Address Contract Verified
Address
0x42FDB333B407a8f57b571A02B9E01D66852e719D
Balance
0 ETH
Nonce
23
Code Size
2500 bytes
Creator
0x8c16Bc0e...1b68 at tx 0x42b93400...b4c891
Indexed Transactions
0
Contract Bytecode
2500 bytes
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
Verified Source Code Full Match
Compiler: v0.8.25+commit.b61c2a91
EVM: cancun
Optimization: Yes (0 runs)
TwoFiveSixFactoryRoyaltySplitter.sol 134 lines
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
/*
██████╗ ███████╗ ██████╗
╚════██╗██╔════╝██╔════╝
█████╔╝███████╗███████╗
██╔═══╝ ╚════██║██╔═══██╗
███████╗███████║╚██████╔╝
╚══════╝╚══════╝ ╚═════╝
Using this contract?
A shout out to @Mint256Art is appreciated!
*/
pragma solidity ^0.8.25;
import "./helpers/SSTORE2.sol";
import "./helpers/OwnableUpgradeable.sol";
import "./RoyaltySplitter.sol";
/**
* @title TwoFiveSixFactoryRoyaltySplitterV2
* @dev A factory contract for creating and managing instances of RoyaltySplitter contracts.
* Each instance allows for the distribution of funds between specified recipients.
*/
contract TwoFiveSixFactoryRoyaltySplitterV2 is OwnableUpgradeable {
address payable private _twoFiveSixAddress; // The address for the 256ART payment.
address payable public masterRoyaltySplitter; // Template address for creating new RoyaltySplitter instances.
/* Percentage multiplied by 100 */
uint24 public twoFiveSixShareSecondary; // Secondary share percentage for 256ART.
event Deployed(address a); // Event to notify when a new RoyaltySplitter is deployed.
/**
* @notice Initializes the project.
* @dev Initializes the ERC721 contract.
* @param _owner The owner of the contract.
*/
function initFactory(address _owner) public initializer {
__Ownable_init(_owner);
}
/**
* @notice Creates a new instance of the RoyaltySplitter contract with the specified recipients and their shares.
* @param _receivers An array of payable addresses who will receive the funds.
* @param _shares An array of shares corresponding to the receivers. The total must not exceed 10000.
*/
function createRoyaltySplitter(
address payable[] calldata _receivers,
uint24[] calldata _shares
) public {
require(
_receivers[1] == _twoFiveSixAddress,
"Incorrect 256ART address"
);
require(
_shares[1] >= twoFiveSixShareSecondary,
"Incorrect 256ART share"
);
require(sumShares(_shares) <= 10000, "Total shares too high");
address payable newSplitter = clonePayable(masterRoyaltySplitter);
RoyaltySplitterV2 r = RoyaltySplitterV2(newSplitter);
r.initRoyaltySplitter(_receivers, _shares);
emit Deployed(newSplitter);
}
/**
* @notice Helper function to make sure sum of non owner shares =< 10000
* @param _shares The array of shares
*/
function sumShares(
uint24[] calldata _shares
) private pure returns (uint24) {
uint24 sum = 0;
for (uint i = 1; i < _shares.length; i++) {
sum += _shares[i];
}
return sum;
}
/**
* @notice Clones a contract using the provided implementation address
* @param implementation The address of the contract implementation
*/
function clonePayable(
address implementation
) internal returns (address payable instance) {
assembly {
let ptr := mload(0x40)
mstore(
ptr,
0x3d602d80600a3d3981f3363d3d373d3d3d363d73000000000000000000000000
)
mstore(add(ptr, 0x14), shl(0x60, implementation))
mstore(
add(ptr, 0x28),
0x5af43d82803e903d91602b57fd5bf30000000000000000000000000000000000
)
instance := create(0, ptr, 0x37)
}
require(instance != address(0), "ERC1167: create failed");
}
/**
* @dev Sets the address for 256ART payments.
* @param newAddress The new address to be set.
*/
function setTwoFiveSixAddress(address payable newAddress) public onlyOwner {
_twoFiveSixAddress = newAddress;
}
/**
* @dev Sets the master address for creating RoyaltySplitter instances.
* @param _masterRoyaltySplitter The new master RoyaltySplitter address.
*/
function setMasterRoyaltySplitter(
address payable _masterRoyaltySplitter
) public onlyOwner {
masterRoyaltySplitter = _masterRoyaltySplitter;
}
/**
* @dev Sets the secondary share for 256ART.
* @param newShare The new secondary share value.
*/
function setTwoFiveSixShareSecondary(uint24 newShare) public onlyOwner {
twoFiveSixShareSecondary = newShare;
}
}
Initializable.sol 228 lines
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
// OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v5.0.0) (proxy/utils/Initializable.sol)
pragma solidity ^0.8.20;
/**
* @dev This is a base contract to aid in writing upgradeable contracts, or any kind of contract that will be deployed
* behind a proxy. Since proxied contracts do not make use of a constructor, it's common to move constructor logic to an
* external initializer function, usually called `initialize`. It then becomes necessary to protect this initializer
* function so it can only be called once. The {initializer} modifier provided by this contract will have this effect.
