Whirpools is an open-source concentrated liquidity AMM contract on the Solana blockchain. This repository contains the Rust smart contract and SDKs to interact with a deployed program.
The official deployment of the whilrpool contract can be found at the whirLbMiicVdio4qvUfM5KAg6Ct8VwpYzGff3uctyCc
address on:
The contract is deployed using verifiable build, so that you can ensure that the hash of the on-chain program matches the hash of the program in this codebase.
The program has been audited several times by different security firms.
- Jan 28th, 2022 - Kudelski Security
- May 5th, 2022 - Neodyme
- Aug 21st, 2024 - OtterSec
This repository contains several libraries that can be used to interact with the Whirlpools contract. For most purposes you can use our high-level SDKs, @orca-so/whirlpools
for Typescript projects, and orca_whirlpools
for Rust projects.
For specific use-cases you can opt for integrating with lower level packages such as:
@orca-so/whirlpools-client
&orca_whirlpools_client
- auto-generated client for the Whirlpools program that contains account, instruction and error parsing.@orca-so/whirlpools-core
&orca_whirlpools_core
- utility, math and quoting functions used by other packages.
The legacy Typescript SDK (@orca-so/whirlpools-sdk
) remains a solid choice, and it’s currently the only option if your project uses Solana Web3.js versions below v2.
For a more detailed overview of our SDK suite and usage examples, visit our developer documentation site.
This monorepo contains all the code needed to build, deploy and interact with the Whirlpools contract.
- Rust 1.78.0
- Anchor v0.29.0
- Solana v1.17.22
These instructions are for setting up a development environment on a Mac. If you are using a different operating system, you will need to adjust the instructions accordingly.
- Install NodeJS and gcc-12 using
brew install node gcc@12
. - Add gcc-12 headers to your cpath using
export CPATH="/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOSX.sdk/usr/include"
. - Install Rust lang using
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
. - Install the Solana CLI using
curl -sSfL https://release.solana.com/v1.17.22/install | sh
. - Add the Solana CLI to your path using
export PATH="/Users/$(whoami)/.local/share/solana/install/active_release/bin:$PATH"
. - Install Anchor version manager using
cargo install --git https://github.com/coral-xyz/anchor avm --locked --force
. - Install the latest Anchor version using
avm install 0.29.0 && avm use 0.29.0
. - Clone this repository using
git clone https://github.com/orca-so/whirlpools
. - Install the dependencies using
yarn
. - Set up a Solana wallet if you don't have one already (see below).
- Run one of the commands below to get started such as
yarn build
.
- Create a new keypair using
solana-keygen new
. - Check if you have a valid wallet address using
solana address
. - Set your local config to the Solana devnet env using
solana config set --url https://api.devnet.solana.com
. - Give yourself some devnet SOL (for transaction fees) using
solana airdrop 1
. - Check if you have a positive balance using
solana balance
.
This repository uses NX to manage the Rust and Typescript codebases. This allows us to have a monorepo with multiple packages and share code between them. Dependencies between packages are automatically resolved by NX, so you don't have to worry about managing that yourself.
This repository is split up into sevaral parts. The following is a (non-exhaustive) list of the components and their purpose.
/programs/*
- Rust programs that are deployed on Solana./ts-sdk/*
- Typescript SDKs for interacting with the programs./rust-sdk/*
- Rust SDKs for interacting with the programs./docs/*
- Documentation for the programs and SDKs./legacy-sdk/*
- Legacy Typescript SDKs and integration tests.
All commands should be run from the root of the repository. NX will try to run a command with the same name for each individual component, skipping the component if that specific command does not exist.
Below is a (non-exhaustive) list of available commands:
yarn build
- compile the components for deployment or serving.yarn clean
- clean up all local build products, useful for when builds are failing.yarn test
- run the tests for all components.yarn format
- run formatter to format code.
If you look closely, the commands just call individual commands specified in the component's package.json
file. These commands should not be run by themselves as it will not resolve the right dependencies and will not execute the prerequisites. Instead you can specify which package to run with yarn build programs/whirlpool
, yarn test legacy-sdk/whirlpool
, etc.
If you want to stream the logs of a specific command you can add the --output-style stream
flag to the command. This allows you to view the logs of the command as they are being produced which can be useful for longer running tasks like integration tests.
Have problems integrating with the SDK? Pop by over to the Orca Discord #dev-questions channel and chat with one of our engineers.
Got ideas on how to improve the system? Open up an issue on github and let's brainstorm more about it together!