ENS support for multiple contenthash records on a single ENS name.
Motivation
Many applications are resolving ENS names to content hosted on distributed systems. To do this, they use contenthash record from ENS domain to know how to resolve names and which distributed system should be used.
However, the domain can store only one contenthash record which means that the site owner needs to decide which hosting system to use. Because there are many ENS-compatible hosting systems available (IPFS, Swarm, recently Onion and ZeroNet), and there will probably be even more in the future, lack of support for multiple records could become problematic. Instead, domains should be able to store multiple contenthash records to allow applications to resolve to multiple hosting systems.
Specification
Setting and getting functions MUST have the same public interface as specified in EIP 1577. Additionally, they MUST also have new public interfaces introduced by this EIP:
For setting a contenthash record, the setContenthashMUST provide additional proto parameter and use it to save the contenthash. When proto is not provided, it MUST save the record as default record.
For getting a contenthash record, the contenthashMUST provide additional proto parameter and use it to get the contenthash for requested type. When proto is not provided, it MUST return the default record.
Resolver that supports multiple contenthash records MUST return true for supportsInterface with interface ID 0x6de03e07.
Applications that are using ENS contenthash records SHOULD handle them in the following way:
If the application only supports one hosting system (like directly handling ENS from IPFS/Swarm gateways), it SHOULD request contenthash with a specific type. The contract MUST then return it and application SHOULD correctly handle it.
If the application supports multiple hosting systems (like MetaMask), it SHOULD request contenthash without a specific type (like in EIP 1577). The contract MUST then return the default contenthash record.
Rationale
The proposed implementation was chosen because it is simple to implement and supports all important requested features. However, it doesn’t support multiple records for the same type and priority order, as they don’t give much advantage and are harder to implement properly.
Backwards Compatibility
The EIP is backwards-compatible with EIP 1577, the only differences are additional overloaded methods. Old applications will still be able to function correctly, as they will receive the default contenthash record.