* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Signet
[not found] <CACJ+Xm+-+C43ev_Sk8T-wdm=1nsmHHR_wB4rk+wu9CJvMHS5jw@mail.gmail.com>
@ 2019-03-14 1:17 ` Karl-Johan Alm
0 siblings, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread
From: Karl-Johan Alm @ 2019-03-14 1:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Varunram Ganesh; +Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
Hi Varunram,
On Wed, Mar 13, 2019 at 3:41 PM Varunram Ganesh
<varunramganesh@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I like your idea of a signet as it would greatly help test reorgs and stuff without having to experiment with regtest. But I'm a bit concerned about running a common signet (Signet1) controlled by a trusted entity. I guess if someone wants to test signet on a global scale, they could spin up a couple nodes in a couple places (and since it is anyway trusted, they can choose to run it on centralised services like AWS). Another concern is that the maintainer might have unscheduled work, emergencies, etc and that could affect how people test stuff on. This would also mean that we need people to run signet1 nodes in parallel with current testnet nodes (one could argue that Signet is trusted anyway and this doesn't matter, still)
>
> I'm sure you would have considered these while designing, so would be great to hear your thoughts.
For starters, I assume that the signer would run an automated script
that generated blocks on regular intervals without requiring manual
interaction. So even if the signer went on a vacation, the network
would keep on ticking. I also assume the signer would be running a
faucet service so users could get coins as needed. Ultimately though,
if a signer ended up vanishing or being unreliable, people would just
set up a new signet with a different signer and use that instead, so
ultimately it's not a big deal.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Signet
@ 2019-03-13 9:15 Varunram Ganesh
0 siblings, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread
From: Varunram Ganesh @ 2019-03-13 9:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: bitcoin-dev
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Hello Kalle,
I like your idea of a signet as it would greatly help test reorgs and stuff
without having to experiment with regtest. But I'm a bit concerned about
running a common signet (Signet1) controlled by a trusted entity. I guess
if someone wants to test signet on a global scale, they could spin up a
couple nodes in a couple places (and since it is anyway trusted, they can
choose to run it on centralised services like AWS). Another concern is that
the maintainer might have unscheduled work, emergencies, etc and that could
affect how people test stuff on. This would also mean that we need people
to run signet1 nodes in parallel with current testnet nodes (one could
argue that Signet is trusted anyway and this doesn't matter, still)
I'm sure you would have considered these while designing, so would be great
to hear your thoughts.
Regards,
Varunram
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* [bitcoin-dev] Signet
@ 2019-03-08 5:54 Karl-Johan Alm
2019-03-08 20:20 ` Matt Corallo
2019-03-09 19:52 ` Lautaro Dragan
0 siblings, 2 replies; 11+ messages in thread
From: Karl-Johan Alm @ 2019-03-08 5:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3305 bytes --]
Hello,
As some of you already know, I've been working on a network called
"signet", which is bascially a complement to the already existing testnet,
except it is completely centralized, and blocks are signed by a specific
key rather than using proof of work.
Benefits of this:
1. It is more predictable than testnet. Miners appear and disappear
regularly, causing irregular block generation.
2. Since it is centrally controlled, it is easy to perform global testing,
such as reorgs (e.g. the network performs a 4 block reorg by request, or as
scheduled).
3. It is more stable than testnet, which occasionally sees several thousand
block reorgs.
4. It is trivial to spin up (and shut down) new signets to make public
tests where anyone can participate.
Anyone can create a signet at any time, simply by creating a key pair and
creating a challenge (scriptPubKey). The network can then be used globally
by anyone, assuming the creator sends some coins to the other participants.
Having a persistent signet would be beneficial in particular to services
which need a stable place to test features over an extended period of time.
My own company implements protocols on top of Bitcoin with sidechains. We
need multi-node test frameworks to behave in a predictable manner (unlike
testnet) and with the same standardness relay policy as mainnet.
