Files
openzeppelin-contracts/contracts/introspection
Nicolás Venturo 5b5d91c9d4 Remove 'external' functions (#2162)
* Remove _grantRole and _revokeRole, replace with _setupRole

* Make all external AccessControl functions public

* Remove Ownable._transferOwnership

* Rename ERC721's _safeTransferFrom and _transferFrom to _safeTransfer and _transfer

* Make all ERC721 external functions public

* Make all miscelaneous external functions public instead

* Add changelog entry

* Move calldata arguments to memory

* Update contracts/access/AccessControl.sol

Co-Authored-By: Francisco Giordano <frangio.1@gmail.com>

* Restrict setupRole to the constructor

* Replace isConstructor for !isContract

Co-authored-by: Francisco Giordano <frangio.1@gmail.com>
2020-04-02 15:29:58 -03:00
..
2020-04-02 15:29:58 -03:00
2020-02-06 18:07:03 -03:00

= Introspection

This set of interfaces and contracts deal with https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_introspection[type introspection] of contracts, that is, examining which functions can be called on them. This is usually referred to as a contract's _interface_.

Ethereum contracts have no native concept of an interface, so applications must usually simply trust they are not making an incorrect call. For trusted setups this is a non-issue, but often unknown and untrusted third-party addresses need to be interacted with. There may even not be any direct calls to them! (e.g. `ERC20` tokens may be sent to a contract that lacks a way to transfer them out of it, locking them forever). In these cases, a contract _declaring_ its interface can be very helpful in preventing errors.

There are two main ways to approach this.

* Locally, where a contract implements `IERC165` and declares an interface, and a second one queries it directly via `ERC165Checker`.
* Globally, where a global and unique registry (`IERC1820Registry`) is used to register implementers of a certain interface (`IERC1820Implementer`). It is then the registry that is queried, which allows for more complex setups, like contracts implementing interfaces for externally-owned accounts.

Note that, in all cases, accounts simply _declare_ their interfaces, but they are not required to actually implement them. This mechanism can therefore be used to both prevent errors and allow for complex interactions (see `ERC777`), but it must not be relied on for security.

== Local

{{IERC165}}

{{ERC165}}

{{ERC165Checker}}

== Global

{{IERC1820Registry}}

{{IERC1820Implementer}}

{{ERC1820Implementer}}