How to Save My Gas Fees: Understanding and Detecting Real-world Gas Issues in Solidity Programs
The execution of smart contracts on Ethereum, a public blockchain system, incurs a fee called gas fee for its computation and data-store consumption. When programmers develop smart contracts (e.g., in the Solidity programming language), they could unknowingly write code snippets that unnecessarily c...
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Zusammenfassung: | The execution of smart contracts on Ethereum, a public blockchain system,
incurs a fee called gas fee for its computation and data-store consumption.
When programmers develop smart contracts (e.g., in the Solidity programming
language), they could unknowingly write code snippets that unnecessarily cause
more gas fees. These issues, or what we call gas wastes, could lead to
significant monetary waste for users. Yet, there have been no systematic
examination of them or effective tools for detecting them. This paper takes the
initiative in helping Ethereum users reduce their gas fees in two important
steps: we conduct the first empirical study on gas wastes in popular smart
contracts written in Solidity by understanding their root causes and fixing
strategies; we then develop a static tool, PeCatch, to effectively detect gas
wastes with simple fixes in Solidity programs based on our study findings.
Overall, we make seven insights and four suggestions from our gas-waste study,
which could foster future tool development, language improvement, and
programmer awareness, and develop eight gas-waste checkers, which pinpoint 383
previously unknown gas wastes from famous Solidity libraries. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2403.02661 |