*
* The initialization functions use a version number. Once a version number is used, it is consumed and cannot be
* reused. This mechanism prevents re-execution of each "step" but allows the creation of new initialization steps in
* case an upgrade adds a module that needs to be initialized.
*
* For example:
*
* [.hljs-theme-light.nopadding]
* ```solidity
* contract MyToken is ERC20Upgradeable {
* function initialize() initializer public {
* __ERC20_init("MyToken", "MTK");
* }
* }
*
* contract MyTokenV2 is MyToken, ERC20PermitUpgradeable {
* function initializeV2() reinitializer(2) public {
* __ERC20Permit_init("MyToken");
* }
* }
* ```
*
* TIP: To avoid leaving the proxy in an uninitialized state, the initializer function should be called as early as
* possible by providing the encoded function call as the `_data` argument to {ERC1967Proxy-constructor}.
*
* CAUTION: When used with inheritance, manual care must be taken to not invoke a parent initializer twice, or to ensure
* that all initializers are idempotent. This is not verified automatically as constructors are by Solidity.
*
* [CAUTION]
* ====
* Avoid leaving a contract uninitialized.
*
* An uninitialized contract can be taken over by an attacker. This applies to both a proxy and its implementation
* contract, which may impact the proxy. To prevent the implementation contract from being used, you should invoke
* the {_disableInitializers} function in the constructor to automatically lock it when it is deployed:
*
* [.hljs-theme-light.nopadding]
* ```
* /// @custom:oz-upgrades-unsafe-allow constructor
* constructor() {
* _disableInitializers();
* }
* ```
* ====
*/
abstract contract Initializable {
/**
* @dev Storage of the initializable contract.
*
* It's implemented on a custom ERC-7201 namespace to reduce the risk of storage collisions
* when using with upgradeable contracts.
*
* @custom:storage-location erc7201:openzeppelin.storage.Initializable
*/
struct InitializableStorage {
/**
* @dev Indicates that the contract has been initialized.
*/
uint64 _initialized;
/**
* @dev Indicates that the contract is in the process of being initialized.
*/
bool _initializing;
}
// keccak256(abi.encode(uint256(keccak256("openzeppelin.storage.Initializable")) - 1)) & ~bytes32(uint256(0xff))
bytes32 private constant INITIALIZABLE_STORAGE = 0xf0c57e16840df040f15088dc2f81fe391c3923bec73e23a9662efc9c229c6a00;
/**
* @dev The contract is already initialized.
*/
error InvalidInitialization();
/**
* @dev The contract is not initializing.
*/
error NotInitializing();
/**
* @dev Triggered when the contract has been initialized or reinitialized.
*/
event Initialized(uint64 version);
/**
* @dev A modifier that defines a protected initializer function that can be invoked at most once. In its scope,
* `onlyInitializing` functions can be used to initialize parent contracts.
*
* Similar to `reinitializer(1)`, except that in the context of a constructor an `initializer` may be invoked any
* number of times. This behavior in the constructor can be useful during testing and is not expected to be used in
* production.
*
* Emits an {Initialized} event.
*/
modifier initializer() {
// solhint-disable-next-line var-name-mixedcase
InitializableStorage storage $ = _getInitializableStorage();
// Cache values to avoid duplicated sloads
bool isTopLevelCall = !$._initializing;
uint64 initialized = $._initialized;
// Allowed calls:
// - initialSetup: the contract is not in the initializing state and no previous version was
// initialized
// - construction: the contract is initialized at version 1 (no reininitialization) and the
// current contract is just being deployed
bool initialSetup = initialized == 0 && isTopLevelCall;
bool construction = initialized == 1 && address(this).code.length == 0;
if (!initialSetup && !construction) {
revert InvalidInitialization();
}
$._initialized = 1;
if (isTopLevelCall) {
$._initializing = true;
}
_;
if (isTopLevelCall) {
$._initializing = false;
emit Initialized(1);
}
}
/**
* @dev A modifier that defines a protected reinitializer function that can be invoked at most once, and only if the
* contract hasn't been initialized to a greater version before. In its scope, `onlyInitializing` functions can be
* used to initialize parent contracts.
*
* A reinitializer may be used after the original initialization step. This is essential to configure modules that
* are added through upgrades and that require initialization.
*
* When `version` is 1, this modifier is similar to `initializer`, except that functions marked with `reinitializer`
* cannot be nested. If one is invoked in the context of another, execution will revert.
*
* Note that versions can jump in increments greater than 1; this implies that if multiple reinitializers coexist in
* a contract, executing them in the right order is up to the developer or operator.
*
* WARNING: Setting the version to 2**64 - 1 will prevent any future reinitialization.
*
* Emits an {Initialized} event.
