What is a Smart Account?
A Smart account is a smart contract wallet that follows the ERC-4337 specification.
Ethereum has 2 types of accounts to transfer and receive tokens: EOAs (Externally Owned Accounts) and Contract Accounts. A smart account is a wallet managed by a contract account instead of an EOA. A smart account is a wallet type requiring no private keys or seed phrases. Smart accounts rely on code instead of private keys to secure and recover wallet information.
A smart account is a type of Web3 wallet powered by smart contracts.
This smart account is unlocked by a 'key' - a personal account. This key can be anything from a MetaMask wallet or even a In-App Wallet and is used as a way to 'sign in' to the wallet.
Benefits of Smart Accounts
- Optimized transaction efficiency & batch transactions
- Combine multiple transactions into a single atomic transaction
- Improved Security Features
- Social & Multi-Sig Recovery
- Recover a wallet without seed phrases/passwords
- Nominate a trusted person to recover your wallet in the case of an emergency
- Programmability
- Smart accounts can be programmed to do anything a smart contract can do
- Smart accounts can be upgraded to add new features
Account Factories
In order to issue smart accounts for users, an account factory contract must be used. This factory contract is responsible for deploying individual user contracts when required. The SDK provides a global factory ready to use, but you can also deploy your own factory.
Terminology
Personal Wallet/Key
This is the default admin on an account or the "key" to an account. It can be any wallet and is used to initialize the account. Only one wallet can only be the "key" to one account per factory contract.
This wallet is the primary way to access and interact with the account.
Account
The account is the ERC-4337 compatible smart contract which holds all of the assets.
UserOperations
This is the data structure for the "pseudo-transaction" that the user wants to perform. The transaction is pseudo as Smart Accounts cannot initiate transactions on EVM chains as they are not supported natively. It contains the following fields:
sender
: The account making the operation.nonce
: Anti-replay parameter; also used as the salt for first-time account creation.initCode
: The initialization code needed to create the account (needed if and only if the account is not yet onchain).callData
: The data to pass to thesender
during the operation.callGasLimit
: The amount of gas to allocate for the operation.verificationGasLimit
: The amount of gas to allocate for the verification step.preVerificationGas
: The amount of gas to pay to compensate the bundler for pre-verification execution and calldata.maxFeePerGas
: Maximum fee per gas (similar to EIP-1559max_fee_per_gas
).maxPriorityFeePerGas
: Maximum priority fee per gas (similar to EIP-1559).paymasterAndData
: Address of the paymaster sponsoring the transaction, followed by extra data to send to the paymaster (empty for self-sponsored transaction).signature
: Data passed into the account along with the nonce during the verification step. Should depend on thechainid
andEntryPoint
address to prevent replay attacks.
EntryPoint
The EntryPoint is a singleton contract (a contract that has a predictable address that is the same on every chain).
It has two methods that are used as entry points to execute bundles of UserOperations: handleOps
and handleAggregatedOps
.
Bundler (relayer)
A bundler is a node that monitors the alternative mempool of UserOperations
and bundles multiple UserOps
together to forward to the EntryPoint contract as a single transaction.
These UserOps
can be sent from different accounts and are bundled and sent to the EntryPoint
contract via a handleOps
call.
The bundler is controlled by its own EOA which initially pays for the gas fees upfront and is then repaid by either the sender or a paymaster if the transaction is sponsored.
The entry point contract then uses the validateOp
and executeOp
functions on the smart account contract to verify and execute the UserOps
on behalf of the users.
It allows you to send transactions with smart accounts.
Paymaster
A paymaster is a smart contract that relays transactions. It provides a service that enables a third party to pay
the transaction fee on behalf of the user by funding the Paymaster contract in advance. The paymaster acts as a gas reserve which then
can be used during the call execution via the EntryPoint
contract. The thirdweb Account abstraction paymaster is initially paid for by thirdweb. By using an API key,
the usage is tracked and billed. You can easily define sponsorship rules that determine whether a transaction will be sponsored.