Sisswap Coco Lovelock And Theodora Day Pool Upd Review

The "pool upd" might refer to an update or a new feature implementation in the Siswap DEX, possibly related to liquidity pools.

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| Section | Suggested Content | Example Paragraph | |---------|-------------------|-------------------| | Abstract | 150‑250 words summarizing the problem, contribution, methodology, and key results. | “We present the first systematic analysis of the CoCo‑Lovelock protocol and the Theodora Day pool update (UPD) deployed on the SISSWAP AMM. By modeling liquidity provision incentives, cross‑chain token wrapping, and dynamic fee schedules, we show that the UPD improves capital efficiency by ~27 % while mitigating front‑running attacks. Our findings are validated through on‑chain data from block 12 345 678 to 12 456 789 and a Monte‑Carlo simulation of adversarial strategies.” | | 1. Introduction | Context of DeFi liquidity pools, challenges (impermanent loss, fee‑rate volatility), and why SISSWAP introduced CoCo‑Lovelock and Theodora Day. | “Decentralized exchanges (DEXes) rely on AMM pools that often suffer from sub‑optimal capital deployment. SISSWAP’s CoCo‑Lovelock—named after its “collateral‑capped” and “lock‑in‑reward” design—aims to address these inefficiencies by introducing a token‑backed collateral buffer and a time‑locked reward schedule. The Theodora Day pool update (UPD) further refines this mechanism by integrating a dynamic fee curve tied to pool utilization metrics.” | | 2. Background & Related Work | Review of classic AMMs (Uniswap V2/V3), liquidity‑bootstrapping pools, and recent works on fee‑adaptive models (e.g., “Dynamic Fees in AMM” – Angeris & Chitra, 2022). | “Unlike Uniswap V3’s concentrated liquidity, CoCo‑Lovelock utilizes a collateral‑capped liquidity token (CoCo‑L) that limits exposure to extreme price swings. The approach parallels the “Liquidity‑Bootstrapping Pools” (LBPs) of Balancer (2020) but adds a lock‑in period, reminiscent of “Lovelace‑Lock” mechanisms in the Lattice protocol (2021).” | | 3. System Architecture | • CoCo‑L Token (ERC‑20 wrapper, collateral ratio).
Lovelock Smart Contract (lock‑in schedule, reward distribution).
Theodora Day UPD (dynamic fee function, utilization oracle). | Diagram of contract interactions (optional figure). | | 4. Economic Model | Formal definitions of:
Liquidity Provider (LP) utility U = Σ R_t − IL_t (rewards minus impermanent loss).
Collateral Ratio (CR) = Collateral / (Total LP tokens).
Dynamic Fee Function f(u) = f₀ · (1 + α·(u − u₀)) where u = utilization. | Derive equilibrium CR that minimizes IL while preserving capital efficiency. | | 5. Security Analysis | • Front‑Running Resistance – use of time‑locked commitments.
Re‑entrancy & Oracle Manipulation – formal proof sketch. | “We prove that, under the assumption of a bounded‑delay oracle (Δ ≤ 5 blocks), the fee function cannot be gamed to produce arbitrage > 0.5 % per transaction.” | | 6. Empirical Evaluation | • Data collection (Etherscan + The Graph).
• Metrics: TVL, fee revenue, LP ROI, slippage.
• Baselines: Uniswap V3 (0.05 %–0.30 % fees), Balancer LBP. | Table 1 – “Performance Comparison (30‑day window)”. Graphs of TVL growth, fee‑revenue per $1 M capital. | | 7. Simulation of Adversarial Scenarios | Monte‑Carlo simulation of sandwich attacks, oracle delay, and collusion among LPs. | “Even with a 30 % coordinated attacker pool, net LP ROI declines by < 3 % relative to baseline, confirming robustness.” | | 8. Discussion | Interpretation of results, trade‑offs (complexity vs. efficiency), governance implications (DAO voting on α). | “While CoCo‑L increases contract overhead, the collateral buffer reduces IL by 12 % on average, making the protocol attractive for risk‑averse LPs.” | | 9. Future Work | • Multi‑chain extension (e.g., Polkadot parachains).
• Adaptive collateral ratios via machine‑learning predictors. | “A follow‑up study could integrate on‑chain AI oracles to dynamically adjust CR in response to market volatility.” | | 10. Conclusion | Summarize contributions and impact. | “The CoCo‑Lovelock and Theodora Day UPD together provide a novel pathway toward more capital‑efficient, secure AMM pools, setting a precedent for next‑generation DeFi infrastructure.” | | References | Cite real papers, protocol docs, and on‑chain data sources. | 1. Angeris, G., & Chitra, T. (2022). Dynamic Fees in AMM. arXiv:2205.01893.
2. Balancer Labs. (2020). Liquidity‑Bootstrapping Pools. https://docs.balancer.fi/.
3. SISSWAP Whitepaper (2024). https://sisswap.org/whitepaper.pdf.
4. The Graph. (2024). SISSWAP Subgraph. https://thegraph.com/hosted-service/subgraph/sisswap. … | The "pool upd" might refer to an update


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  • anonymous

    what do you mean your newly added website is named /webapps/solr. You named the it webapps/tomcat?

    • Thomas

      I’d appreciate an answer to this as well.

    • http://sangatpedas.com Sangat Pedas

      Sorry, this was a type, should have been /webapps/tomcat. I also did a Solr installation outside of Tomcat so mixed up the to locations

  • anonymous

    there’s no /opt/ directory anywhere. you lost me when you started with the copy/paste of apache directions

    • http://sangatpedas.com Sangat Pedas

      the opt dir is under the directory ../username/webapps/tomcat/