*/
modifier reinitializer(uint64 version) {
// solhint-disable-next-line var-name-mixedcase
InitializableStorage storage $ = _getInitializableStorage();
if ($._initializing || $._initialized >= version) {
revert InvalidInitialization();
}
$._initialized = version;
$._initializing = true;
_;
$._initializing = false;
emit Initialized(version);
}
/**
* @dev Modifier to protect an initialization function so that it can only be invoked by functions with the
* {initializer} and {reinitializer} modifiers, directly or indirectly.
*/
modifier onlyInitializing() {
_checkInitializing();
_;
}
/**
* @dev Reverts if the contract is not in an initializing state. See {onlyInitializing}.
*/
function _checkInitializing() internal view virtual {
if (!_isInitializing()) {
revert NotInitializing();
}
}
/**
* @dev Locks the contract, preventing any future reinitialization. This cannot be part of an initializer call.
* Calling this in the constructor of a contract will prevent that contract from being initialized or reinitialized
* to any version. It is recommended to use this to lock implementation contracts that are designed to be called
* through proxies.
*
* Emits an {Initialized} event the first time it is successfully executed.
*/
function _disableInitializers() internal virtual {
// solhint-disable-next-line var-name-mixedcase
InitializableStorage storage $ = _getInitializableStorage();
if ($._initializing) {
revert InvalidInitialization();
}
if ($._initialized != type(uint64).max) {
$._initialized = type(uint64).max;
emit Initialized(type(uint64).max);
}
}
/**
* @dev Returns the highest version that has been initialized. See {reinitializer}.
*/
function _getInitializedVersion() internal view returns (uint64) {
return _getInitializableStorage()._initialized;
}
/**
* @dev Returns `true` if the contract is currently initializing. See {onlyInitializing}.
*/
function _isInitializing() internal view returns (bool) {
return _getInitializableStorage()._initializing;
}
/**
* @dev Returns a pointer to the storage namespace.
*/
// solhint-disable-next-line var-name-mixedcase
function _getInitializableStorage() private pure returns (InitializableStorage storage $) {
assembly {
$.slot := INITIALIZABLE_STORAGE
}
}
}
ContextUpgradeable.sol 34 lines
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
// OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v5.0.1) (utils/Context.sol)
pragma solidity ^0.8.20;
import {Initializable} from "../proxy/utils/Initializable.sol";
/**
* @dev Provides information about the current execution context, including the
* sender of the transaction and its data. While these are generally available
* via msg.sender and msg.data, they should not be accessed in such a direct
* manner, since when dealing with meta-transactions the account sending and
* paying for execution may not be the actual sender (as far as an application
* is concerned).
*
* This contract is only required for intermediate, library-like contracts.
*/
abstract contract ContextUpgradeable is Initializable {
function __Context_init() internal onlyInitializing {
}
function __Context_init_unchained() internal onlyInitializing {
}
function _msgSender() internal view virtual returns (address) {
return msg.sender;
}
function _msgData() internal view virtual returns (bytes calldata) {
return msg.data;
}
function _contextSuffixLength() internal view virtual returns (uint256) {
return 0;
}
}
IERC20.sol 79 lines
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
// OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v5.0.0) (token/ERC20/IERC20.sol)
pragma solidity ^0.8.20;
/**
* @dev Interface of the ERC20 standard as defined in the EIP.
*/
interface IERC20 {
/**
* @dev Emitted when `value` tokens are moved from one account (`from`) to
* another (`to`).
*
* Note that `value` may be zero.
*/
event Transfer(address indexed from, address indexed to, uint256 value);
/**
* @dev Emitted when the allowance of a `spender` for an `owner` is set by
* a call to {approve}. `value` is the new allowance.
*/
event Approval(address indexed owner, address indexed spender, uint256 value);
/**
* @dev Returns the value of tokens in existence.
*/
function totalSupply() external view returns (uint256);
/**
* @dev Returns the value of tokens owned by `account`.
*/
function balanceOf(address account) external view returns (uint256);
/**
* @dev Moves a `value` amount of tokens from the caller's account to `to`.
*
* Returns a boolean value indicating whether the operation succeeded.
*
* Emits a {Transfer} event.
*/
function transfer(address to, uint256 value) external returns (bool);
/**
* @dev Returns the remaining number of tokens that `spender` will be
* allowed to spend on behalf of `owner` through {transferFrom}. This is
* zero by default.
*
* This value changes when {approve} or {transferFrom} are called.
*/
function allowance(address owner, address spender) external view returns (uint256);
/**
* @dev Sets a `value` amount of tokens as the allowance of `spender` over the
* caller's tokens.
*
* Returns a boolean value indicating whether the operation succeeded.
*
* IMPORTANT: Beware that changing an allowance with this method brings the risk
* that someone may use both the old and the new allowance by unfortunate
* transaction ordering. One possible solution to mitigate this race
* condition is to first reduce the spender's allowance to 0 and set the
* desired value afterwards:
* https://github.com/ethereum/EIPs/issues/20#issuecomment-263524729
*
* Emits an {Approval} event.
