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GIF Core Contracts

This repository holds the GIF core contracts and tools to develop, test and deploy GIF instances.

Repository settings

The repository uses Gitflow . New features/fixes are to be based on the develop branch. Releases are to be created from the main or a release/ branch. Hotfixes on releases are to based on the affected release/ or the main branch.

Github Actions will automatically publish npm packages (with tag next) to npm.js containing the latest contracts. The only exception is the main branch, which requires manual releases using npm publish (without any tags).

Clone Repository

git clone https://github.com/etherisc/gif-contracts.git
cd gif-contracts

Fully configure IDE

To use our fully configured IDE see the instructions at https://github.com/etherisc/gif-sandbox/blob/master/docs/development_environment.md. In this case you can skip the next two steps as the devcontainer is based on the (updated) brownie image.

Create Brownie Docker Image

Brownie is used for development of the contracts in this repository.

Alternatively to installing a python development environment and the brownie framework, wokring with Brownie is also possible via Docker.

For building the brownie docker image used in the samples below, follow the instructions in gif-brownie.

Run Brownie Container

docker run -it --rm -v $PWD:/projects brownie

Compile the GIF Core Contracts

Inside the Brownie container compile the contracts/interfaces

brownie compile --all

Run GIF Unit Tests

Run the unit tests

brownie test

or to execute the tests in parallel

brownie test -n auto

Note: Should the tests fail when running them in parallel, the test execution probably creates too much load on the system. In this case replace the auto keyword in the command with the number of executors (use at most the number of CPU cores available on your system).

Deployment to Live Networks

Deployments to live networks can be done with brownie console as well.

Example for the deployment to Polygon test

brownie console --network polygon-test

# in console
owner = accounts.add()
# will generate a new account and prints the mnemonic here

owner.address
# will print the owner address that you will need to fund first

Use Polygon test faucet to fund the owner address

from scripts.instance import GifInstance

# publishes source code to the network
instance = GifInstance(owner, publishSource=True)

# after the deploy print the registry address
instance.getRegistry().address

After a successful deploy check the registry contract in the Polygon testnet explorer.

To check all contract addresses you may use the instance python script inside the brownie container as follows.

# 0x2852593b21796b549555d09873155B25257F6C38 is the registry contract address
brownie run scripts/instance.py dump_sources 0x2852593b21796b549555d09873155B25257F6C38 --network polygon-test

Full Deployment with Example Product

Before attempting to deploy the setup on a life chain ensure that the instanceOperator has sufficient funds to cover the setup.

For testnets faucet funds may be used

Using the ganache scenario shown below ensures that all addresses used are sufficiently funded.

from scripts.deploy_ayii import (
    stakeholders_accounts_ganache,
    check_funds,
    amend_funds,
    deploy,
    deploy_setup_including_token,
    from_registry,
    from_component,
)

from scripts.instance import (
  GifInstance, 
  dump_sources
)

from scripts.util import (
  s2b, 
  b2s, 
  contract_from_address,
)

# for ganche the command below may be used
# for other chains, use accounts.add() and record the mnemonics
a = stakeholders_accounts_ganache()

# deploy TestCoin with instanceOperator 
usdc = TestCoin.deploy({'from': a['instanceOperator']})

# check_funds checks which stakeholder accounts need funding for the deploy
# also, it checks if the instanceOperator has a balance that allows to provided
# the missing funds for the other accounts
check_funds(a, usdc)

# amend_funds transfers missing funds to stakeholder addresses using the
# avaulable balance of the instanceOperator
amend_funds(a)

d = deploy_setup_including_token(a, usdc)

(
componentOwnerService,customer1,customer2,erc20Token,instance,instanceOperator,instanceOperatorService,instanceService,
instanceWallet,insurer,investor,oracle,oracleProvider,processId1,processId2,product,productOwner,riskId1,riskId2,
riskpool,riskpoolKeeper,riskpoolWallet
)=(
d['componentOwnerService'],d['customer1'],d['customer2'],d['erc20Token'],d['instance'],d['instanceOperator'],d['instanceOperatorService'],d['instanceService'],
d['instanceWallet'],d['insurer'],d['investor'],d['oracle'],d['oracleProvider'],d['processId1'],d['processId2'],d['product'],d['productOwner'],d['riskId1'],d['riskId2'],
d['riskpool'],d['riskpoolKeeper'],d['riskpoolWallet']
)

# the deployed setup can now be used
# example usage
instanceOperator
instance.getRegistry()

instanceService.getChainName()
instanceService.getInstanceId()

product.getId()
b2s(product.getName())

customer1
instanceService.getMetadata(processId1)
instanceService.getApplication(processId1)
instanceService.getPolicy(processId1)

tx = product.triggerOracle(processId1, {'from': insurer})

For a first time setup on a live chain the setup below can be used.

IMPORTANT: Make sure to write down the generated mnemonics for the stakeholder accounts. To reuse the same accounts replace accounts.add with accounts.from_mnemonic using the recorded mnemonics.

instanceOperator=accounts.add()
instanceWallet=accounts.add()
oracleProvider=accounts.add()
chainlinkNodeOperator=accounts.add()
riskpoolKeeper=accounts.add()
riskpoolWallet=accounts.add()
investor=accounts.add()
productOwner=accounts.add()
insurer=accounts.add()
customer1=accounts.add()
customer2=accounts.add()

a = {
  'instanceOperator': instanceOperator,
  'instanceWallet': instanceWallet,
  'oracleProvider': oracleProvider,
  'chainlinkNodeOperator': chainlinkNodeOperator,
  'riskpoolKeeper': riskpoolKeeper,
  'riskpoolWallet': riskpoolWallet,
  'investor': investor,
  'productOwner': productOwner,
  'insurer': insurer,
  'customer1': customer1,
  'customer2': customer2,
}

To interact with an existing setup use the following helper methods as shown below.

from scripts.deploy_ayii import (
    from_registry,
    from_component,
)

from scripts.instance import (
  GifInstance, 
)

from scripts.util import (
  s2b, 
  b2s, 
  contract_from_address,
)

# for the case of a known registry address, 
# eg '0xE7eD6747FaC5360f88a2EFC03E00d25789F69291'
(instance, product, oracle, riskpool) = from_registry('0xE7eD6747FaC5360f88a2EFC03E00d25789F69291')

# or for a known address of a component, eg
# eg product address '0xF039D8acecbB47763c67937D66A254DB48c87757'
(instance, product, oracle, riskpool) = from_component('0xF039D8acecbB47763c67937D66A254DB48c87757')

Run linter

Linter findings are shown automatically in vscode. To execute it manually, run the following command:

solhint contracts/**/*.sol

and including prettier formatting

solhint --config .solhint.prettier.json contracts/**/*.sol

Publish release to NPMJS

npm ci 
npm version patch/minor/major --no-git-tag-version
npm publish
git commit -m 'bump version'

Build and test using foundry

Foundry is a new tool to build and test smart contracts. More documentation about foundry can be found in the foundry [https://book.getfoundry.sh/](Foundry book).

The project is configured to use foundry. All contracts in the contracts folder can be compiled using foundry as well as brownie (results are stored in build_foundry). Foundry tests are writte in solidy and can be found in the tests_foundry folder (they need to be separate from brownie based tests). Dependencies are stored in the lib folder and are mapped in the foundry.yaml config file.

To compile the contracts using foundry, run the following command:

forge build

To run the foundry based tests, run the following command:

forge test

About

This is the official Repo of the Generic Insurance Framework (GIF) Core Contracts.

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