1 unstable release

0.1.0 Nov 9, 2022

#448 in Memory management

MIT license

3KB

Serai

Serai is a new DEX, built from the ground up, initially planning on listing Bitcoin, Ethereum, DAI, and Monero, offering a liquidity-pool-based trading experience. Funds are stored in an economically secured threshold-multisig wallet.

Getting Started

Layout

  • audits: Audits for various parts of Serai.

  • docs: Documentation on the Serai protocol.

  • common: Crates containing utilities common to a variety of areas under Serai, none neatly fitting under another category.

  • crypto: A series of composable cryptographic libraries built around the ff/group APIs, achieving a variety of tasks. These range from generic infrastructure, to our IETF-compliant FROST implementation, to a DLEq proof as needed for Bitcoin-Monero atomic swaps.

  • coins: Various coin libraries intended for usage in Serai yet also by the wider community. This means they will always support the functionality Serai needs, yet won't disadvantage other use cases when possible.

  • message-queue: An ordered message server so services can talk to each other, even when the other is offline.

  • processor: A generic chain processor to process data for Serai and process events from Serai, executing transactions as expected and needed.

  • coordinator: A service to manage processors and communicate over a P2P network with other validators.

  • substrate: Substrate crates used to instantiate the Serai network.

  • orchestration: Dockerfiles and scripts to deploy a Serai node/test environment.

  • tests: Tests for various crates. Generally, crate/src/tests is used, or crate/tests, yet any tests requiring crates' binaries are placed here.

Security

Serai hosts a bug bounty program via Immunefi. For in-scope critical vulnerabilities, we will reward whitehats with up to $30,000.

Anything not in-scope should still be submitted through Immunefi, with rewards issued at the discretion of the Immunefi program managers.


lib.rs:

Implementation of a Zeroizing Allocator, enabling zeroizing memory on deallocation. This can either be used with Box (requires nightly and the "allocator" feature) to provide the functionality of zeroize on types which don't implement zeroize, or used as a wrapper around the global allocator to ensure all memory is zeroized.

Dependencies

~31KB