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Autor: Eric Voskuil
Data:  
Para: Jorge Timón
CC: Libbitcoin, Cory Fields, Eric Lombrozo
Assunto: [Libbitcoin] Libconsensus separated repository (from bitcoin-dev)
Jorge, sorry for the slow reply. I've cross-posted this to the
libbitcoin list. I'll get back with answers as soon as I am able.


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On 07/29/2015 02:46 PM, Jorge Timón wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 29, 2015 at 10:38 PM, Eric Voskuil <eric@???> wrote:
>> On 07/28/2015 02:58 AM, Jorge Timón wrote:
>> Oh, I misunderstood your ask then. I don't have a preference on
>> prioritizing VerifyTx vs VerifyHeader.
>
> Ok, let's assume we want to expose verifyHeader first (which I think
> will be easier).
>
>>> would this be an acceptable way to expose
>>> VerifyHeader?
>>
>> I'm not sure how you mean to expose it, could you clarify?
>
> In https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/5995 I had one (probably
> stupid) proposal.
> But it had so many preparations commits that I had to close it.
> In the last commit
> https://github.com/jtimon/bitcoin/commit/00b9b227afc8669a877984561329dde75d3d8942
> you can see that I'm adding a new function in
> script/bitcoinconsensus.cpp with the following declaration:
>
> int bitcoinconsensus_verify_header(const unsigned char* blockHeader,
> unsigned int blockHeaderLen,
> const Consensus::Params& params, int64_t nTime, CBlockIndexBase*
> pindexPrev, PrevIndexGetter indexGetter,
> bitcoinconsensus_error* err)
>
> The ugly parts that you may not like are the CBlockIndexBase struct
> (or maybe it's not so unreasonable) and the function pointer
> PrevIndexGetter.
> To see their "ugliness" you can look at:
>
> https://github.com/jtimon/bitcoin/commit/4528ec69617f1b6d6c8f0d73dc4091cded7c216c
>
> The PrevIndexGetter function pointer that Bitcoin Core would use
> internally would be:
>
> const CBlockIndexBase* GetPrevIndex(const CBlockIndexBase* pindex)
> {
>     return ((CBlockIndex*)pindex)->pprev;
> }

>
> with an ugly casting. But, well, I guess that's only ugly for Bitcoin
> Core, not necessarily for other libconsensus users, which can define
> their own function pointer, provided that it's of the form:
>
> typedef const CBlockIndexBase* (*PrevIndexGetter)(const CBlockIndexBase*);
>
> The struct that I think needs more refinement (and I just used what I
> considered easier to implement at the time) is the CBlockIndexBase
> struct itself:
>
> +struct CBlockIndexBase
> +{
> + //! pointer to the hash of the block, if any. Memory is owned by
> this CBlockIndexBase
> + const uint256* phashBlock;
> + //! block header
> + int32_t nVersion;
> + uint256 hashMerkleRoot;
> + uint32_t nTime;
> + uint32_t nBits;
> + uint32_t nNonce;
> + //! height of the entry in the chain. The genesis block has height 0
> + int nHeight;
> +};
>
> I don't like phashBlock being a pointer instead of just a ref or even an object
> Should that struct have a CBlockIndexBase* pprev; field (moving it
> down from CBlockIndex)?
> That's the kind of question where your feedback seems very important
> from other-implementations developers (because you won't necessarily
> take into account the difficulty of the refactors required in Bitcoin
> Core to expose the right interface, and "libconsensus shouldn't care"
> either, all we want is the best interface).
>
>>> Which of he step-checks functions is worth exposing too (Bitcoin
>>> Core is currently using some to prevent DoS attacks, for example)?
>>
>> I don't see any reason to expose checkpoints in this library. They are
>> trivial to implement and are not part of consensus.
>
> Agreed, and I would say all of the checkpoint check separation has
> been done already.
> What I mean by step functions is...look at verfyHeader internals, for example:
>
> https://github.com/jtimon/bitcoin/commit/11ede96f59f611ede596a1335e896b1fef4fb5b2
>
> It internally calls Consensus::CheckBlockHeader (quite cheap with no
> context required) and Consensus::ContextualCheckBlockHeader (not so
> cheap).
> Bitcoin Core never calls (yet) the full verifyHeader at once. It does
> the cheap tests first and the expensive later. For example,
>
> call CheckBlockHeader, then CheckBlock (also cheap), then
> ContextualCheckBlockHeader and then ContextualCheckBlock.
>
> The question is, will other implementations want access to these
> not-full-but-cheap tests?
> In other words, apart from exposing VerifyHeader that fully validates
> all consensus rules for a header, do we also want to expose
> CheckBlockHeader and ContextualCheckBlockHeader to give more
> flexibility to libconsensus' users?
>
> I think, yes, other implementations will want this for the same DoS
> reasons that Bitcoin Core currently wants them. But it would be nice
> to know what a second person thinks about this.
>
>> Nothing can eliminate all consensus risk, not even a common full node
>> implementation.
>
> In fact, one thing does: never changing the code again (but the cure
> would be worse than the illness).
> Agreed, any software changes in the consensus code can cause consensus
> forks (and that's why you don't want to touch libconsensus that much
> once it's separated).
>
>
>>>> Useful specifications often have two reference implementations. It's the
>>>> idea that there can be only one legitimate implementation that's
>>>> problematic.
>>>
>>> Well, this is where I fear we will never agree. I think "Bitcoin is
>>> different" in this reward and you disagree.
>>> Maybe Pieter's explanation is more convincing to you:
>>> https://youtu.be/PxW5D9xCIsc?t=769
>>> Otherwise, I think I'll stop trying convincing you.