Signets consist of 2 parameters: the challenge script (scriptPubKey) and
the solution length. (The latter is needed to retain fixed length block
headers, despite having an additional payload.)
I propose that a default persistent "signet1" is created, which can be
replaced in future versions e.g. if the coins are unwisely used as real
money, similarly to what happened to previous testnets. This signet is
picked by default if a user includes -signet without providing any of the
parameters mentioned above. The key holder would be someone sufficiently
trusted in the community, who would be willing to run the system (block
generation code, faucet, etc). It could be made a little more sturdy by
using 1-of-N multisig as the challenge, in case 1 <= x < N of the signers
disappear. If people oppose this, it can be skipped, but will mean people
can't just jump onto signet without first tracking down parameters from
somewhere.
Implementation-wise, the code adds an std::map with block hash to block
signature. This is serialized/deserialized as appropriate (Segwit witness
style), which means block headers in p2p messages are (80 +
solution_length) bytes. Block header non-contextual check goes from
checking if block header hash < target to checking if the payload is a
valid signature for the block header hash instead.
Single commit with code (will split into commits and make PR later, but
just to give an idea what it looks like):
https://github.com/kallewoof/bitcoin/pull/4
I don't think this PR is overly intrusive, and I'm hoping to be able to get
signet code into Bitcoin Core eventually, and am equally hopeful that devs
of other (wallet etc) implementations will consider supporting it.
Feedback requested on this.
Attribution: parts of the signet code (in particular signblock and
getnewblockhex) were adapted from the ElementsProject/elements repository.
When PR is split into atomic commits, I will put appropriate attribution
there.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Signet
2019-03-08 5:54 Karl-Johan Alm
@ 2019-03-08 20:20 ` Matt Corallo
2019-03-10 0:43 ` Karl-Johan Alm
2019-03-13 3:23 ` Anthony Towns
2019-03-09 19:52 ` Lautaro Dragan
1 sibling, 2 replies; 11+ messages in thread
From: Matt Corallo @ 2019-03-08 20:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Karl-Johan Alm, Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
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To make testing easier, it may make sense to keep the existing block header format (and PoW) and instead apply the signature rules to some field in the coinbase transaction. This means SPV clients (assuming they only connect to honest/trusted nodes) work as-is.
A previous idea regarding reorgs (that I believe Greg came up with) is to allow multiple keys to sign blocks, with one signing no reorgs and one signing a reorg every few blocks, allowing users to choose the behavior they want.
> On Mar 8, 2019, at 00:54, Karl-Johan Alm via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> As some of you already know, I've been working on a network called "signet", which is bascially a complement to the already existing testnet, except it is completely centralized, and blocks are signed by a specific key rather than using proof of work.
>
> Benefits of this:
>
> 1. It is more predictable than testnet. Miners appear and disappear regularly, causing irregular block generation.
>
> 2. Since it is centrally controlled, it is easy to perform global testing, such as reorgs (e.g. the network performs a 4 block reorg by request, or as scheduled).
>
> 3. It is more stable than testnet, which occasionally sees several thousand block reorgs.
>
> 4. It is trivial to spin up (and shut down) new signets to make public tests where anyone can participate.
>
> Anyone can create a signet at any time, simply by creating a key pair and creating a challenge (scriptPubKey). The network can then be used globally by anyone, assuming the creator sends some coins to the other participants.
>
> Having a persistent signet would be beneficial in particular to services which need a stable place to test features over an extended period of time. My own company implements protocols on top of Bitcoin with sidechains. We need multi-node test frameworks to behave in a predictable manner (unlike testnet) and with the same standardness relay policy as mainnet.
>
> Signets consist of 2 parameters: the challenge script (scriptPubKey) and the solution length. (The latter is needed to retain fixed length block headers, despite having an additional payload.)