*/
function approve(address spender, uint256 value) external returns (bool);
/**
* @dev Moves a `value` amount of tokens from `from` to `to` using the
* allowance mechanism. `value` is then deducted from the caller's
* allowance.
*
* Returns a boolean value indicating whether the operation succeeded.
*
* Emits a {Transfer} event.
*/
function transferFrom(address from, address to, uint256 value) external returns (bool);
}
IERC20Permit.sol 90 lines
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
// OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v5.0.0) (token/ERC20/extensions/IERC20Permit.sol)
pragma solidity ^0.8.20;
/**
* @dev Interface of the ERC20 Permit extension allowing approvals to be made via signatures, as defined in
* https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-2612[EIP-2612].
*
* Adds the {permit} method, which can be used to change an account's ERC20 allowance (see {IERC20-allowance}) by
* presenting a message signed by the account. By not relying on {IERC20-approve}, the token holder account doesn't
* need to send a transaction, and thus is not required to hold Ether at all.
*
* ==== Security Considerations
*
* There are two important considerations concerning the use of `permit`. The first is that a valid permit signature
* expresses an allowance, and it should not be assumed to convey additional meaning. In particular, it should not be
* considered as an intention to spend the allowance in any specific way. The second is that because permits have
* built-in replay protection and can be submitted by anyone, they can be frontrun. A protocol that uses permits should
* take this into consideration and allow a `permit` call to fail. Combining these two aspects, a pattern that may be
* generally recommended is:
*
* ```solidity
* function doThingWithPermit(..., uint256 value, uint256 deadline, uint8 v, bytes32 r, bytes32 s) public {
* try token.permit(msg.sender, address(this), value, deadline, v, r, s) {} catch {}
* doThing(..., value);
* }
*
* function doThing(..., uint256 value) public {
* token.safeTransferFrom(msg.sender, address(this), value);
* ...
* }
* ```
*
* Observe that: 1) `msg.sender` is used as the owner, leaving no ambiguity as to the signer intent, and 2) the use of
* `try/catch` allows the permit to fail and makes the code tolerant to frontrunning. (See also
* {SafeERC20-safeTransferFrom}).
*
* Additionally, note that smart contract wallets (such as Argent or Safe) are not able to produce permit signatures, so
* contracts should have entry points that don't rely on permit.
*/
interface IERC20Permit {
/**
* @dev Sets `value` as the allowance of `spender` over ``owner``'s tokens,
* given ``owner``'s signed approval.
*
* IMPORTANT: The same issues {IERC20-approve} has related to transaction
* ordering also apply here.
*
* Emits an {Approval} event.
*
* Requirements:
*
* - `spender` cannot be the zero address.
* - `deadline` must be a timestamp in the future.
* - `v`, `r` and `s` must be a valid `secp256k1` signature from `owner`
* over the EIP712-formatted function arguments.
* - the signature must use ``owner``'s current nonce (see {nonces}).
*
* For more information on the signature format, see the
* https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-2612#specification[relevant EIP
* section].
*
* CAUTION: See Security Considerations above.
*/
function permit(
address owner,
address spender,
uint256 value,
uint256 deadline,
uint8 v,
bytes32 r,
bytes32 s
) external;
/**
* @dev Returns the current nonce for `owner`. This value must be
* included whenever a signature is generated for {permit}.
*
* Every successful call to {permit} increases ``owner``'s nonce by one. This
* prevents a signature from being used multiple times.
*/
function nonces(address owner) external view returns (uint256);
/**
* @dev Returns the domain separator used in the encoding of the signature for {permit}, as defined by {EIP712}.
*/
// solhint-disable-next-line func-name-mixedcase
function DOMAIN_SEPARATOR() external view returns (bytes32);
}
SafeERC20.sol 118 lines
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
// OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v5.0.0) (token/ERC20/utils/SafeERC20.sol)
pragma solidity ^0.8.20;
import {IERC20} from "../IERC20.sol";
import {IERC20Permit} from "../extensions/IERC20Permit.sol";
import {Address} from "../../../utils/Address.sol";
/**
* @title SafeERC20
* @dev Wrappers around ERC20 operations that throw on failure (when the token
* contract returns false). Tokens that return no value (and instead revert or
* throw on failure) are also supported, non-reverting calls are assumed to be
* successful.
* To use this library you can add a `using SafeERC20 for IERC20;` statement to your contract,
* which allows you to call the safe operations as `token.safeTransfer(...)`, etc.
*/
library SafeERC20 {
using Address for address;
/**
* @dev An operation with an ERC20 token failed.
*/
error SafeERC20FailedOperation(address token);
/**
* @dev Indicates a failed `decreaseAllowance` request.
*/
error SafeERC20FailedDecreaseAllowance(address spender, uint256 currentAllowance, uint256 requestedDecrease);
/**
* @dev Transfer `value` amount of `token` from the calling contract to `to`. If `token` returns no value,
* non-reverting calls are assumed to be successful.
