smart-contract-fiesta
/
organized_contracts
/12
/1212840035a9adbd2811028b218c6c3bcbc421070c7591f04bc571dbd2e67557
/VRFConsumerBaseV2.sol
// This contract is part of Zellic’s smart contract dataset, which is a collection of publicly available contract code gathered as of March 2023. | |
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT | |
pragma solidity ^0.8.4; | |
/** **************************************************************************** | |
* @notice Interface for contracts using VRF randomness | |
* ***************************************************************************** | |
* @dev PURPOSE | |
* | |
* @dev Reggie the Random Oracle (not his real job) wants to provide randomness | |
* @dev to Vera the verifier in such a way that Vera can be sure he's not | |
* @dev making his output up to suit himself. Reggie provides Vera a public key | |
* @dev to which he knows the secret key. Each time Vera provides a seed to | |
* @dev Reggie, he gives back a value which is computed completely | |
* @dev deterministically from the seed and the secret key. | |
* | |
* @dev Reggie provides a proof by which Vera can verify that the output was | |
* @dev correctly computed once Reggie tells it to her, but without that proof, | |
* @dev the output is indistinguishable to her from a uniform random sample | |
* @dev from the output space. | |
* | |
* @dev The purpose of this contract is to make it easy for unrelated contracts | |
* @dev to talk to Vera the verifier about the work Reggie is doing, to provide | |
* @dev simple access to a verifiable source of randomness. It ensures 2 things: | |
* @dev 1. The fulfillment came from the VRFCoordinator | |
* @dev 2. The consumer contract implements fulfillRandomWords. | |
* ***************************************************************************** | |
* @dev USAGE | |
* | |
* @dev Calling contracts must inherit from VRFConsumerBase, and can | |
* @dev initialize VRFConsumerBase's attributes in their constructor as | |
* @dev shown: | |
* | |
* @dev contract VRFConsumer { | |
* @dev constructor(<other arguments>, address _vrfCoordinator, address _link) | |
* @dev VRFConsumerBase(_vrfCoordinator) public { | |
* @dev <initialization with other arguments goes here> | |
* @dev } | |
* @dev } | |
* | |
* @dev The oracle will have given you an ID for the VRF keypair they have | |
* @dev committed to (let's call it keyHash). Create subscription, fund it | |
* @dev and your consumer contract as a consumer of it (see VRFCoordinatorInterface | |
* @dev subscription management functions). | |
* @dev Call requestRandomWords(keyHash, subId, minimumRequestConfirmations, | |
* @dev callbackGasLimit, numWords), | |
* @dev see (VRFCoordinatorInterface for a description of the arguments). | |
* | |
* @dev Once the VRFCoordinator has received and validated the oracle's response | |
* @dev to your request, it will call your contract's fulfillRandomWords method. | |
* | |
* @dev The randomness argument to fulfillRandomWords is a set of random words | |
* @dev generated from your requestId and the blockHash of the request. | |
* | |
* @dev If your contract could have concurrent requests open, you can use the | |
* @dev requestId returned from requestRandomWords to track which response is associated | |
* @dev with which randomness request. | |
* @dev See "SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS" for principles to keep in mind, | |
* @dev if your contract could have multiple requests in flight simultaneously. | |
* | |
* @dev Colliding `requestId`s are cryptographically impossible as long as seeds | |
* @dev differ. | |
* | |
* ***************************************************************************** | |
* @dev SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS | |
* | |
* @dev A method with the ability to call your fulfillRandomness method directly | |
* @dev could spoof a VRF response with any random value, so it's critical that | |
* @dev it cannot be directly called by anything other than this base contract | |
* @dev (specifically, by the VRFConsumerBase.rawFulfillRandomness method). | |
* | |
* @dev For your users to trust that your contract's random behavior is free | |
* @dev from malicious interference, it's best if you can write it so that all | |
* @dev behaviors implied by a VRF response are executed *during* your | |
* @dev fulfillRandomness method. If your contract must store the response (or | |
* @dev anything derived from it) and use it later, you must ensure that any | |
* @dev user-significant behavior which depends on that stored value cannot be | |
* @dev manipulated by a subsequent VRF request. | |
* | |
* @dev Similarly, both miners and the VRF oracle itself have some influence | |
* @dev over the order in which VRF responses appear on the blockchain, so if | |
* @dev your contract could have multiple VRF requests in flight simultaneously, | |
* @dev you must ensure that the order in which the VRF responses arrive cannot | |
* @dev be used to manipulate your contract's user-significant behavior. | |
* | |
* @dev Since the block hash of the block which contains the requestRandomness | |
* @dev call is mixed into the input to the VRF *last*, a sufficiently powerful | |
* @dev miner could, in principle, fork the blockchain to evict the block | |
* @dev containing the request, forcing the request to be included in a | |
* @dev different block with a different hash, and therefore a different input | |
* @dev to the VRF. However, such an attack would incur a substantial economic | |
* @dev cost. This cost scales with the number of blocks the VRF oracle waits | |
* @dev until it calls responds to a request. It is for this reason that | |
* @dev that you can signal to an oracle you'd like them to wait longer before | |
* @dev responding to the request (however this is not enforced in the contract | |
* @dev and so remains effective only in the case of unmodified oracle software). | |
*/ | |
abstract contract VRFConsumerBaseV2 { | |
error OnlyCoordinatorCanFulfill(address have, address want); | |
address private immutable vrfCoordinator; | |
/** | |
* @param _vrfCoordinator address of VRFCoordinator contract | |
*/ | |
constructor(address _vrfCoordinator) { | |
vrfCoordinator = _vrfCoordinator; | |
} | |
/** | |
* @notice fulfillRandomness handles the VRF response. Your contract must | |
* @notice implement it. See "SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS" above for important | |
* @notice principles to keep in mind when implementing your fulfillRandomness | |
* @notice method. | |
* | |
* @dev VRFConsumerBaseV2 expects its subcontracts to have a method with this | |
* @dev signature, and will call it once it has verified the proof | |
* @dev associated with the randomness. (It is triggered via a call to | |
* @dev rawFulfillRandomness, below.) | |
* | |
* @param requestId The Id initially returned by requestRandomness | |
* @param randomWords the VRF output expanded to the requested number of words | |
*/ | |
function fulfillRandomWords(uint256 requestId, uint256[] memory randomWords) internal virtual; | |
// rawFulfillRandomness is called by VRFCoordinator when it receives a valid VRF | |
// proof. rawFulfillRandomness then calls fulfillRandomness, after validating | |
// the origin of the call | |
function rawFulfillRandomWords(uint256 requestId, uint256[] memory randomWords) external { | |
if (msg.sender != vrfCoordinator) { | |
revert OnlyCoordinatorCanFulfill(msg.sender, vrfCoordinator); | |
} | |
fulfillRandomWords(requestId, randomWords); | |
} | |
} |