>
> I propose that a default persistent "signet1" is created, which can be replaced in future versions e.g. if the coins are unwisely used as real money, similarly to what happened to previous testnets. This signet is picked by default if a user includes -signet without providing any of the parameters mentioned above. The key holder would be someone sufficiently trusted in the community, who would be willing to run the system (block generation code, faucet, etc). It could be made a little more sturdy by using 1-of-N multisig as the challenge, in case 1 <= x < N of the signers disappear. If people oppose this, it can be skipped, but will mean people can't just jump onto signet without first tracking down parameters from somewhere.
>
> Implementation-wise, the code adds an std::map with block hash to block signature. This is serialized/deserialized as appropriate (Segwit witness style), which means block headers in p2p messages are (80 + solution_length) bytes. Block header non-contextual check goes from checking if block header hash < target to checking if the payload is a valid signature for the block header hash instead.
>
> Single commit with code (will split into commits and make PR later, but just to give an idea what it looks like): https://github.com/kallewoof/bitcoin/pull/4
>
> I don't think this PR is overly intrusive, and I'm hoping to be able to get signet code into Bitcoin Core eventually, and am equally hopeful that devs of other (wallet etc) implementations will consider supporting it.
>
> Feedback requested on this.
>
> Attribution: parts of the signet code (in particular signblock and getnewblockhex) were adapted from the ElementsProject/elements repository. When PR is split into atomic commits, I will put appropriate attribution there.
>
> _______________________________________________
> bitcoin-dev mailing list
> bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
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* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Signet
2019-03-08 20:20 ` Matt Corallo
@ 2019-03-10 0:43 ` Karl-Johan Alm
2019-03-10 17:01 ` David A. Harding
2019-03-13 3:23 ` Anthony Towns
1 sibling, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread
From: Karl-Johan Alm @ 2019-03-10 0:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Matt Corallo; +Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
Hi Matt,
On Sat, Mar 9, 2019 at 5:20 AM Matt Corallo <lf-lists@mattcorallo.com> wrote:
>
> To make testing easier, it may make sense to keep the existing block header format (and PoW) and instead apply the signature rules to some field in the coinbase transaction. This means SPV clients (assuming they only connect to honest/trusted nodes) work as-is.
Keeping the PoW rule and moving the signature would mean DoS attacks
would be trivial as anyone could mine blocks without a signature in
them, unless you ramped up the difficulty, which would mean it's just
another testnet. It's a test network, admittedly, but I think it would
kind of defeat the purpose.
> A previous idea regarding reorgs (that I believe Greg came up with) is to allow multiple keys to sign blocks, with one signing no reorgs and one signing a reorg every few blocks, allowing users to choose the behavior they want.
Not sure how this would work in practice. The idea with signet is to
have an actual network that is occasionally reorged, i.e. it's a
global network (for those participating) that everyone agrees on. Not
sure how you would have choices there.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Signet
2019-03-10 0:43 ` Karl-Johan Alm
@ 2019-03-10 17:01 ` David A. Harding
2019-03-12 5:44 ` Karl-Johan Alm
0 siblings, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread
From: David A. Harding @ 2019-03-10 17:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Karl-Johan Alm, Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
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On Sun, Mar 10, 2019 at 09:43:43AM +0900, Karl-Johan Alm via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> Keeping the PoW rule and moving the signature would mean DoS attacks
> would be trivial as anyone could mine blocks without a signature in
> them
Sure, but anyone could also just connect their lite client to a trusted
node (or nodes) on signet. The nodes would protect the clients from
missing/invalid-signature DoS and the clients wouldn't have to implement
any more network-level changes than they need to now for testnet.
For people who don't want to run their own trusted signet nodes, there
could be a list of signet nodes run by well-known Bitcoiners (and this
could even be made available via a simple static dns seeder lite clients
could use).
> On Sat, Mar 9, 2019 at 5:20 AM Matt Corallo <lf-lists@mattcorallo.com>
> wrote:
> > A previous idea regarding reorgs (that I believe Greg came up with)
> > is to allow multiple keys to sign blocks, with one signing no reorgs
> > and one signing a reorg every few blocks, allowing users to choose
> > the behavior they want.
