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RMRK Solidity

A set of Solidity contracts for RMRK.app.

For each of the MultiAsset, Nestable and Equippable combinations, we provide samples of simple and advance usage in this repo.

MultiAsset (RMRKMultiAsset)

WORKFLOW NOTES:

  1. Deploy the MultiAsset contract.
  2. Admin must add assets on a PER-TOKEN basis. This could be very gas-expensive, so it's recommended that this be done in batches.
  3. Mint the tokens using your preferred method.

Nestable (RMRKNestable)

  1. Deploy like a regular ERC721. That's it! This contract can recieve and be nested by other instances of RMRKNestable. Note that it WILL NOT be compatible with other equippable contracts as a standalone.

RMRK also offers Nestable + MultiAsset (RMRKNestableMultiAsset). To deploy, follow instructions after MultiAsset.

Equippable

RMRK Equippable comes in two flavors: RMRKEquippable and RMRKNestableExternalEquippable. The former is a single contract designed to handle the full implementation of multiasset, nestable, and equippable. The latter separates Nestable and Equippable into two mutually dependent contracts to allow for more custom logic in each, if necessary.

  1. Deploy the RMRKNestableExternalEquippable. This contract contains core transfer and minting logic.

  2. Deploy the RMRKExternalEquippable. This contract contains equippable and asset management logic.

  3. Initialize the address of RMRKExternalEquippable on RMRKNestableExternalEquippable via an exposed setEquippalbeAddress method. If you're not using a prefab RMRK top-level implementation, you will need to expose this yourself.

  4. Deploy RMRKCatalog. Initialize your catalog parts (fixed and slot). You will pass the address of RMRKCatalog and corresponding catalog part IDs when initializing your assets on RMRKExternalEquippable.

  5. Assign token assets on RMRKExternalEquippable as you would the above MultiAsset, with the added ExtendedAsset params, equippableRefId and catalogAddress.

NOTE: Please be aware that RMRKEquippable is likely very close to the maximum contract deployment size allowed by most EVM environments. If you need more space, consider RMRKNestingExternalEquippable.

Emotable

TBD

Emotes are useful, but very expensive to store. Some important considerations are documented here: https://github.com/rmrk-team/pallet-emotes and here: https://hackmd.io/JjqT6THTSoqMj-_ucPEJAw?view - needs storage oprimizations considerations vs wasting gas on looping. Benchmarking would be GREAT.

Interface

This interface defines the standard for RMRK multi-resource tokens. While this repository will not enforce inheritance from another interface that defines a spec for token provenance or transfer, please note that most practical implementations will do so, the implementation provided in this repository included.

Implementation

Provided are two examples of a RMRK multiresource token -- one which inherits from ERC721, and one which inherits from RMRK nesting, which may be considered a ERC721 compatible replacement.

Fractional

TBD

Turning NFTs into fractional tokens after a deposit of RMRK. The deposit size should be read from Settings.

Settings

TBD

A storage contract containing values like the RMRK Fungibilization deposit (how many tokens you need to make an NFT into a collection of fungibles) and other governance-settable values.

Logic

TBD

JSONlogic for front-end variability based on on-chain values. Logic should go into a Logic field of the NFT's body, and is executed exclusively in the client.

Harberger

TBD

An extension for the contracts to make them Harberger-taxable by default, integrating the selling and taxing functionality right into the NFT's mint. This does mean the NFT can never not be Harb-taxed, but there can be an on-off flag for this that the ultimate owner (a new owner type?) can flip.


Develop

Just run npx hardhat compile to check if it works. Refer to the rest below.

This project demonstrates an advanced Hardhat use case, integrating other tools commonly used alongside Hardhat in the ecosystem.

The project comes with a sample contract, a test for that contract, a sample script that deploys that contract, and an example of a task implementation, which simply lists the available accounts. It also comes with a variety of other tools, preconfigured to work with the project code.

Try running some of the following tasks:

npx hardhat accounts
npx hardhat compile
npx hardhat clean
npx hardhat test
npx hardhat node
npx hardhat help
REPORT_GAS=true npx hardhat test
npx hardhat coverage
npx hardhat run scripts/deploy.ts
TS_NODE_FILES=true npx ts-node scripts/deploy.ts
npx eslint '**/*.{js,ts}'
npx eslint '**/*.{js,ts}' --fix
npx prettier '**/*.{json,sol,md}' --check
npx prettier '**/*.{json,sol,md}' --write
npx solhint 'contracts/**/*.sol'
npx solhint 'contracts/**/*.sol' --fix

Etherscan verification

To try out Etherscan verification, you first need to deploy a contract to an Ethereum network that's supported by Etherscan, such as Ropsten.

In this project, copy the .env.example file to a file named .env, and then edit it to fill in the details. Enter your Etherscan API key, your Görli node URL (e.g. from Alchemy), and the private key of the account which will send the deployment transaction. With a valid .env file in place, first deploy your contract:

hardhat run --network goerli scripts/sample-script.ts

Then, copy the deployment address and paste it in to replace DEPLOYED_CONTRACT_ADDRESS in this command:

npx hardhat verify --network goerli DEPLOYED_CONTRACT_ADDRESS "Hello, Hardhat!"

Performance optimizations

For faster runs of your tests and scripts, consider skipping ts-node's type checking by setting the environment variable TS_NODE_TRANSPILE_ONLY to 1 in hardhat's environment. For more details see the documentation.

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