Pool Joins

Info

Calls to joinPool() are made on the Vault contract! You cannot send this command directly to a pool.

API

joinPool(
    bytes32 poolId,
    address sender,
    address recipient,
    JoinPoolRequest request
)

struct JoinPoolRequest {
    address[] assets,
    uint256[] maxAmountsIn,
    bytes userData,
    bool fromInternalBalance
}

Arguments Explained

  • poolId - ID of the pool you're interacting with
  • sender - Address sending tokens to the pool
  • recipient - Address receiving BPT (usually the same as sender)
  • request - JoinPoolRequest tuple made up of the following:
    • assets - Sorted list of all tokens in pool (see below)
    • maxAmountsIn - Maximum token send amounts (see below)
    • userData - Custom bytes field (see below)
    • fromInternalBalance - True if sending from internal token balances. False if sending ERC20.

Token Ordering

When providing your assets, you must ensure that the tokens are sorted numerically by token address. It's also important to note that the values in maxAmountsIn correspond to the same index value in assets, so these arrays must be made in parallel after sorting.

maxAmountsIn

In the joinPool call, you have to provide maxAmountsIn, the upper limits for the tokens to send. In short, what are the maximum amounts you would find acceptable to send, given the amount of BPT you are receiving?

A good practice is to use queryJoin in BalancerQueries to find the current amount of BPT you would get for your tokens, and then account for some possible slippage.

Let's say that you want to allow a 1% slippage. After computing how many tokens you expect to provide for a given amount of BPT, you'd apply a factor of 1.01 to all the amounts. These thresholds are important because it's possible for token amounts to change in the pool between the time you send your transaction and when your transaction executes.

userData

userData is a highly versatile field; as such, it needs to be encoded for its specific use case. For joins, userData encodes a JoinKind to tell the pool what style of join you're performing. Not every pool uses every JoinKind, so it's important to keep track of what each pool type can handle.

WeightedPool JoinKinds

enum JoinKind {
    INIT,
    EXACT_TOKENS_IN_FOR_BPT_OUT,
    TOKEN_IN_FOR_EXACT_BPT_OUT,
    ALL_TOKENS_IN_FOR_EXACT_BPT_OUT
}

Applies to:

  • WeightedPool
  • WeightedPool2Tokens
  • LiquidityBootstrappingPool
  • InvestmentPool

StablePool JoinKinds

enum JoinKind {
    INIT,
    EXACT_TOKENS_IN_FOR_BPT_OUT,
    TOKEN_IN_FOR_EXACT_BPT_OUT
 }

Applies to:

  • StablePool
  • MetaStablePool

JoinKinds Explained

  • Initial Join (INIT)
    • User sends the precise initial tokens to seed a pool. This can be done only once.
  • Exact Tokens Join (EXACT_TOKENS_IN_FOR_BPT_OUT)
    • User sends precise quantities of tokens, and receives an estimated but unknown (computed at run time) quantity of BPT.
  • Single Token Join (TOKEN_IN_FOR_EXACT_BPT_OUT)
    • User sends an estimated but unknown (computed at run time) quantity of a single token, and receives a precise quantity of BPT.
  • Proportional Join (ALL_TOKENS_IN_FOR_EXACT_BPT_OUT)
    • User sends estimated but unknown (computed at run time) quantities of tokens, and receives precise quantity of BPT.

Encoding

  • Initial Join
    • userData ABI
      • ['uint256', 'uint256[]']
    • userData
      • [INIT, amountsIn]
  • Exact Tokens Join
    • userData ABI
      • ['uint256', 'uint256[]', 'uint256']
    • userData
      • [EXACT_TOKENS_IN_FOR_BPT_OUT, amountsIn, minimumBPT]
  • Single Token Join
    • userData ABI
      • ['uint256', 'uint256', 'uint256']
    • userData
      • [TOKEN_IN_FOR_EXACT_BPT_OUT, bptAmountOut, enterTokenIndex]
  • Proportional Join
    • userData ABI
      • ['uint256', 'uint256']
    • userData
      • [ALL_TOKENS_IN_FOR_EXACT_BPT_OUT, bptAmountOut]