When user creates an offer or an order, the tokens are transfered from his address to CapitalPool using TokenManager. When user wants withdraw the tokens, they are transfered back to user from CapitalPool using TokenManager. The TokenManager has can get an approval from CaptialPool to transfer tokens. It needs to pass correct token address. approve function in CapitalPool expects token address as an input parameter. However in _transfer function inside TokenManager it uses address(this) instead of token address.
_transfer passes address(this) as parameter into approve function.
We can see that approve function inside CapitalPool expects token address. It uses this address to approve current token manager.
Tokens cannot be transfered from CapitalPool to user. Desired flow of the transaction does not work but the funds can be withdrawn because the CaptialPool inherits Rescuable.
Pass _token parameter instead of address(this).
If we consider the correct permissioned implementation for the `approve()` function within `CapitalPool.sol`, this would be a critical severity issue, because the withdrawal of funds will be permanently blocked and must be rescued by the admin via the `Rescuable.sol` contract, given it will always revert [here](https://github.com/Cyfrin/2024-08-tadle/blob/04fd8634701697184a3f3a5558b41c109866e5f8/src/core/CapitalPool.sol#L36-L38) when attempting to call a non-existent function selector `approve` within the TokenManager contract. The argument up in the air is since the approval function `approve` was made permisionless, the `if` block within the internal `_transfer()` function will never be invoked if somebody beforehand calls approval for the TokenManager for the required token, so the transfer will infact not revert when a withdrawal is invoked. I will leave open for escalation discussions, but based on my first point, I believe high severity is appropriate.
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