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[BREAKING] Enable ABI coder v2 by default.
111 lines
5.9 KiB
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111 lines
5.9 KiB
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********************************
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Solidity v0.8.0 Breaking Changes
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********************************
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This section highlights the main breaking changes introduced in Solidity
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version 0.8.0.
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For the full list check
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`the release changelog <https://github.com/ethereum/solidity/releases/tag/v0.8.0>`_.
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Silent Changes of the Semantics
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===============================
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This section lists changes where existing code changes its behaviour without
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the compiler notifying you about it.
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* Arithmetic operations revert on underflow and overflow. You can use ``unchecked { ... }`` to use
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the previous wrapping behaviour.
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Checks for overflow are very common, so we made them the default to increase readability of code,
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even if it comes at a slight increase of gas costs.
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* ABI coder v2 is activated by default.
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You can choose to use the old behaviour using ``pragma abicoder v1;``.
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The pragma ``pragma experimental ABIEncoderV2;`` is still valid, but it is deprecated and has no effect.
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If you want to be explicit, please use ``pragma abicoder v2;`` instead.
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Note that ABI coder v2 supports more types than v1 and performs more sanity checks on the inputs.
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ABI coder v2 makes some function calls more expensive and it can also make contract calls
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revert that did not revert with ABI coder v1 when they contain data that does not conform to the
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parameter types.
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* Exponentiation is right associative, i.e., the expression ``a**b**c`` is parsed as ``a**(b**c)``.
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Before 0.8.0, it was parsed as ``(a**b)**c``.
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This is the common way to parse the exponentiation operator.
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* Failing assertions and other internal checks like division by zero or arithmetic overflow do
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not use the invalid opcode but instead the revert opcode.
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More specifically, they will use error data equal to a function call to ``Panic(uint256)`` with an error code specific
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to the circumstances.
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This will save gas on errors while it still allows static analysis tools to distinguish
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these situations from a revert on invalid input, like a failing ``require``.
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* If a byte array in storage is accessed whose length is encoded incorrectly, a panic is caused.
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A contract cannot get into this situation unless inline assembly is used to modify the raw representation of storage byte arrays.
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* If constants are used in array length expressions, previous versions of Solidity would use arbitrary precision
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in all branches of the evaluation tree. Now, if constant variables are used as intermediate expressions,
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their values will be properly rounded in the same way as when they are used in run-time expressions.
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New Restrictions
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================
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* There are new restrictions related to explicit conversion of literals. The previous behaviour in
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the following cases was likely ambiguous:
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1. Explicit conversions from negative literals and literals larger than ``type(uint160).max`` to
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``address`` are disallowed.
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2. Explicit conversions between literals and an integer type ``T`` are only allowed if the literal
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lies between ``type(T).min`` and ``type(T).max``. In particular, replace usages of ``uint(-1)``
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with ``type(uint).max``.
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3. Explicit conversions between literals and enums are only allowed if the literal can
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represent a value in the enum.
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* There are new restrictions on explicit type conversions. The conversion is only allowed when there
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is at most one change in sign, width or type-category (``int``, ``address``, ``bytesNN``, etc.)
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Let us use the notation ``T(S)`` to denote the explicit conversion ``T(x)``, where, ``T`` and
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``S`` are types, and ``x`` is any arbitrary variable of type ``S``. An example of such a
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disallowed conversion would be ``uint16(int8)`` since it changes both width (8 bits to 16 bits)
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and sign (signed integer to unsigned integer). In order to do the conversion, one has to go
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through an intermediate type. In the previous example, this would be ``uint16(uint8(int8))`` or
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``uint16(int16(int8))``. Note that the two ways to convert will produce different results e.g.,
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for ``-1``. The following are some examples of conversions that are disallowed by this rule.
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- ``address(uint)`` and ``uint(address)``: converting both type-category and width. Replace this by
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``address(uint160(uint))`` and ``uint(uint160(address))`` respectively.
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- ``int80(bytes10)`` and ``bytes10(int80)``: converting both type-category and sign. Replace this by
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``int80(uint80(bytes10))`` and ``bytes10(uint80(int80)`` respectively.
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- ``Contract(uint)``: converting both type-category and width. Replace this by
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``Contract(address(uint160(uint)))``.
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These conversions were disallowed to avoid ambiguity. For example, in the expression ``uint16 x =
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uint16(int8(-1))``, the value of ``x`` would depend on whether the sign or the width conversion
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was applied first.
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* Function call options can only be given once, i.e. ``c.f{gas: 10000}{value: 1}()`` is invalid and has to be changed to ``c.f{gas: 10000, value: 1}()``.
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* The global functions ``log0``, ``log1``, ``log2``, ``log3`` and ``log4`` have been removed.
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These are low-level functions that were largely unused. Their behaviour can be accessed from inline assembly.
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* ``enum`` definitions cannot contain more than 256 members.
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This will make it safe to assume that the underlying type in the ABI is always ``uint8``.
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* Declarations with the name ``this``, ``super`` and ``_`` are disallowed, with the exception of
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public functions and events.
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* Remove support for the ``\b``, ``\f``, and ``\v`` escape sequences in code.
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They can still be inserted via hexadecimal escapes, e.g. ``\x08``, ``\x0c``, and ``\x0b``, respectively.
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* The ``chainid`` builtin in inline assembly is now considered ``view`` instead of ``pure``.
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Interface Changes
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=================
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* Changed output of ``--combined-json``. JSON fields ``abi``, ``devdoc``, ``userdoc`` and ``storage-layout`` are sub-objects now. Before 0.8.0 they used to be serialised as strings.
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