*/
function safeTransfer(IERC20 token, address to, uint256 value) internal {
_callOptionalReturn(token, abi.encodeCall(token.transfer, (to, value)));
}
/**
* @dev Transfer `value` amount of `token` from `from` to `to`, spending the approval given by `from` to the
* calling contract. If `token` returns no value, non-reverting calls are assumed to be successful.
*/
function safeTransferFrom(IERC20 token, address from, address to, uint256 value) internal {
_callOptionalReturn(token, abi.encodeCall(token.transferFrom, (from, to, value)));
}
/**
* @dev Increase the calling contract's allowance toward `spender` by `value`. If `token` returns no value,
* non-reverting calls are assumed to be successful.
*/
function safeIncreaseAllowance(IERC20 token, address spender, uint256 value) internal {
uint256 oldAllowance = token.allowance(address(this), spender);
forceApprove(token, spender, oldAllowance + value);
}
/**
* @dev Decrease the calling contract's allowance toward `spender` by `requestedDecrease`. If `token` returns no
* value, non-reverting calls are assumed to be successful.
*/
function safeDecreaseAllowance(IERC20 token, address spender, uint256 requestedDecrease) internal {
unchecked {
uint256 currentAllowance = token.allowance(address(this), spender);
if (currentAllowance < requestedDecrease) {
revert SafeERC20FailedDecreaseAllowance(spender, currentAllowance, requestedDecrease);
}
forceApprove(token, spender, currentAllowance - requestedDecrease);
}
}
/**
* @dev Set the calling contract's allowance toward `spender` to `value`. If `token` returns no value,
* non-reverting calls are assumed to be successful. Meant to be used with tokens that require the approval
* to be set to zero before setting it to a non-zero value, such as USDT.
*/
function forceApprove(IERC20 token, address spender, uint256 value) internal {
bytes memory approvalCall = abi.encodeCall(token.approve, (spender, value));
if (!_callOptionalReturnBool(token, approvalCall)) {
_callOptionalReturn(token, abi.encodeCall(token.approve, (spender, 0)));
_callOptionalReturn(token, approvalCall);
}
}
/**
* @dev Imitates a Solidity high-level call (i.e. a regular function call to a contract), relaxing the requirement
* on the return value: the return value is optional (but if data is returned, it must not be false).
* @param token The token targeted by the call.
* @param data The call data (encoded using abi.encode or one of its variants).
*/
function _callOptionalReturn(IERC20 token, bytes memory data) private {
// We need to perform a low level call here, to bypass Solidity's return data size checking mechanism, since
// we're implementing it ourselves. We use {Address-functionCall} to perform this call, which verifies that
// the target address contains contract code and also asserts for success in the low-level call.
bytes memory returndata = address(token).functionCall(data);
if (returndata.length != 0 && !abi.decode(returndata, (bool))) {
revert SafeERC20FailedOperation(address(token));
}
}
/**
* @dev Imitates a Solidity high-level call (i.e. a regular function call to a contract), relaxing the requirement
* on the return value: the return value is optional (but if data is returned, it must not be false).
* @param token The token targeted by the call.
* @param data The call data (encoded using abi.encode or one of its variants).
*
* This is a variant of {_callOptionalReturn} that silents catches all reverts and returns a bool instead.
*/
function _callOptionalReturnBool(IERC20 token, bytes memory data) private returns (bool) {
// We need to perform a low level call here, to bypass Solidity's return data size checking mechanism, since
// we're implementing it ourselves. We cannot use {Address-functionCall} here since this should return false
// and not revert is the subcall reverts.
(bool success, bytes memory returndata) = address(token).call(data);
return success && (returndata.length == 0 || abi.decode(returndata, (bool))) && address(token).code.length > 0;
}
}
Address.sol 159 lines
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
// OpenZeppelin Contracts (last updated v5.0.0) (utils/Address.sol)
pragma solidity ^0.8.20;
/**
* @dev Collection of functions related to the address type
*/
library Address {
/**
* @dev The ETH balance of the account is not enough to perform the operation.
*/
error AddressInsufficientBalance(address account);
/**
* @dev There's no code at `target` (it is not a contract).
*/
error AddressEmptyCode(address target);
/**
* @dev A call to an address target failed. The target may have reverted.
*/
error FailedInnerCall();
/**
* @dev Replacement for Solidity's `transfer`: sends `amount` wei to
* `recipient`, forwarding all available gas and reverting on errors.
*
* https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-1884[EIP1884] increases the gas cost
* of certain opcodes, possibly making contracts go over the 2300 gas limit
* imposed by `transfer`, making them unable to receive funds via
* `transfer`. {sendValue} removes this limitation.
*
* https://consensys.net/diligence/blog/2019/09/stop-using-soliditys-transfer-now/[Learn more].
*
* IMPORTANT: because control is transferred to `recipient`, care must be
* taken to not create reentrancy vulnerabilities. Consider using
* {ReentrancyGuard} or the
* https://solidity.readthedocs.io/en/v0.8.20/security-considerations.html#use-the-checks-effects-interactions-pattern[checks-effects-interactions pattern].