>
> Not sure how this would work in practice.
This post from Maxwell could be the idea Corallo is describing:
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2018-August/016348.html
I read it as:
- Trusted signer Alice only signs extensions of her previous blocks
- Trusted signer Bob periodically extends one of Alice's blocks
(either the tip or an earlier block) with a chain that grows faster
than Alice's chain, becoming the most-PoW chain. At some point he
stops and Alice's chain overtakes Bob's fork as the most-PoW chain
- User0 who wants to ignore reorg problems starts his node with
-signet -signers="alice", causing his node to only accept blocks
from Alice.
- User1 who wants to consider reorg problems starts his node with
-signet -signers="alice,bob", causing his node to accept blocks from
both Alice and Bob, thus experiencing periodic reorgs.
- There can also be other signing keys for any sort of attack
that can be practically executed, allowing clients to test their
response to the attack when they want to but also ignore any
disruption it would otherwise cause the rest of the time.
- As an alternative to particular signing keys, there could just be
flags put in the header versionbits, header nonce, or generation
transaction indicating how the block should be classified (e.g.
no_reorg, reorg_max6, reorg_max144, merkle_vulnerability, special0,
special1, etc...)
(If something like this is implemented, I propose reserving one of the
signing keys/classification flags for use by any of Bitcoin's more
devious devs in unannounced attacks. Having to occasionally dig
through weird log messages and odd blocks with other Bitcoin dorks on
IRC in order to figure out why things went horribly sideways in our
signet clients sounds to me like an enjoyable experience. :-)
-Dave
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Signet
2019-03-10 17:01 ` David A. Harding
@ 2019-03-12 5:44 ` Karl-Johan Alm
0 siblings, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread
From: Karl-Johan Alm @ 2019-03-12 5:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: David A. Harding; +Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
Hello all,
I started writing code that puts the signature in the coinbase
transaction similar to the witness commitment, and encountered a
potential issue. See inline comments below.
On Mon, Mar 11, 2019 at 2:02 AM David A. Harding <dave@dtrt.org> wrote:
>
> On Sun, Mar 10, 2019 at 09:43:43AM +0900, Karl-Johan Alm via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> > Keeping the PoW rule and moving the signature would mean DoS attacks
> > would be trivial as anyone could mine blocks without a signature in
> > them
>
> Sure, but anyone could also just connect their lite client to a trusted
> node (or nodes) on signet. The nodes would protect the clients from
> missing/invalid-signature DoS and the clients wouldn't have to implement
> any more network-level changes than they need to now for testnet.
>
> For people who don't want to run their own trusted signet nodes, there
> could be a list of signet nodes run by well-known Bitcoiners (and this
> could even be made available via a simple static dns seeder lite clients
> could use).
This sounds sensible. One issue here is that the "proper" signer will
be orders of magnitude slower than the fake miner when constructing
blocks. Because the signature is now stuffed into the coinbase
transaction, it becomes a part of the block merkle root, so the true
miner now has to (1) create a block, (2) sign it, (3) check if hash <
target, (4) nudge nonce if not, and then repeat from step (2) until it
finds a valid block. I.e. it has to sign the entire thing for every
nonce.
> This post from Maxwell could be the idea Corallo is describing:
>
> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2018-August/016348.html
That's pretty cool. The plan I had was to set up some simple interface
where anyone could "order" reorgs whenever they wanted to. It would
reorg/double spend people on request (e.g. "send 1 signetcoin to
signet1qfoobar and then double spend it in a reorg 3 blocks deep") and
so on.
With that kind of tool, I don't know if you need the alternate signing
approach you described, but I could be mistaken.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Signet
2019-03-08 20:20 ` Matt Corallo
2019-03-10 0:43 ` Karl-Johan Alm
@ 2019-03-13 3:23 ` Anthony Towns
2019-03-14 1:07 ` Karl-Johan Alm
1 sibling, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread
From: Anthony Towns @ 2019-03-13 3:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
On Fri, Mar 08, 2019 at 03:20:49PM -0500, Matt Corallo via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> To make testing easier, it may make sense to keep the existing block header
> format (and PoW) and instead apply the signature rules to some field in the
> coinbase transaction.
