npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@eth-optimism/tokenlist

v10.0.169

Published

[Optimism] token list

Downloads

3,987

Readme

Superchain Token List

The Superchain token list is a list of tokens managed by the maintainers of this repo that have been deployed on Superchains including the OP Mainnet and Base. It serves as a source of truth for services such as the Optimism bridge UI.

It is worth noting that the Superchain Token List makes a distinction between token deployment / bridging and list curation. Tokens can be deployed / bridged in a permissionless manner, anyone can deploy / bridge a token on the Superchain.

Please note that by adding a token to the list we aren’t making any claims about the token itself; tokens are not reviewed for their quality, merits, or soundness as investments.

Review process and merge criteria

Process overview

  1. Follow the instructions below to create a PR that would add your token to the list.
  2. Wait for a reviewer to kick off the automated checks.
  3. After the automated checks pass and a reviewer approves the PR, then it will automatically be merged.

Note: The standard bridge does not support certain ERC-20 configurations:

Specifying chains

For right now, each OP Chain has their own review process. So, if you are adding tokens across multiple chains, please separate your pull request so that you have one PR for each chain, in order to streamline the review process.

  • If you're adding a token to Base (e.g. base [mainnet] or base-sepolia [testnet]), instead of using the predeploy token factory on Base, we recommend you use the token factory listed here to avoid having a token address that may conflict with a different token on Optimism.
  • If you are adding a token to Zora: please use the zora label and add @tbtstl as a reviewer.
  • If you are adding a token to Mode: please use the mode label.
  • If you are adding a token to Lisk (e.g. lisk [mainnet] or lisk-sepolia [testnet]): please use the lisk label and add @shuse2 as a reviewer.

Automated checks

Our CI performs a series of automated checks on every PR. These automated checks take place as part of the Validate PR check. Some issues raised by CI will trigger an error and must be resolved before your PR will be approved. These issues are marked below as "auto-reject" issues. Other issues will surface a warning, and will require a manual review from a reviewer. These issues are marked below as "requires manual review".

  • Given tokens actually exist on all specified chains (auto-reject)
  • L1 tokens are verified on Etherscan (auto-reject)
  • Description is under 1000 characters (auto-reject)
  • Token name, symbol, and decimals matches on-chain data (auto-reject)
    • If overrides are used (requires manual review)
  • L2 token was deployed by the StandardTokenFactory or is an L2StandardERC20 token that uses the standard L2 bridge address (0x4200000000000000000000000000000000000010) (requires manual review)
  • Ethereum token listed on the CoinGecko Token List(requires manual review)
    • Why CoinGecko? CoinGecko's token list updates every hour which means we get token list updates very quickly. CoinGecko also uses an in-depth listing criteria.

Debugging Automated checks failures

If your automated checks failed, you can see the reason for the failure by downloading validation-artifacts.zip, unzipping it and opening the validation_results.txt file. To locate the validation-artifacts follow these steps:

  1. Click on the Details link for Validate PR check in your PR
  2. Click Summary in the left panel
  3. Find the section on the page labeled Artifacts and click on validation-artifacts
  4. After download of validation-artifacts.zip, unzip it and open validation_results.txt

If you make changes and need to run the validation check again, you will need to wait for a reviewer to approve the checks to run again. However, if you do not want to wait for a reviewer to approve the checks to run again to see if the failures have been resolved, you can run the validation checks locally by running:

npx tsx ./bin/cli.ts validate --datadir ./data --tokens <data folder name (e.g. ETH)>

Final approval

All PRs are subject to a light-weight final approval, even if not marked as requires manual review.

Adding a token to the list

Create a folder for your token

Create a folder inside of the data folder with the same name as the symbol of the token you are trying to add. For example, if you are adding a token with the symbol "ETH" you must create a folder called ETH.

Add a logo to your folder

Add a logo to the data folder you just created. Your logo MUST be an SVG called logo.svg. Your logo should be at least 200x200 pt minimum and 256x256 pt preferred.

