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DEFIanchor

version_b

94kQ4gTupF1dqM9z8NWbhbBffYfNrsv87PRcxWiGFLJ1open in Orb
NEW: 29% structurally distinct from its nearest relative ACTIVE: 3 transactions in the last 24h OPEN: 1/6 disclosures: name, repo, site, IDL, security.txt, verified build COST: 1.455 SOL locked as rent by the deploy CTRL: single hot-wallet authorityNEWACTIVEOPENCOSTCTRL

Lineagei

Nearest known programHb4h…cXhC · 71% 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

204 KBimage size · moderate
1.455 SOLrent locked
9syscalls imported
instructions
Capabilitiescpipdahashingsysvarstokens

Recovered architecturei

Crateversion_b
Built withsolana toolchain
root/instructioninternallib

Reachi

EmbeddedSPL Token