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Towns A-9

Security Audit

March 17, 2025

Version 1.0.0

Presented by 0xMacro

Table of Contents

Introduction

This document includes the results of the security audit for towns's smart contract code as found in the section titled ‘Source Code’. The security audit was performed by the Macro security team from March 7, 2025 to March 10, 2025.

The purpose of this audit is to review the source code of certain towns Solidity contracts, and provide feedback on the design, architecture, and quality of the source code with an emphasis on validating the correctness and security of the software in its entirety.

Disclaimer: While Macro’s review is comprehensive and has surfaced some changes that should be made to the source code, this audit should not solely be relied upon for security, as no single audit is guaranteed to catch all possible bugs.

Overall Assessment

The following is an aggregation of issues found by the Macro Audit team:

Severity Count Acknowledged Won't Do Addressed
Low 2 - - 2
Code Quality 2 - 1 1

towns was quick to respond to these issues.

Specification

Our understanding of the specification was based on the following sources:

Source Code

The following source code was reviewed during the audit:

Specifically, we audited the following contracts within contracts/src/tokens/towns repository directory:

Source Code SHA256
contracts/src/tokens/towns/base/Towns.sol

986b4ad31ea1eec2ffaae1b8934a98acbceef8e980afb6b2c404cb6c7f72e635

contracts/src/tokens/towns/base/TownsDeployer.sol

3f5f5e60f47fa882da3bdea89164fc75192c0f911e7b79c2f57a8b0f8073b9a4

contracts/src/tokens/towns/base/TownsLib.sol

dd8afe1f2194ac67e02b30636d2494bb517def9e3181d5ce1918cca814ac2a6f

contracts/src/tokens/towns/base/versions/TownsV2.sol

fc67d46e84f6d5250f98415dca920830fcc73e165687d7b036d141d2a73fc54b

Note: This document contains an audit solely of the Solidity contracts listed above. Specifically, the audit pertains only to the contracts themselves, and does not pertain to any other programs or scripts, including deployment scripts.

Issue Descriptions and Recommendations

Click on an issue to jump to it, or scroll down to see them all.

Security Level Reference

We quantify issues in three parts:

  1. The high/medium/low/spec-breaking impact of the issue:
    • How bad things can get (for a vulnerability)
    • The significance of an improvement (for a code quality issue)
    • The amount of gas saved (for a gas optimization)
  2. The high/medium/low likelihood of the issue:
    • How likely is the issue to occur (for a vulnerability)
  3. The overall critical/high/medium/low severity of the issue.

This third part – the severity level – is a summary of how much consideration the client should give to fixing the issue. We assign severity according to the table of guidelines below:

Severity Description
(C-x)
Critical

We recommend the client must fix the issue, no matter what, because not fixing would mean significant funds/assets WILL be lost.

(H-x)
High

We recommend the client must address the issue, no matter what, because not fixing would be very bad, or some funds/assets will be lost, or the code’s behavior is against the provided spec.

(M-x)
Medium

We recommend the client to seriously consider fixing the issue, as the implications of not fixing the issue are severe enough to impact the project significantly, albiet not in an existential manner.

(L-x)
Low

The risk is small, unlikely, or may not relevant to the project in a meaningful way.

Whether or not the project wants to develop a fix is up to the goals and needs of the project.

(Q-x)
Code Quality

The issue identified does not pose any obvious risk, but fixing could improve overall code quality, on-chain composability, developer ergonomics, or even certain aspects of protocol design.

(I-x)
Informational

Warnings and things to keep in mind when operating the protocol. No immediate action required.

(G-x)
Gas Optimizations

The presented optimization suggestion would save an amount of gas significant enough, in our opinion, to be worth the development cost of implementing it.

Issue Details

L-1

Reference _msgSender() in crosschain events

Topic
Spec
Status
Impact
Low
Likelihood
Low

In the Towns.sol contract, the msg.sender value is used in events emitted within the crosschainMint() and crosschainBurn() functions. However, in the onlyL2SuperChainBridge() modifier, where access control is implemented, _msgSender() is used instead for comparison. With meta transactions, these two values may differ.

Remediations to Consider

  • Update crosschainMint() and crosschainBurn() to emit events with _msgSender() to reduce inconsistency issues.
L-2

lockCooldown() may return misleading value

Topic
Spec
Status
Impact
Low
Likelihood
Low

In the LockBase.sol, in the _disableLock() function, the cooldownByAddress variable is set to indicate when the cooldown expires.

  function _disableLock(address caller) internal {
    LockStorage.Layout storage ds = LockStorage.layout();

    uint256 cooldown = block.timestamp + ds.defaultCooldown;
    ds.enabledByAddress[caller] = false;
    ds.cooldownByAddress[caller] = cooldown;

    emit LockUpdated(caller, false, cooldown);
  }

However, in _enableLock(), there is no corresponding functionality for resetting this value. As a result, Towns.lockCooldown() may, in some situations, return misleading values, which may indicate that the cooldown is in place and the lock may expire or have expired while it is just set.

Remediations to Consider

  • Update _enableLock() implementation to reset ds.cooldownByAddress[caller].
Q-1

Missing validation when setting a cooldown period

Topic
Best practices
Status
Wont Do
Quality Impact
Low

In the LockBase.sol, _setDefaultCooldown(), although it contains the crucial functionality of managing token transfer capability, does not feature range validation for valid values.

Consider adding MIN and MAX values to prevent extreme values for the cooldown period due to accidental management updates.

Q-2

CustomRevert not used consistently

Topic
Best practices
Status
Quality Impact
Low

In the Towns.sol contract, CustomRevert.revertWith() is not used consistently across the contract. In the onlyL2StandardBridge() modifier revertWith() utility functions is not used to with Unauthorized() error.

Consider updating the modifier’s implementation to report errors consistently.

Disclaimer

Macro makes no warranties, either express, implied, statutory, or otherwise, with respect to the services or deliverables provided in this report, and Macro specifically disclaims all implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, noninfringement and those arising from a course of dealing, usage or trade with respect thereto, and all such warranties are hereby excluded to the fullest extent permitted by law.

Macro will not be liable for any lost profits, business, contracts, revenue, goodwill, production, anticipated savings, loss of data, or costs of procurement of substitute goods or services or for any claim or demand by any other party. In no event will Macro be liable for consequential, incidental, special, indirect, or exemplary damages arising out of this agreement or any work statement, however caused and (to the fullest extent permitted by law) under any theory of liability (including negligence), even if Macro has been advised of the possibility of such damages.

The scope of this report and review is limited to a review of only the code presented by the towns team and only the source code Macro notes as being within the scope of Macro’s review within this report. This report does not include an audit of the deployment scripts used to deploy the Solidity contracts in the repository corresponding to this audit. Specifically, for the avoidance of doubt, this report does not constitute investment advice, is not intended to be relied upon as investment advice, is not an endorsement of this project or team, and it is not a guarantee as to the absolute security of the project. In this report you may through hypertext or other computer links, gain access to websites operated by persons other than Macro. Such hyperlinks are provided for your reference and convenience only, and are the exclusive responsibility of such websites’ owners. You agree that Macro is not responsible for the content or operation of such websites, and that Macro shall have no liability to your or any other person or entity for the use of third party websites. Macro assumes no responsibility for the use of third party software and shall have no liability whatsoever to any person or entity for the accuracy or completeness of any outcome generated by such software.