Create a data file

Add a file to your folder called data.json with the following format:

{
  "name": "Token Name",
  "symbol": "SYMBOL",
  "decimals": 18,
  "description": "A multi-chain token",
  "website": "https://token.com",
  "twitter": "@token",
  "tokens": {
    "ethereum": {
      "address": "0x1234123412341234123412341234123412341234"
    },
    "optimism": {
      "address": "0x2345234523452345234523452345234523452345"
    },
    "sepolia": {
      "address": "0x5678567856785678567856785678567856785678"
    },
    "optimism-sepolia": {
      "address": "0x6789678967896789678967896789678967896789"
    },
    "base": {
      "address": "0x7890789078907890789078907890789078907890"
    },
    "base-sepolia": {
      "address": "0x1011121011121011121011121011121011121011"
    }
  }
}

Please include the token addresses for all of the below chains where the token you are submitting has been deployed. We currently accept tokens on the following chains:

  • ethereum
  • optimism
  • sepolia
  • base
  • base-sepolia
  • optimism-sepolia
  • mode
  • pgn
  • lisk
  • lisk-sepolia
  • redstone
  • metall2
  • metall2-sepolia

Non-bridgable tokens

If you would like to add your token to this token list but you do not want your token to be included on the Optimism Bridge app, please include the nobridge option.

{
  "name": "Token Name",
  "symbol": "SYMBOL",
  "decimals": 18,
  "description": "A multi-chain token",
  "website": "https://token.com",
  "twitter": "@token",
  "nobridge": true,
  "tokens": {
    ...
  }
}

Non-standard tokens

If your token is not a standard ERC20 (e.g., DSToken), please include the nonstandard option.

{
  "name": "Token Name",
  "symbol": "SYMBOL",
  "decimals": 18,
  "description": "A multi-chain token",
  "website": "https://token.com",
  "twitter": "@token",
  "nonstandard": true,
  "tokens": {
    ...
  }
}

Per-token overrides

If you require overrides for specific tokens, you can include the overrides field. You are able to override the name, symbol, decimals, or bridge for any token. You do not need to override every token at the same time.

{
  "name": "Token Name",
  "symbol": "SYMBOL",
  "decimals": 18,
  "description": "A multi-chain token",
  "website": "https://token.com",
  "twitter": "@token",
  "tokens": {
    "ethereum": {
      "address": "0x1234123412341234123412341234123412341234",
      "overrides": {
        "name": "My Ethereum Token"
      }
    },
    "optimism": {
      "address": "0x2345234523452345234523452345234523452345",
      "overrides": {
        "bridge": "0x1111111111111111111111111111111111111111"
      }
    }
  }
}
Bridge overrides

To override an L1 bridge address, specify the L2 chain it bridges to along with the address of the L1 bridge. For an L2 bridge address override, just specify the address of the L2 bridge.

Here is an example:

{
  "name": "Synthetix",
  "symbol": "SNX",
  "decimals": 18,
  "tokens": {
    "ethereum": {
      "address": "0xc011a73ee8576fb46f5e1c5751ca3b9fe0af2a6f",
      "overrides": {
        "bridge": {
          "optimism": "0x39Ea01a0298C315d149a490E34B59Dbf2EC7e48F"
        }
      }
    },
    "optimism": {
      "address": "0x8700daec35af8ff88c16bdf0418774cb3d7599b4",
      "overrides": {
        "bridge": "0x136b1EC699c62b0606854056f02dC7Bb80482d63"
      }
    },
    "sepolia": {
      "address": "0x51f44ca59b867E005e48FA573Cb8df83FC7f7597",
      "overrides": {
        "bridge": {
          "optimism-sepolia": "0x1427Bc44755d9Aa317535B1feE38922760Aa4e65"
        }
      }
    },
    "optimism-sepolia": {
      "address": "0x2E5ED97596a8368EB9E44B1f3F25B2E813845303",
      "overrides": {
        "bridge": "0xD2b3F0Ea40dB68088415412b0043F37B3088836D"
      }
    }
  }
}

Create a pull request

Open a pull request with the changes that you've made. Please only add one token per pull request to simplify the review process. This means two new files inside of one new folder. If you want to add multiple tokens, please open different PRs for each token.

Respond to validation checks

Your pull request will be validated by a series of automated checks. If one of these checks fails, please resolve these issues and make sure that validation succeeds. We will review your pull request for final approval once automated validation succeeds.

Wait for the token list to update automatically

Once your PR is merged, the token list will update automatically to include your token. Please do NOT update the token list (optimism.tokenlist.json) directly. All token list updates will be handled automatically when PRs are merged into the master branch.

Note that the bridge UI is updated approximately once every work day, so it might take a day (or three in the case of an update on Friday) until your token is available there.