Cross-Chain Execution
Overview
Omnera supports execution across multiple blockchain networks from a single wallet connection. The trader does not need to bridge assets, switch networks, or manage multiple wallet connections. When the execution router identifies the optimal venue for a trade, it handles the cross-chain mechanics transparently.
Supported Chains
| Chain | Asset Types | Execution |
|---|
| Solana | Spot tokens, SPL assets | Direct liquidity venue and aggregator routing |
| Ethereum L2s | Spot tokens, DeFi positions | Bridged execution with atomic settlement |
| Additional chains | Expanding | See Roadmap for upcoming integrations |
How It Works
When a trader initiates a trade on an asset that resides on a different chain from their primary wallet:
- The router evaluates cross-chain paths. Multiple bridging options may exist. The router selects based on speed, cost, and reliability.
- A transaction bundle is constructed. The bridge operation, the order placement, and any intermediate steps are composed into a single transaction flow.
- The trader reviews and signs. The complete execution path is presented before confirmation. One signature initiates the full sequence.
- Atomic settlement. The trade settles as a single unit. If any step fails, the entire operation reverts.
Execution Guarantees
Price protection. The execution price shown at confirmation is protected by slippage parameters. If market conditions shift beyond the trader’s tolerance during settlement, the transaction reverts.
No intermediate custody. At no point do funds rest in an Omnera-controlled address. Cross-chain movement uses trustless or minimally-trusted bridge infrastructure.
Transaction transparency. Every step in the cross-chain execution is traceable on-chain. The trader receives transaction hashes for each component of the settlement.
Cross-chain execution depends on the reliability and security of underlying bridge protocols. While Omnera selects routes for optimal safety, bridge risk cannot be fully eliminated. Cross-chain trades may take longer to settle than same-chain execution.