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Action Request

The main difference between tokens and coins is that tokens do not allow transfers, conversions, or spends by default. There is an authorization mechanism, however, that allows these actions. This mechanism is called an ActionRequest. You can choose to allow or disallow any of the actions independently (see the Request confirmation section).

Protected actions

Tokens have four protected actions that create an ActionRequest:

FunctionAction nameDescriptionSpecial fields in ActionRequest
token::from_coinfrom_coinConvert a coin into a token-
token::to_cointo_coinConvert a token into a coin-
token::transfertransferTransfer a token to a recipientContains recipient field
token::spendspendSpend a tokenContains spent_balance field

ActionRequest structure

ActionRequest is defined in the sui::token module and contains the following fields:

  • name: Name of the performed action, standard ones are transfer, spend, to_coin and from_coin, and you can create custom actions.
  • amount: The amount of the token that is being transferred, spent, converted, and so on.
  • sender: The account that initiated the action.
  • recipient: The account that receives the token in transfer action (use for custom actions).
  • spent_balance: The balance of a spent token in the spend action (use in custom actions).

Rules can use these fields to determine whether the action should be allowed or not. Rules are custom modules that implement restriction logic. See Rules for more details.

An example of a function creating an ActionRequest:

// module: sui::token
public fun transfer<T>(
t: Token<T>, recipient: address, ctx: &mut TxContext
): ActionRequest<T>;

Request confirmation

There are three ways to confirm an ActionRequest using a:

  1. TreasuryCap - you (or an application storing the TreasuryCap) can call the token::confirm_with_treasury_cap function to confirm any request. This method is useful for applications that store the TreasuryCap and implement custom logic; it also allows you to mint and transfer tokens, bypassing the restrictions.
  2. TokenPolicy - create a shared TokenPolicy and set up allowed actions and requirements for each action. This way, applications or wallets know which actions are considered public and so they are able to perform them.
  3. TokenPolicyCap - use the capability managing the TokenPolicy to confirm requests. This can be useful for applications that have the TreasuryCap wrapped and inaccessible; and you need to authorize some administrator action.
info

You can't use TokenPolicyCap to confirm spend requests.

Confirming with TreasuryCap

Use the TreasuryCap to confirm any action request for the token. It's useful for administrator actions (like mint and transfer), as well as for simple applications that don't require a token policy and wrap the TreasuryCap into the main object.

The signature for the token::confirm_with_treasury_cap function is:

// module: sui::token
public fun confirm_with_treasury_cap<T>(
treasury_cap: &mut TreasuryCap<T>,
request: ActionRequest<T>,
ctx: &mut TxContext
): (String, u64, address, Option<address>);

An example of a transaction implemented in TypeScript with sui.js, confirming an action request with a TreasuryCap. Here the admin account owns the TreasuryCap, which is used to mint and confirm the transfer request for the token:

let tx = new Transaction();
let tokenType = '0x....::my_token::MY_TOKEN';
let treasuryCapArg = tx.object('0x....');

// mint 10 tokens using the `TreasuryCap`
let token = tx.moveCall({
target: '0x2::token::mint',
arguments: [treasuryCapArg, tx.pure.u64(10)],
typeArguments: [tokenType],
});

// transfer the token to a recipient; receive an `ActionRequest`
let request = tx.moveCall({
target: '0x2::token::transfer',
arguments: [token, tx.pure.address('0x...')],
typeArguments: [tokenType],
});

// confirm the request with the `TreasuryCap`
tx.moveCall({
target: '0x2::token::confirm_with_treasury_cap',
arguments: [treasuryCapArg, request],
typeArguments: [tokenType],
});

// submit the transaction
// ...

Confirming with TokenPolicy

TokenPolicy is a way of enabling certain actions network-wide. After sharing, the TokenPolicy is available to everyone. Hence, wallets or other clients can use it to confirm allowed operations.

The signature for the token::confirm_request function is:

// module: sui::token
public fun confirm_request<T>(
treasury_cap: &TokenPolicy<T>,
request: ActionRequest<T>,
ctx: &mut TxContext
): (String, u64, address, Option<address>);
info

If it's a spend request, use the confirm_request_mut function instead.

An example of a client transfer request confirmation in JavaScript:

let tx = new Transaction();
let tokenType = '0x....::my_token::MY_TOKEN';
let myTokenArg = tx.object('0x...token_object');
let receiverArg = tx.pure.address('0x...receiver');
let tokenPolicyArg = tx.object('0x...token_policy');

let request = tx.moveCall({
target: '0x2::token::transfer',
arguments: [myTokenArg, receiverArg],
typeArguments: [tokenType],
});

// expecting the `TokenPolicy` to have the `transfer` operation allowed
tx.moveCall({
target: '0x2::token::confirm_request',
arguments: [tokenPolicyArg, request],
typeArguments: [tokenType],
});

// submit the transaction
// ...

Confirming with TokenPolicyCap

Use TokenPolicyCap to confirm action requests. A convenient approach when the TreasuryCap is wrapped in another object, and TokenPolicy does not allow certain action or has rules that make the default way of confirming impossible.

info

You can't use TokenPolicyCap to confirm spend requests.

// module: sui::token

public fun confirm_with_policy_cap<T>(
token_policy_cap: &TokenPolicyCap<T>,
request: ActionRequest<T>,
ctx: &mut TxContext
): (String, u64, address, Option<address>);

An example of a client transfer request confirmation in JavaScript:

let tx = new Transaction();
let tokenType = '0x....::my_token::MY_TOKEN';
let myTokenArg = tx.object('0x...token_object');
let receiverArg = tx.pure.address('0x...receiver');
let tokenPolicyCapArg = tx.object('0x...token_policy_cap');

let request = tx.moveCall({
target: '0x2::token::transfer',
arguments: [myTokenArg, receiverArg],
typeArguments: [tokenType],
});

// confirming the request with the TokenPolicyCap
tx.moveCall({
target: '0x2::token::confirm_with_policy_cap',
arguments: [tokenPolicyCapArg, request],
typeArguments: [tokenType],
});

// submit the transaction
// ...

Approving actions

ActionRequests can collect approvals - witness stamps from applications or rules. They carry the confirmation that a certain module or a rule has approved the action. This mechanic allows gating actions behind certain requirements.

The signature for the token::add_approval function is:

// module: sui::token
public fun add_approval<T, W: drop>(
_t: W, request: &mut ActionRequest<T>, _ctx: &mut TxContext
);

Approvals are mostly used for rules, but they can carry confirmations from any module.

Creating a custom request

Anyone can create a new ActionRequest using the token::new_request function. You can use it to create custom actions and rules, not necessarily related to the token itself.

info

Because you can create an ActionRequest freely for any type T, you can't use them as a proof of the action. Their purpose is authorization, not proof.

The signature for the token::new_request function is:

public fun new_request<T>(
name: vector<u8>,
amount: u64,
recipient: option<address>,
spent_balance: option<Balance<T>>,
ctx: &mut TxContext
): ActionRequest<T>;