*/
function sendValue(address payable recipient, uint256 amount) internal {
if (address(this).balance < amount) {
revert AddressInsufficientBalance(address(this));
}
(bool success, ) = recipient.call{value: amount}("");
if (!success) {
revert FailedInnerCall();
}
}
/**
* @dev Performs a Solidity function call using a low level `call`. A
* plain `call` is an unsafe replacement for a function call: use this
* function instead.
*
* If `target` reverts with a revert reason or custom error, it is bubbled
* up by this function (like regular Solidity function calls). However, if
* the call reverted with no returned reason, this function reverts with a
* {FailedInnerCall} error.
*
* Returns the raw returned data. To convert to the expected return value,
* use https://solidity.readthedocs.io/en/latest/units-and-global-variables.html?highlight=abi.decode#abi-encoding-and-decoding-functions[`abi.decode`].
*
* Requirements:
*
* - `target` must be a contract.
* - calling `target` with `data` must not revert.
*/
function functionCall(address target, bytes memory data) internal returns (bytes memory) {
return functionCallWithValue(target, data, 0);
}
/**
* @dev Same as {xref-Address-functionCall-address-bytes-}[`functionCall`],
* but also transferring `value` wei to `target`.
*
* Requirements:
*
* - the calling contract must have an ETH balance of at least `value`.
* - the called Solidity function must be `payable`.
*/
function functionCallWithValue(address target, bytes memory data, uint256 value) internal returns (bytes memory) {
if (address(this).balance < value) {
revert AddressInsufficientBalance(address(this));
}
(bool success, bytes memory returndata) = target.call{value: value}(data);
return verifyCallResultFromTarget(target, success, returndata);
}
/**
* @dev Same as {xref-Address-functionCall-address-bytes-}[`functionCall`],
* but performing a static call.
*/
function functionStaticCall(address target, bytes memory data) internal view returns (bytes memory) {
(bool success, bytes memory returndata) = target.staticcall(data);
return verifyCallResultFromTarget(target, success, returndata);
}
/**
* @dev Same as {xref-Address-functionCall-address-bytes-}[`functionCall`],
* but performing a delegate call.
*/
function functionDelegateCall(address target, bytes memory data) internal returns (bytes memory) {
(bool success, bytes memory returndata) = target.delegatecall(data);
return verifyCallResultFromTarget(target, success, returndata);
}
/**
* @dev Tool to verify that a low level call to smart-contract was successful, and reverts if the target
* was not a contract or bubbling up the revert reason (falling back to {FailedInnerCall}) in case of an
* unsuccessful call.
*/
function verifyCallResultFromTarget(
address target,
bool success,
bytes memory returndata
) internal view returns (bytes memory) {
if (!success) {
_revert(returndata);
} else {
// only check if target is a contract if the call was successful and the return data is empty
// otherwise we already know that it was a contract
if (returndata.length == 0 && target.code.length == 0) {
revert AddressEmptyCode(target);
}
return returndata;
}
}
/**
* @dev Tool to verify that a low level call was successful, and reverts if it wasn't, either by bubbling the
* revert reason or with a default {FailedInnerCall} error.
*/
function verifyCallResult(bool success, bytes memory returndata) internal pure returns (bytes memory) {
if (!success) {
_revert(returndata);
} else {
return returndata;
}
}
/**
* @dev Reverts with returndata if present. Otherwise reverts with {FailedInnerCall}.
*/
function _revert(bytes memory returndata) private pure {
// Look for revert reason and bubble it up if present
if (returndata.length > 0) {
// The easiest way to bubble the revert reason is using memory via assembly
/// @solidity memory-safe-assembly
assembly {
let returndata_size := mload(returndata)
revert(add(32, returndata), returndata_size)
}
} else {
revert FailedInnerCall();
}
}
}
RoyaltySplitter.sol 101 lines
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
/*
██████╗ ███████╗ ██████╗
╚════██╗██╔════╝██╔════╝
█████╔╝███████╗███████╗
██╔═══╝ ╚════██║██╔═══██╗
███████╗███████║╚██████╔╝
╚══════╝╚══════╝ ╚═════╝
Using this contract?
A shout out to @Mint256Art is appreciated!
*/
pragma solidity ^0.8.25;
import "@openzeppelin/contracts-upgradeable/proxy/utils/Initializable.sol";
import "@openzeppelin/contracts/token/ERC20/utils/SafeERC20.sol";
/**
* @title RoyaltySplitter
* @dev This contract allows for the automatic splitting of Ether and ERC20 tokens among a group of recipients.
* The recipients and their respective shares are initialized on deployment and are immutable thereafter.
*/
contract RoyaltySplitterV2 is Initializable {
address payable[] public receivers; // Array of recipients (e.g., 0 will be owner, 1 will be 256ART)
uint24[] public shares; // Corresponding shares of each recipient, with the total summing up to 10000.
/**
* @notice Initializes the contract with the specified receivers and their corresponding shares.
* @param _receivers List of payable addresses of the recipients.
