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DEFIanchorupgraded ×13

debate_market

7r63WbreKAVaXikqeVXeDkvW4gaKa5QnF41qtrAvJ9bfopen in Orb
NEW: 31% structurally distinct from idx-protocol ACTIVE: 992 transactions in the last 24h OPEN: 1/6 disclosures: name, repo, site, IDL, security.txt, verified build COST: 9.4 SOL locked as rent by the deploy CTRL: single hot-wallet authorityNEWACTIVEOPENCOSTCTRL

Lineagei

Nearest known programidx-protocol · 69% code match

Frameworki

Anchorconfirmedself-describing IDLecosystem standard · beginner-friendly
What's Anchor?

Batteries-included Rust framework. Ships account-validation codegen, 8-byte instruction discriminators, and an on-chain IDL — the program describes itself.

Bigger binary and higher rent in exchange for safety rails, introspection, and dev speed. The choice of a team optimizing for correctness over on-chain footprint.

Originally Coral (Armani Ferrante); now community-maintained.

What it is

The de facto standard. Rust macros (#[program], #[derive(Accounts)]) eliminate boilerplate: it auto-generates 8-byte account and instruction discriminators — SHA256("account:<Name>")[..8] and SHA256("global:<ix>")[..8] — handles Borsh (de)serialization, enforces account constraints declaratively (mut, has_one, seeds, init), and emits a JSON IDL that client libraries consume directly. The cost: Borsh copies data on every deserialize (not zero-copy), and the macro machinery adds binary bloat and compute overhead — irrelevant for ~99% of programs.

When to pick it

Building a new protocol, moving fast, or wanting maximum ecosystem compatibility. It's the beginner default and stays the right call for most production programs.

How it looks on-chain

The most recognizable framework. Every account it owns begins with an 8-byte discriminator, and the IDL is often published on-chain at a PDA derived from the program id. Both are strong, reliable fingerprints — this is the only framework we can label with confidence.

Others in the wild: Steel (Ore team — near-native performance on solana-program), Seahorse (Python → Anchor), and Poseidon & Quasar (TypeScript → Rust). Transpilers inherit their lowering target's fingerprint: a Quasar or Poseidon program that compiles down to Anchor will look like Anchor on-chain — discriminators and all.

Anchor docs

Footprinti

1.3 MBimage size · heavy
9.4 SOLrent locked
12syscalls imported
15instructions
Capabilitiescpipdahashingsysvarstokens

Recovered architecturei

Cratedebate_market
Instructions ~activate pumpswap buybackbuy virtual pvp sharescreate topiccreate virtual pvp marketexit virtual pvp positionfinalize argument audit capacityredeem virtual pvpresolve virtual pvp marketseal briefsell virtual pvp sharessubmit argumentupdate topic fee recipientupdate virtual pvp global mode overridevoid virtual pvp marketwithdraw treasury
Built withsolana toolchain
instructions/activate_pumpswap_buybackbuy_virtual_pvp_sharescreate_topiccreate_virtual_pvp_marketexit_virtual_pvp_positionfinalize_argument_audit_capacityinitialize_protocol_configredeem_virtual_pvpresolve_virtual_pvp_marketseal_briefsell_virtual_pvp_sharessubmit_argumentupdate_protocol_configupdate_topic_fee_recipientupdate_virtual_pvp_global_mode_overridevoid_virtual_pvp_marketwithdraw_treasury
state/argumentmarket_coreprotocol_configtopicvirtual_pvp
root/eventslibstate
utils/mathpositionpumpswaptokentoken_budgettopicvirtual_pvp

Reachi

EmbeddedSPL TokenPump.fun
Named in sourcePump.fun