>>
>> Maybe I wasn't sufficiently explicit. It is problematic. That is the
>> core issue we are dealing with. That doesn't mean I disagree with the
>> objectives of an independent community consensus library.
>>
>> The premise of the "one true library" idea is that there is *no way* to
>> sufficiently test for consensus bugs in any software release. That of
>> course means that each release of the satoshi client poses a significant
>> risk to the network. This risk is presently greater than that posed by
>> other implementations simply because of adoption. That is the basis of
>> the red herring argument:
>
> Well, the "one true library" will be much better than the current "one
> true full node".
> The "one true library" would be the specification of the consensus
> rules, but that doesn't mean you can't fork and modify it however you
> want.
>
>> The bottom line is that nobody has control over this process. There are,
>> and will always be, a multitude of consensus implementations that intend
>> to target the same coin. Presently there are multiple versions of the
>> satoshi client, and this has produced forks, and will continue to do so.
>
> I get this point, even if the current satoshi client contains the
> consensus rules specification (and many other things, obviously), that
> doesn't mean is somehow protected from forking with itself if the
> consensus code is changed in the wrong way accidentally. But the more
> separated libconsensus and Bitcoin Core (satoshi client) are, the less
> likely that changes in Bitcoin Core that weren't supposed to change
> consensus rules actually do it by accident (like last time with the
> migration out of bdb).
>
>> Isolating the satoshi consensus checks to an independent library serves
>> not to eliminate that risk, but can reduce it somewhat. Importantly it
>> will allow various implementations to overcome a perception problem,
>> which will improve implementation diversity and developer participation.
>
> I think alternative implementations using a full libconsensus can
> increase their adoption a lot, since they become just as vulnerable to
> consensus forks as Bitcoin Core (instead of more vulnerable like now).
>
>>>>> I believe that's the only point where we fundamentally disagree, but
>>>>> it shouldn't be a barrier in our common goal of taking "power" away
>>>>> from Bitcoin Core development. If we're successful Bitcoin Core won't
>>>>> have any privileged position with regards to, say, libbitcoin when it
>>>>> comes to deciding consensus rules changes.
>>>>
>>>> I don't think we disagree on anything fundamental. My issues with the
>>>> library were (1) the lack of isolation, (2) the fact that the satoshi
>>>> client wouldn't actually use the library, and (3) backtracking to use
>>>> OpenSSL, which we had recently removed from libbitcoin.
>>>
>>> 1) Working on it
>>
>> For the sake of clarity, this is now a non-issue for us.
>
> You mean libbitcoin's code is better organized than Bitcoin Core's?
> I don't doubt it. Maybe we can create a full-libbitcoin-libconsensus
> first and work on the API there.
>
>>> 2) The Satoshi client has been using all along and it will use it
>>> forever (maybe not through the API, but I don't get what the problem
>>> with that is).
>>
>> Again, I consider this a requirement for us to link directly to it as a
>> library. If the sources are isolated into an independent repo, but the
>> satoshi client is embedding its own copies, one must continue to diff
>> the client sources against the library sources. We are doing this
>> already, so the benefit to having the independent repo is in no longer
>> having to do this.
>
> Oh, I see, you don't like that libsecp256k1 is currently a subtree of
> Bitcoin Core either for the same reasons, right?
> To not need to know when the changes in libconsensus are applied in
> Bitcoin Core.
> Mhmm, once libconsensus is complete, why would you care about it?
> You just care about the libconsensus version (which doesn't have to
> coincide with Bitcoin Core versions anymore).
>
>> There are also differences in the build system that can affect outcome.
>> Comparing those differences across repos can be more challenging. For
>> this reason I consider it important to your objective that the satoshi
>> client actually use the library - as I assume it will at some point.
>
> For the sake of clarity, please say "use the library's API". It's
> going to use the library one way or another.
>
>> If the satoshi client folks are to maintain a consensus library for the
>> community it's also important to show a commitment to its independence.
>> Dogfooding is of course a software engineering best practice. But there
>> is also the cynical perspective - the independent library in some ways
>> works against an advantage of the satoshi client.
>>
>> I personally don't think the committers are parochial enough to let this
>> become an issue. We are all after something bigger. But if there was
>> push-back against using the library it would be a red flag. So until
>> that point passes I would just maintain our independent library, cloning
>> the sources from the satoshi client.
>
> To be clear, I don't oppose to "dogfooding", it's just clear to me
> that it will take even longer.
> So what I don't understand is "once libbitcoin is complete and ready
> for us to use, we will keep using our reimplementation of consensus
> until Bitcoin Core uses the API as well. If Bitcoin core doesn't use
> the API, we prefer not to use the library at all and keep having the
> same consensus risk. We will do what we think it's worse for us until
> Bitcoin Core uses the library through the API".
>
>>> 3) There will be an announce about this soon.
>>
>> Yes, I've seen this as a temporary setback.
>
> And we will hopefully migrate the current libconsensus from openSSL to
> libsecp256k1 soon. So we will be able to enjoy libsecp256k1's
> performance improvements without risking consensus. One problem less.
>
>>>> Always willing to work with you on it, although we're all busy, and this
>>>> isn't my top priority presently.
>>>
>>> Is it because "fear of consensus bugs is what keeps people on the
>>> satoshi client" and you want to keep things this way?
>>
>> No, I see it as less significant to the adoption of libbitcoin-server
>> than other issues we are working on, especially given the existence of
>> libbitcoin-consensus. I also trust you will make progress regardless.
>
> This was just a joke because you said something similar earlier.
> Don't take it seriously.
>