Hi Tamas, 

> The only advantage I see in the current design choice is filter size, but
> even that is less impressive in recent history and going forward, as address
> re-use is much less frequent nowadays than it was Bitcoin’s early days.

Gains aren't only had with address re-use, it's also the case that if an
input is spent in the same block as it was created, then only a single items
is inserted into the filter. Filters spanning across several blocks would
also see savings due to the usage of input scripts.

Another advantage of using input scripts is that it allows rescans where all
keys are known ahead of time to proceed in parallel, which can serve to
greatly speed up rescans in bitcoind. Additionally, it allows light clients
to participate in protocols like atomic swaps using the input scripts as
triggers for state transitions. If outpoints were used, then the party that
initiated the swap would need to send the cooperating party all possible
txid's that may be generated due to fee bumps (RBF or sighash single
tricks). Using the script, the light client simply waits for it to be
revealed in a block (P2WSH) and then it can carry on the protocol.

> Clear advantages of moving to spent outpoint + output script filter:

> 1. Filter correctness can be proven by downloading the block in question only.

Yep, as is they can verify half the filter. With auxiliary data, they can
verify the entire thing. Once committed, they don't need to verify at all.
We're repeating a discussion that played out 7 months ago with no new
information or context.

> 2. Calculation of the filter on server side does not need UTXO.

This is incorrect. Filter calculation can use the spentness journal (or undo
blocks) that many full node implementations utilize.

> This certainly improves with a commitment, but that is not even on the
> roadmap yet, or is it?

I don't really know of any sort of roadmaps in Bitcoin development. However,
I think there's relatively strong support to adding a commitment, once the
current protocol gets more usage in the wild, which it already is today on
mainnet.

> Should a filter be committed that contains spent outpoints, then such
> filter would be even more useful

Indeed, this can be added as a new filter type, optionally adding created
outpoints as you referenced in your prior email.

> Since Bitcoin Core is not yet serving any filters, I do not think this
> discussion is too late.

See my reply to Matt on the current state of deployment. It's also the case
that bitcoind isn't the only full node implementation used in the wild.
Further changes would also serve to delay inclusion into bitcoind. The
individuals proposing these PRs to bitcoind has participated in this
discussion 7 months ago (along with many of the contributors to this
project). Based in this conversation 7 months ago, it's my understanding
that all parties are aware of the options and tradeoffs to be had.

-- Laolu


On Tue, Feb 5, 2019 at 12:10 PM Tamas Blummer <tamas.blummer@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Laolu,

The only advantage I see in the current design choice is filter size, but even that is less
impressive in recent history and going forward, as address re-use is much less frequent nowadays
than it was Bitcoin’s early days.

I calculated total filter sizes since block 500,000:

input script + output script (current BIP): 1.09 GB
spent outpoint + output script: 1.26 GB

Both filters are equally useful for a wallet to discover relevant transactions, but the current design
choice seriously limits, practically disables a light client, to prove that the filter is correct.

Clear advantages of moving to spent outpoint + output script filter:

1. Filter correctness can be proven by downloading the block in question only.
2. Calculation of the filter on server side does not need UTXO.
3. Spent outpoints in the filter enable light clients to do further probabilistic checks and even more if committed.

The current design choice offers lower security than now attainable. This certainly improves with
a commitment, but that is not even on the roadmap yet, or is it?

Should a filter be committed that contains spent outpoints, then such filter would be even more useful:
A client could decide on availability of spent coins of a transaction without maintaining the UTXO set, by
checking the filters if the coin was spent after its origin proven in an SPV manner, evtl. eliminating false positives
with a block download. This would be slower than having UTXO but require only immutable store, no unwinds and
only download of a few blocks.

Since Bitcoin Core is not yet serving any filters, I do not think this discussion is too late.