Maybe make the signature be an optional addition to the header, so
that you can have a "light node" that doesn't download/verify sigs
and a full node that does? (So signatures just sign the traditional
80-byte header, and aren't included in the block's tx merkle root, and
the prevHash reflects the hash of the previous block's 80-byte header,
without the signature)
I think you could do that by adding a p2p service bit to say "send me
signatures if you have them / I can send you signatures", which changes
the p2p encoding of the header from (ver, prev, mrkl, time, bits, nonce)
to (ver, prev, mrkl, time, 0, nonce, bits, sig), and change header
processing to ignore headers from nodes that don't have the service
bit set?
If you did this, it might be a good idea to enforce including the previous
block's header signature in the current block's coinbase.
Cheers,
aj
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Signet
2019-03-13 3:23 ` Anthony Towns
@ 2019-03-14 1:07 ` Karl-Johan Alm
0 siblings, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread
From: Karl-Johan Alm @ 2019-03-14 1:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Anthony Towns; +Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
Hi Anthony,
On Wed, Mar 13, 2019 at 12:23 PM Anthony Towns <aj@erisian.com.au> wrote:
>
> Maybe make the signature be an optional addition to the header, so
> that you can have a "light node" that doesn't download/verify sigs
> and a full node that does? (So signatures just sign the traditional
> 80-byte header, and aren't included in the block's tx merkle root, and
> the prevHash reflects the hash of the previous block's 80-byte header,
> without the signature)
This seems to be what everyone around me thinks is the best approach.
I.e. signet is a "p2p level agreement" that an additional signature is
required for a block to be considered fully valid.
It has the added complexity that a signature-aware signet node talking
to a non-signature-aware signet node should reject/discard headers
sent from the peer, or you will run into situations where a node
doesn't know if the headers are valid or not and has to hold onto them
indefinitely, which is a situation that currently does not occur in
"regular" nets.
If you detach the signature from the header, you also end up with
cases where a malicious user could send garbage data as the signature
for a valid header, forcing peers to mark that header as invalid, even
though it isn't. That is regardless of whether a fix is in place for
the above, too.
> If you did this, it might be a good idea to enforce including the previous
> block's header signature in the current block's coinbase.
Yeah that is one of the ideas we had early on, and I think it's a good
one to do. It doesn't mean someone cannot spam a bunch of invalid
headers at block height current_tip+1, but at least you can get all
but the latest signature now. So as long as you are able to fetch the
latest signature, you should theoretically be able to verify the
entire chain just from the blocks + that one sig.
-Kalle.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Signet
2019-03-08 5:54 Karl-Johan Alm
2019-03-08 20:20 ` Matt Corallo
@ 2019-03-09 19:52 ` Lautaro Dragan
2019-03-10 1:02 ` Karl-Johan Alm
1 sibling, 1 reply; 11+ messages in thread
From: Lautaro Dragan @ 2019-03-09 19:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Karl-Johan Alm, Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 4585 bytes --]
Hi Karl-Johan, my two cents:
At Po.et we use regtest to simulate reorgs in integration tests in Travis /
CircleCI. It has proved quite useful.
In general regtest for automated testing has given us all we needed so far,
but I admit we have a rather simple use of Bitcoin right now (colored
coins).
For local development, we sometimes use a script that "mines" blocks in
regtest periodically. It was my goal to also use this method in QA,
although we wound up using testnet and didn't encounter any problems so far.
