of the FMT
}
}
Any contract that implements the IBorrower
interface can mint as many FMTs as they want, use them however they want (e.g.: for arbitrage or liquidating CDPs), so long as the same number of FMTs get burned from their account by the end of the transaction.
You can think of FMTs as "credit tokens". Flash-minting FMTs is like "running up a tab", and burning the tokens at the end of the transaction is "paying off your tab". If you don't pay off your tab by the end of the transaction, then the transaction is reverted, and it is as if you never ran up a tab to begin with.
Flash-minting is a powerful idea, but only if the tokens themselves have some value.
Asset-backed tokens are ERC20-compliant tokens that are 1-to-1 backed and trustlessly redeemable for some other asset. The canonical example is Wrapped Ether (WETH).
Here is a minimal example of an asset-backed token (this is equivalent to WETH):
pragma solidity 0.5.16;
import "https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/openzeppelin-contracts/blob/release-v2.5.0/contracts/token/ERC20/ERC20.sol";
contract WETH is ERC20 {
function deposit() public payable {
_mint(msg.sender, msg.value);
}
function withdraw(uint256 wad) public {
_burn(msg.sender, wad);
msg.sender.transfer(wad);
}
}
As you can see, anyone can send an asset (ETH in this case) to the contract and receive one WETH token in return. The WETH token can be transferred and sold to anyone, just like any other ERC20 token.
More importantly, anyone who holds a WETH token can instantly and trustlessly redeem it for one ETH by sending it back to the contract. This is what makes WETH an asset-backed token.
The most important thing to know about asset-backed tokens is that they have exactly the same market value as their underlying asset. One WETH will always be worth exactly one ETH, and vice versa.
A flash-mintable asset-backed token is exactly what it sounds like: an ERC20-compliant token that is:
-
Asset-backed, so everyone can accept them at full face value knowing that they can always trustlessly redeem them for the underlying asset.
-
Flash-mintable, so anyone can mint arbitrarily many unbacked-tokens and spend them at full face value, so long as they destroy all the unbacked tokens (and therefore restore the backing) before the end of the transaction.
Here is a minimal example using ETH as the underlying asset:
pragma solidity 0.5.16;
import "https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/openzeppelin-contracts/blob/release-v2.3.0/contracts/token/ERC20/ERC20.sol";
interface IBorrower {
function executeOnFlashMint(uint256 amount) external;
}
contract BasicFlashWETH is ERC20 { // Flash-mintable WETH (fWETH)
function deposit() public payable {
_mint(msg.sender, msg.value);
}
function withdraw(uint256 wad) public {
_burn(msg.sender, wad);
msg.sender.transfer(wad);
}
function flashMint(uint256 amount) public {
// mint tokens
_mint(msg.sender, amount);
// hand control to borrower
IBorrower(msg.sender).executeOnFlashMint(amount);
// burn tokens
_burn(msg.sender, amount); // reverts if `msg.sender` does not have enough fWETH
// txn can never succeed unless all tokens are fully backed by ETH
assert(address(this).balance >= totalSupply());
}
}
Notice that it is impossible for a transaction to end with any fWETH tokens being unbacked by ETH.
This means that the only time the fWETH are ever unbacked is during the execution of a flashMint
. To see that the fWETH tokens maintain their market value even during a flashMint
-- when they are not all backed by ETH -- consider the following thought experiment.
Suppose you receive an fWETH token during a flashMint
and consider the following cases:
If you try to redeem the fWETH for ETH by calling withdraw()
during the execution of flashMint
one of two things will happen:
If your attempt succeeds then you got exactly what the fWETH was worth (1 ETH). No problem here.
Then the transaction will revert, and it will be as though you never received the fWETH in the first place. No harm done. You are not left "holding a bag".
If you do not try to redeem the fWETH for ETH during the same flashMint
transaction, then either:
If the flashMint
goes on to succeed, then the unbacked tokens all got burned, and so the fWETH token you are holding is fully backed. No problem here.
If the flashMint
goes on to fail, then the transaction will be reverted, and it will be as though you never accepted the fWETH to begin with. No harm done.
In short, everyone can always accept fWETH at full face value because either it is instantly redeemable for ETH whenever they want, or else the EVM will revert and they'll have never accepted it in the first place.
Imagine if all of your users where whales.
Integrating FlashWETH
into your project lets all of your users act like whales. They can have access to as much money as they need to do whatever they want on your platform. If your project makes fees on volume, this is a no-brainer.
Instead of sending them off to some flash-lending pool somewhere, you can serve them directly. Save them gas and fees. Give them access to a virtually unbounded amount of money. Completely remove their dependence on third-party flash-lending platforms.
Other platforms are using the "trustlessness of atomicity" to extend credit to your users via flash-loans, often charging them for the privilege. You can cut out those middlemen and give your users credit directly. And you can do it with no additional code. All you have to do is accept fWETH the same way you already accept WETH.
Note that fWETH doesn't require liquidity pools like flash-loans do. Anything users can do on your platform using a $100M flash-loan from a third-party, they can also do using fWETH once you've integrate it -- even if the FlashWETH
contract isn't holding very much ETH. Flash-mintable asset-backed tokens are powerful.
The FlashWETH
contract has been made to be a drop-in replacement for Wrapped Ether. If your project already has support for WETH you can use the exact same code for FlashWETH
. The APIs are exactly the same. You do not need to make any modifications to your code. Just point to the FlashWETH
contract instead of the WETH9
contract.
If you want to use an ERC20 token as the asset that backs the token, check out the FlashERC20
contract.
The Exchange contract serves as a bug bounty and evidence that it is safe to treat fWETH exactly like regular WETH. It is a "constant sum" market between ETH and fWETH. The Exchange:
- Has no fees (other than gas).
- Has no slippage.
- Will trade fWETH for an equal number of ETH (and vise versa).
- Will accept all trades even during a
flashMint
. - Allows anyone to cause the exchange to internally rebalance however they want -- making the exchange trade its own fWETH for ETH or vise versa.
- Will have some initial liquidity provided to serve as a bug bounty.
If you think fWETH is unsafe or should not have exactly the same value as ETH, even during a flashMint
, then the Exchange contract will give you the opportunity to exploit that for profit. If there is any difference at all between the value of ETH and fWETH, then you should be able to drain the Exchange contract of all of its value.
The Exchange contract is on mainnet here: 0x5d84fC93A6a8161873a315C233Fbd79A88280079
To get you started in your bug hunt, you can find an "ExampleExchangeThief" contract in this repo. It has the boilerplate contract you would need to steal from the Exchange during a flash-mint -- if you think that's possible.
UPDATE: Due to a lack of attempts to steal it, I've removed the ETH bug bounty from the exchange contracts and put them towards other projects. If you are convinced that you could steal ETH from the exchange contract and want to give it a shot, then open an issue and let me know. I'll throw some money back in there for you to try to steal.