Tamas Blummer


> On Feb 5, 2019, at 02:42, Olaoluwa Osuntokun <laolu32@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Hi Tamas,
>
> This is how the filter worked before the switch over to optimize for a
> filter containing the minimal items needed for a regular wallet to function.
> When this was proposed, I had already implemented the entire proposal from
> wallet to full-node. At that point, we all more or less decided that the
> space savings (along with intra-block compression) were worthwhile, we
> weren't cutting off any anticipated application level use cases (at that
> point we had already comprehensively integrated both filters into lnd), and
> that once committed the security loss would disappear.
>
> I think it's too late into the current deployment of the BIPs to change
> things around yet again. Instead, the BIP already has measures in place for
> adding _new_ filter types in the future. This along with a few other filter
> types may be worthwhile additions as new filter types.
>
> -- Laolu
>
> On Mon, Feb 4, 2019 at 12:59 PM Tamas Blummer <tamas.blummer@gmail.com> wrote:
> I participated in that discussion in 2018, but have not had the insight gathered by now though writing both client and server implementation of BIP157/158
>
> Pieter Wuille considered the design choice I am now suggesting here as alternative (a) in: https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2018-June/016064.html
> In his evaluation he recognized that a filter having spent output and output scripts would allow decision on filter correctness by knowing the block only.
> He did not evaluate the usefulness in the context of checkpoints, which I think are an important shortcut here.
>
> Yes, a filter that is collecting input and output scripts is shorter if script re-use is frequent, but I showed back in 2018 in the same thread that this saving is not that significant in recent history as address reuse is no longer that frequent.
>
> A filter on spent outpoint is just as useful for wallets as is one on spent script, since they naturally scan the blockchain forward and thereby learn about their coins by the output script before they need to check spends of those outpoints.
>
> It seems to me that implementing an interrogation by evtl. downloading blocks at checkpoints is much simpler than following multiple possible filter paths.
>
> A spent outpoint filter allows us to decide on coin availability based on immutable store, without updated and eventually rolled back UTXO store. The availability could be decided by following the filter path to current tip to genesis and
> check is the outpoint was spent earlier. False positives can be sorted out with a block download. Murmel implements this if running in server mode, where blocks are already there.
>
> Therefore I ask for a BIP change based on better insight gained through implementation.
>
> Tamas Blummer
>
>> On Feb 4, 2019, at 21:18, Jim Posen <jim.posen@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Please see the thread "BIP 158 Flexibility and Filter Size" from 2018 regarding the decision to remove outpoints from the filter [1].
>>
>> Thanks for bringing this up though, because more discussion is needed on the client protocol given that clients cannot reliably determine the integrity of a block filter in a bandwidth-efficient manner (due to the inclusion of input scripts).
>>
>> I see three possibilities:
>> 1) Introduce a new P2P message to retrieve all prev-outputs for a given block (essentially the undo data in Core), and verify the scripts against the block by executing them. While this permits some forms of input script malleability (and thus cannot discriminate between all valid and invalid filters), it restricts what an attacker can do. This was proposed by Laolu AFAIK, and I believe this is how btcd is proceeding.
>> 2) Clients track multiple possible filter header chains and essentially consider the union of their matches. So if any filter received for a particular block header matches, the client downloads the block. The client can ban a peer if they 1) ever return a filter omitting some data that is observed in the downloaded block, 2) repeatedly serve filters that trigger false positive block downloads where such a number of false positives is statistically unlikely, or 3) repeatedly serves filters that are significantly larger than the expected size (essentially padding the actual filters with garbage to waste bandwidth). I have not done the analysis yet, but we should be able to come up with some fairly simple banning heuristics using Chernoff bounds. The main downside is that the client logic to track multiple possible filter chains and filters per block is more complex and bandwidth increases if connected to a malicious server. I first heard about this idea from David Harding.
>> 3) Rush straight to committing the filters into the chain (via witness reserved value or coinbase OP_RETURN) and give up on the pre-softfork BIP 157 P2P mode.
>>
>> I'm in favor of option #2 despite the downsides since it requires the smallest number of changes and is supported by the BIP 157 P2P protocol as currently written. (Though the recommended client protocol in the BIP needs to be updated to account for this). Another benefit of it is that it removes some synchronicity assumptions where a peer with the correct filters keeps timing out and is assumed to be dishonest, while the dishonest peer is assumed to be OK because it is responsive.
>>
>> If anyone has other ideas, I'd love to hear them.
>>
>> -jimpo
>>
>> [1] https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2018-June/016057.html
>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Feb 4, 2019 at 10:53 AM Tamas Blummer via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
>> TLDR: a change to BIP158 would allow decision on which filter chain is correct at lower bandwith use
>>
>> Assume there is a BIP157 client that learned a filter header chain earlier and is now offered an alternate reality by a newly connected BIP157 server.
>>
>> The client notices the alternate reality by routinely asking for filter chain checkpoints after connecting to a new BIP157 server. A divergence at a checkpoint means that the server disagrees the client's history at or before the first diverging checkpoint. The client would then request the filter headers between the last matching and first divergent checkpoint, and quickly figure which block’s filter is the first that does not match previous assumption, and request that filter from the server.
>>
>> The client downloads the corresponding block, checks that its header fits the PoW secured best header chain, re-calculates merkle root of its transaction list to know that it is complete and queries the filter to see if every output script of every transaction is contained in there, if not the server is lying, the case is closed, the server disconnected.
>>
>> Having all output scripts in the filter does not however guarantee that the filter is correct since it might omit input scripts. Inputs scripts are not part of the downloaded block, but are in some blocks before that. Checking those are out of reach for lightweight client with tools given by the current BIP.
>>
>> A remedy here would be an other filter chain on created and spent outpoints as is implemented currently by Murmel. The outpoint filter chain must offer a match for every spent output of the block with the divergent filter, otherwise the interrogated server is lying since a PoW secured block can not spend coins out of nowhere. Doing this check would already force the client to download the outpoint filter history up-to the point of divergence. Then the client would have to download and PoW check every block that shows a match in outpoints until it figures that one of the spent outputs has a script that was not in the server’s filter, in which case the server is lying. If everything checks out then the previous assumption on filter history was incorrect and should be replaced by the history offered by the interrogated server.
>>
>> As you see the interrogation works with this added filter but is highly ineffective. A really light client should not be forced to download lots of blocks just to uncover a lying filter server. This would actually be an easy DoS on light BIP157 clients.
>>
>> A better solution is a change to BIP158 such that the only filter contains created scripts and spent outpoints. It appears to me that this would serve well both wallets and interrogation of filter servers well:
>>
>> Wallets would recognize payments to their addresses by the filter as output scripts are included, spends from the wallet would be recognized as a wallet already knows outpoints of its previously received coins, so it can query the filters for them.
>>
>> Interrogation of a filter server also simplifies, since the filter of the block can be checked entirely against the contents of the same block. The decision on filter correctness does not require more bandwith then download of a block at the mismatching checkpoint. The client could only be forced at max. to download 1/1000 th of the blockchain in addition to the filter header history.
>>
>> Therefore I suggest to change BIP158 to have a base filter, defined as:
>>
>> A basic filter MUST contain exactly the following items for each transaction in a block:
>>         • Spent outpoints
>>         • The scriptPubKey of each output, aside from all OP_RETURN output scripts.
>>
>> Tamas Blummer
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