Out of curiosity: what limitations did you find in using, for example, a
private network of bitcoin core nodes running regtest? (this gives you the
same power as centralization without any changes or extra functionality
required)
El vie., 8 de mar. de 2019 a la(s) 16:02, Karl-Johan Alm via bitcoin-dev <
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> escribió:
> Hello,
>
> As some of you already know, I've been working on a network called
> "signet", which is bascially a complement to the already existing testnet,
> except it is completely centralized, and blocks are signed by a specific
> key rather than using proof of work.
>
> Benefits of this:
>
> 1. It is more predictable than testnet. Miners appear and disappear
> regularly, causing irregular block generation.
>
> 2. Since it is centrally controlled, it is easy to perform global testing,
> such as reorgs (e.g. the network performs a 4 block reorg by request, or as
> scheduled).
>
> 3. It is more stable than testnet, which occasionally sees several
> thousand block reorgs.
>
> 4. It is trivial to spin up (and shut down) new signets to make public
> tests where anyone can participate.
>
> Anyone can create a signet at any time, simply by creating a key pair and
> creating a challenge (scriptPubKey). The network can then be used globally
> by anyone, assuming the creator sends some coins to the other participants.
>
> Having a persistent signet would be beneficial in particular to services
> which need a stable place to test features over an extended period of time.
> My own company implements protocols on top of Bitcoin with sidechains. We
> need multi-node test frameworks to behave in a predictable manner (unlike
> testnet) and with the same standardness relay policy as mainnet.
>
> Signets consist of 2 parameters: the challenge script (scriptPubKey) and
> the solution length. (The latter is needed to retain fixed length block
> headers, despite having an additional payload.)
>
> I propose that a default persistent "signet1" is created, which can be
> replaced in future versions e.g. if the coins are unwisely used as real
> money, similarly to what happened to previous testnets. This signet is
> picked by default if a user includes -signet without providing any of the
> parameters mentioned above. The key holder would be someone sufficiently
> trusted in the community, who would be willing to run the system (block
> generation code, faucet, etc). It could be made a little more sturdy by
> using 1-of-N multisig as the challenge, in case 1 <= x < N of the signers
> disappear. If people oppose this, it can be skipped, but will mean people
> can't just jump onto signet without first tracking down parameters from
> somewhere.
>
> Implementation-wise, the code adds an std::map with block hash to block
> signature. This is serialized/deserialized as appropriate (Segwit witness
> style), which means block headers in p2p messages are (80 +
> solution_length) bytes. Block header non-contextual check goes from
> checking if block header hash < target to checking if the payload is a
> valid signature for the block header hash instead.
>
> Single commit with code (will split into commits and make PR later, but
> just to give an idea what it looks like):
> https://github.com/kallewoof/bitcoin/pull/4
>
> I don't think this PR is overly intrusive, and I'm hoping to be able to
> get signet code into Bitcoin Core eventually, and am equally hopeful that
> devs of other (wallet etc) implementations will consider supporting it.
>
> Feedback requested on this.
>
> Attribution: parts of the signet code (in particular signblock and
> getnewblockhex) were adapted from the ElementsProject/elements repository.
> When PR is split into atomic commits, I will put appropriate attribution
> there.
>
> _______________________________________________
> bitcoin-dev mailing list
> bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
>
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 11+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Signet
2019-03-09 19:52 ` Lautaro Dragan
@ 2019-03-10 1:02 ` Karl-Johan Alm
0 siblings, 0 replies; 11+ messages in thread
From: Karl-Johan Alm @ 2019-03-10 1:02 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: lautaro.dragan; +Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
Hi Lautaro,
Using regtest is not ideal for public networks, as anyone anywhere can
just rewrite the blockchain at their whim by mining a ton of blocks.
On Sun, Mar 10, 2019 at 4:52 AM Lautaro Dragan <lautarodragan@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Hi Karl-Johan, my two cents:
>
> At Po.et we use regtest to simulate reorgs in integration tests in Travis / CircleCI. It has proved quite useful.
>
> In general regtest for automated testing has given us all we needed so far, but I admit we have a rather simple use of Bitcoin right now (colored coins).