* @param _shares List of shares corresponding to each recipient in the _receivers array.
* @dev The function is marked with the `initializer` modifier to ensure that it is called only once.
*/
function initRoyaltySplitter(
address payable[] calldata _receivers,
uint24[] calldata _shares
) public initializer {
receivers = _receivers;
shares = _shares;
}
/**
* @notice Allows the artist or twoFiveSix to withdraw their share from the contract's balance
* @dev When either the artist or twoFiveSix calls this function, their respective share will be sent to both parties
* based on the predefined shares. This function handles only the withdrawal of native Ether.
*/
function withdraw() public {
require(
(msg.sender == receivers[0] || msg.sender == receivers[1]),
"Not allowed"
);
uint256 totalBalance = address(this).balance;
// Distribute balance to all but the first receiver
for (uint256 i = 1; i < receivers.length; ) {
unchecked {
uint256 payment = (totalBalance * shares[i]) / 10000;
receivers[i].transfer(payment);
i++;
}
}
// Transfer any remaining balance to the first receiver
uint256 remainingBalance = address(this).balance;
receivers[0].transfer(remainingBalance);
}
/**
* @notice Allows the stakeholders to withdraw their share of the specified ERC20 token balance
* @param token The ERC20 token contract address from which funds are to be withdrawn
* @dev Ensures that the call is made by either the first or second receiver.
*/
function withdrawToken(IERC20 token) public {
require(
(msg.sender == receivers[0] || msg.sender == receivers[1]),
"Not allowed"
);
uint256 totalBalance = token.balanceOf(address(this));
// Initially distribute to all receivers based on their shares
for (uint256 i = 1; i < receivers.length; ) {
unchecked {
uint256 amount = (totalBalance * shares[i]) / 10000;
SafeERC20.safeTransfer(token, receivers[i], amount);
i++;
}
}
// Transfer remaining balance to the first receiver
uint256 remainingBalance = token.balanceOf(address(this));
SafeERC20.safeTransfer(token, receivers[0], remainingBalance);
}
/**
* @dev Fallback function to allow the contract to receive Ether directly.
*/
receive() external payable {}
}
Bytecode.sol 89 lines
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
pragma solidity ^0.8.25;
library Bytecode {
error InvalidCodeAtRange(uint256 _size, uint256 _start, uint256 _end);
/**
@notice Generate a creation code that results on a contract with `_code` as bytecode
@param _code The returning value of the resulting `creationCode`
@return creationCode (constructor) for new contract
*/
function creationCodeFor(
bytes memory _code
) internal pure returns (bytes memory) {
/*
0x00 0x63 0x63XXXXXX PUSH4 _code.length size
0x01 0x80 0x80 DUP1 size size
0x02 0x60 0x600e PUSH1 14 14 size size
0x03 0x60 0x6000 PUSH1 00 0 14 size size
0x04 0x39 0x39 CODECOPY size
0x05 0x60 0x6000 PUSH1 00 0 size
0x06 0xf3 0xf3 RETURN
<CODE>
*/
return
abi.encodePacked(
hex"63",
uint32(_code.length),
hex"80_60_0E_60_00_39_60_00_F3",
_code
);
}
/**
@notice Returns the size of the code on a given address
@param _addr Address that may or may not contain code
@return size of the code on the given `_addr`
*/
function codeSize(address _addr) internal view returns (uint256 size) {
assembly {
size := extcodesize(_addr)
}
}
/**
@notice Returns the code of a given address
@dev It will fail if `_end < _start`
@param _addr Address that may or may not contain code
@param _start number of bytes of code to skip on read
@param _end index before which to end extraction
@return oCode read from `_addr` deployed bytecode
Forked from: https://gist.github.com/KardanovIR/fe98661df9338c842b4a30306d507fbd
*/
function codeAt(
address _addr,
uint256 _start,
uint256 _end
) internal view returns (bytes memory oCode) {
uint256 csize = codeSize(_addr);
if (csize == 0) return bytes("");
if (_start > csize) return bytes("");
if (_end < _start) revert InvalidCodeAtRange(csize, _start, _end);
unchecked {
uint256 reqSize = _end - _start;
uint256 maxSize = csize - _start;
uint256 size = maxSize < reqSize ? maxSize : reqSize;
assembly {
// allocate output byte array - this could also be done without assembly
// by using o_code = new bytes(size)
oCode := mload(0x40)
// new "memory end" including padding
mstore(
0x40,
add(oCode, and(add(add(size, 0x20), 0x1f), not(0x1f)))
)
// store length in memory
mstore(oCode, size)
// actually retrieve the code, this needs assembly
extcodecopy(_addr, add(oCode, 0x20), _start, size)
}
}
}
}
OwnableUpgradeable.sol 92 lines
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
// OpenZeppelin Contracts v4.4.1 (access/Ownable.sol)
pragma solidity ^0.8.25;
import "@openzeppelin/contracts-upgradeable/utils/ContextUpgradeable.sol";
/**
* @dev Contract module which provides a basic access control mechanism, where
* there is an account (an owner) that can be granted exclusive access to
* specific functions.