>
> For local development, we sometimes use a script that "mines" blocks in regtest periodically. It was my goal to also use this method in QA, although we wound up using testnet and didn't encounter any problems so far.
>
> Out of curiosity: what limitations did you find in using, for example, a private network of bitcoin core nodes running regtest? (this gives you the same power as centralization without any changes or extra functionality required)
>
> El vie., 8 de mar. de 2019 a la(s) 16:02, Karl-Johan Alm via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> escribió:
>>
>> Hello,
>>
>> As some of you already know, I've been working on a network called "signet", which is bascially a complement to the already existing testnet, except it is completely centralized, and blocks are signed by a specific key rather than using proof of work.
>>
>> Benefits of this:
>>
>> 1. It is more predictable than testnet. Miners appear and disappear regularly, causing irregular block generation.
>>
>> 2. Since it is centrally controlled, it is easy to perform global testing, such as reorgs (e.g. the network performs a 4 block reorg by request, or as scheduled).
>>
>> 3. It is more stable than testnet, which occasionally sees several thousand block reorgs.
>>
>> 4. It is trivial to spin up (and shut down) new signets to make public tests where anyone can participate.
>>
>> Anyone can create a signet at any time, simply by creating a key pair and creating a challenge (scriptPubKey). The network can then be used globally by anyone, assuming the creator sends some coins to the other participants.
>>
>> Having a persistent signet would be beneficial in particular to services which need a stable place to test features over an extended period of time. My own company implements protocols on top of Bitcoin with sidechains. We need multi-node test frameworks to behave in a predictable manner (unlike testnet) and with the same standardness relay policy as mainnet.
>>
>> Signets consist of 2 parameters: the challenge script (scriptPubKey) and the solution length. (The latter is needed to retain fixed length block headers, despite having an additional payload.)
>>
>> I propose that a default persistent "signet1" is created, which can be replaced in future versions e.g. if the coins are unwisely used as real money, similarly to what happened to previous testnets. This signet is picked by default if a user includes -signet without providing any of the parameters mentioned above. The key holder would be someone sufficiently trusted in the community, who would be willing to run the system (block generation code, faucet, etc). It could be made a little more sturdy by using 1-of-N multisig as the challenge, in case 1 <= x < N of the signers disappear. If people oppose this, it can be skipped, but will mean people can't just jump onto signet without first tracking down parameters from somewhere.
>>
>> Implementation-wise, the code adds an std::map with block hash to block signature. This is serialized/deserialized as appropriate (Segwit witness style), which means block headers in p2p messages are (80 + solution_length) bytes. Block header non-contextual check goes from checking if block header hash < target to checking if the payload is a valid signature for the block header hash instead.
>>
>> Single commit with code (will split into commits and make PR later, but just to give an idea what it looks like): https://github.com/kallewoof/bitcoin/pull/4
>>
>> I don't think this PR is overly intrusive, and I'm hoping to be able to get signet code into Bitcoin Core eventually, and am equally hopeful that devs of other (wallet etc) implementations will consider supporting it.
>>
>> Feedback requested on this.
>>
>> Attribution: parts of the signet code (in particular signblock and getnewblockhex) were adapted from the ElementsProject/elements repository. When PR is split into atomic commits, I will put appropriate attribution there.
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> bitcoin-dev mailing list
>> bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
>> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
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2019-03-14 1:17 ` [bitcoin-dev] Signet Karl-Johan Alm
2019-03-13 9:15 Varunram Ganesh
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2019-03-08 5:54 Karl-Johan Alm
2019-03-08 20:20 ` Matt Corallo
2019-03-10 0:43 ` Karl-Johan Alm
2019-03-10 17:01 ` David A. Harding
2019-03-12 5:44 ` Karl-Johan Alm
2019-03-13 3:23 ` Anthony Towns
2019-03-14 1:07 ` Karl-Johan Alm
2019-03-09 19:52 ` Lautaro Dragan
2019-03-10 1:02 ` Karl-Johan Alm
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