*
* By default, the owner account will be the one that deploys the contract. This
* can later be changed with {transferOwnership}.
*
* This module is used through inheritance. It will make available the modifier
* `onlyOwner`, which can be applied to your functions to restrict their use to
* the owner.
*/
abstract contract OwnableUpgradeable is Initializable, ContextUpgradeable {
address private _owner;
event OwnershipTransferred(
address indexed previousOwner,
address indexed newOwner
);
/**
* @dev Initializes the contract setting the deployer as the initial owner.
*/
function __Ownable_init(address _ownerOnInit) internal onlyInitializing {
__Ownable_init_unchained(_ownerOnInit);
}
function __Ownable_init_unchained(
address _ownerOnInit
) internal onlyInitializing {
_transferOwnership(_ownerOnInit);
}
/**
* @dev Returns the address of the current owner.
*/
function owner() public view virtual returns (address) {
return _owner;
}
/**
* @dev Throws if called by any account other than the owner.
*/
modifier onlyOwner() {
require(owner() == _msgSender(), "Not owner");
_;
}
/**
* @dev Leaves the contract without owner. It will not be possible to call
* `onlyOwner` functions anymore. Can only be called by the current owner.
*
* NOTE: Renouncing ownership will leave the contract without an owner,
* thereby removing any functionality that is only available to the owner.
*/
function renounceOwnership() public virtual onlyOwner {
_transferOwnership(address(0));
}
/**
* @dev Transfers ownership of the contract to a new account (`newOwner`).
* Can only be called by the current owner.
*/
function transferOwnership(address newOwner) public virtual onlyOwner {
require(newOwner != address(0), "No zero address");
_transferOwnership(newOwner);
}
/**
* @dev Transfers ownership of the contract to a new account (`newOwner`).
* Internal function without access restriction.
*/
function _transferOwnership(address newOwner) internal virtual {
address oldOwner = _owner;
_owner = newOwner;
emit OwnershipTransferred(oldOwner, newOwner);
}
/**
* @dev This empty reserved space is put in place to allow future versions to add new
* variables without shifting down storage in the inheritance chain.
* See https://docs.openzeppelin.com/contracts/4.x/upgradeable#storage_gaps
*/
uint256[49] private __gap;
}
SSTORE2.sol 70 lines
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
pragma solidity ^0.8.25;
import "./Bytecode.sol";
library SSTORE2 {
error WriteError();
/**
@notice Stores `_data` and returns `pointer` as key for later retrieval
@dev The pointer is a contract address with `_data` as code
@param _data to be written
@return pointer Pointer to the written `_data`
*/
function write(bytes memory _data) internal returns (address pointer) {
// Append 00 to _data so contract can't be called
// Build init code
bytes memory code = Bytecode.creationCodeFor(
abi.encodePacked(hex"00", _data)
);
// Deploy contract using create
assembly {
pointer := create(0, add(code, 32), mload(code))
}
// Address MUST be non-zero
if (pointer == address(0)) revert WriteError();
}
/**
@notice Reads the contents of the `_pointer` code as data, skips the first byte
@dev The function is intended for reading pointers generated by `write`
@param _pointer to be read
@return data read from `_pointer` contract
*/
function read(address _pointer) internal view returns (bytes memory) {
return Bytecode.codeAt(_pointer, 1, type(uint256).max);
}
/**
@notice Reads the contents of the `_pointer` code as data, skips the first byte
@dev The function is intended for reading pointers generated by `write`
@param _pointer to be read
@param _start number of bytes to skip
@return data read from `_pointer` contract
*/
function read(
address _pointer,
uint256 _start
) internal view returns (bytes memory) {
return Bytecode.codeAt(_pointer, _start + 1, type(uint256).max);
}
/**
@notice Reads the contents of the `_pointer` code as data, skips the first byte
@dev The function is intended for reading pointers generated by `write`
@param _pointer to be read
@param _start number of bytes to skip
@param _end index before which to end extraction
@return data read from `_pointer` contract
*/
function read(
address _pointer,
uint256 _start,
uint256 _end
) internal view returns (bytes memory) {
return Bytecode.codeAt(_pointer, _start + 1, _end + 1);
}
}
Read Contract
masterRoyaltySplitter 0x38cf1eeb → address
owner 0x8da5cb5b → address
twoFiveSixShareSecondary 0xf01ac1bd → uint24
Write Contract 7 functions
These functions modify contract state and require a wallet transaction to execute.
createRoyaltySplitter 0xc50aeee0
address[] _receivers
uint24[] _shares
initFactory 0x89106fb9
address _owner
renounceOwnership 0x715018a6
No parameters
setMasterRoyaltySplitter 0x328e4640
address _masterRoyaltySplitter
setTwoFiveSixAddress 0x5ab665f5
address newAddress
setTwoFiveSixShareSecondary 0xcc64c6fb
uint24 newShare
transferOwnership 0xf2fde38b
address newOwner
Recent Transactions
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