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* [bitcoin-dev] BIP 174 thoughts
@ 2018-06-15 23:34 Pieter Wuille
  2018-06-16 15:00 ` Peter D. Gray
                   ` (4 more replies)
  0 siblings, 5 replies; 55+ messages in thread
From: Pieter Wuille @ 2018-06-15 23:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Bitcoin Dev

Hello all,

given some recent work and discussions around BIP 174 (Partially
Signed Bitcoin Transaction Format) I'd like to bring up a few ideas.

First of all, it's unclear to me to what extent projects have already
worked on implementations, and thus to what extent the specification
is still subject to change. A response of "this is way too late" is
perfectly fine.

So here goes:

* Key-value map model or set model.

This was suggested in this thread:
https://twitter.com/matejcik/status/1002618633472892929

The motivation behind using a key-value model rather than a simple
list of records was that PSBTs can be duplicated (given to multiple
people for signing, for example), and merged back together after
signing. With a generic key-value model, any implementation can remove
the duplication even if they don't understand fields that may have
been added in future extensions.

However, almost the same can be accomplished by using the simpler set
model (the file consists of a set of records, with no duplication
allowed). This would mean that it would technically be legal to have
two partial signatures with the same key for the same input, if a
non-deterministic signer is used.

On the other hand, this means that certain data currently encoded
inside keys can be dropped, reducing the PSBT size. This is
particularly true for redeemscripts and witnessscripts, as they can
just be computed by the client when deserializing. The two types could
even be merged into just "scripts" records - as they don't need to be
separated based on the way they're looked up (Hash160 for P2SH, SHA256
for P2WSH). The same could be done for the BIP32 derivation paths,
though this may be expensive, as the client would need to derive all
keys before being able to figure out which one(s) it needs.

One exception is the "transaction" record, which needs to be unique.
That can either be done by adding an exception ("there can only be one
transaction record"), or by encoding it separately outside the normal
records (that may also be useful to make it clear that it is always
required).

* Ability for Combiners to verify two PSBT are for the same transaction

Clearly two PSBTs for incompatible transactions cannot be combined,
and this should not be allowed.

It may be easier to enforce this if the "transaction" record inside a
PSBT was required to be in a canonical form, meaning with empty
scriptSigs and witnesses. In order to do so, there could be per-input
records for "finalized scriptSig" and "finalized witness". Actually
placing those inside the transaction itself would only be allowed when
all inputs are finalized.

* Optional signing

I think all operation for the Signer responsibility should be
optional. This will inevitably lead to incompatibilities, but with the
intent of being forward compatible with future developments, I don't
think it is possible to require every implementation to support the
same set of scripts or contracts. For example, some signers may only
implement single-key P2PKH, or may only support signing SegWit inputs.
It's the user's responsibility to find compatible signers (which is
generally not an issue, as the different participants in a setup
necessarily have this figured out before being able to create an
address). This does mean that there can't be an unconditional test
vector that specifies the produced signature in certain circumstances,
but there could be "For implementations that choose to implement
signing for P2PKH inputs using RFC6979, the expected output given
input X and access to key Y is Z".

On the other hand, the Combiner and Finalizer roles can probably be
specified much more accurately than they are now.

* Derivation from xpub or fingerprint

For BIP32 derivation paths, the spec currently only encodes the 32-bit
fingerprint of the parent or master xpub. When the Signer only has a
single xprv from which everything is derived, this is obviously
sufficient. When there are many xprv, or when they're not available
indexed by fingerprint, this may be less convenient for the signer.
Furthermore, it violates the "PSBT contains all information necessary
for signing, excluding private keys" idea - at least if we don't treat
the chaincode as part of the private key.

For that reason I would suggest that the derivation paths include the
full public key and chaincode of the parent or master things are
derived from. This does mean that the Creator needs to know the full
xpub which things are derived from, rather than just its fingerprint.

* Generic key offset derivation

Whenever a BIP32 derivation path does not include any hardened steps,
the entirety of the derivation can be conveyed as "The private key for
P is equal to the private key for Q plus x", with P and Q points and x
a scalar. This representation is more flexible (it also supports
pay-to-contract derivations), more efficient, and more compact. The
downside is that it requires the Signer to support such derivation,
which I don't believe any current hardware devices do.

Would it make sense to add this as an additional derivation method?

* Hex encoding?

This is a very minor thing. But presumably there will be some standard
way to store PSBTs as text for copy-pasting - either prescribed by the
spec, or de facto. These structures may become pretty large, so
perhaps it's worth choosing something more compact than hexadecimal -
for example Base64 or even Z85 (https://rfc.zeromq.org/spec:32/Z85/).

Cheers,

-- 
Pieter


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 55+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] BIP 174 thoughts
@ 2018-06-20  0:39 Jason Les
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 55+ messages in thread
From: Jason Les @ 2018-06-20  0:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: bitcoin-dev

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On Fri, Jun 15, 2018 at 04:34:40PM -0700, Pieter Wuille wrote:
...
> First of all, it's unclear to me to what extent projects have already
> worked on implementations, and thus to what extent the specification
> is still subject to change. A response of "this is way too late" is
> perfectly fine.
...

I am working on a python implementation of BIP 174 as part of a multi-sig hardware wallet I have in the works. I am not so far along as to say that all these changes are way too late, but I’ll comment on the following:

> Key-value map model or set model
I believe the key-value map model should be kept because as Jonas Schnelli said it’s probably not worth significantly breaking existing implementations like Peter Gray’s, or maybe more who have not spoken up. However, I appreciate the benefit of the set model particularly in regards to size consideration and the merging of redeemscripts and witnesscripts into single “scripts” records.

>Ability for Combiners to verify two PSBT are for the same transaction
This idea makes a lot of sense, much more intuitive.

>Hex encoding?
I was hoping for some standard here was well and I agree using something more compact than hex is important. My understanding is Z85 is better for use with JSON than Base64, which is probably a good benefit to have here.

I will continue developing under the current spec and if there ends up being consensus for some of the changes here I’m fine with re-doing the work. I will be following this thread closer now.

Best,
Jason Les


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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 55+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2018-07-11 20:54 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 55+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2018-06-15 23:34 [bitcoin-dev] BIP 174 thoughts Pieter Wuille
2018-06-16 15:00 ` Peter D. Gray
2018-06-19  9:38 ` Jonas Schnelli
2018-06-19 14:20 ` matejcik
2018-06-19 15:20   ` Jonas Schnelli
2018-06-21 20:28     ` Peter D. Gray
2018-06-19 17:16   ` Pieter Wuille
2018-06-21 11:29     ` matejcik
2018-06-21 17:39       ` Pieter Wuille
2018-06-21 11:44     ` Tomas Susanka
2018-06-19 14:22 ` matejcik
2018-06-21  0:39 ` Achow101
2018-06-21 14:32   ` Tomas Susanka
2018-06-21 15:40     ` Greg Sanders
2018-06-21 19:56     ` Peter D. Gray
2018-06-21 21:39       ` Gregory Maxwell
2018-06-22 19:10       ` Pieter Wuille
2018-06-22 22:28         ` Achow101
2018-06-23 17:00           ` William Casarin
2018-06-23 20:33             ` Andrew Chow
2018-06-24  8:19               ` Andrea
2018-06-24  8:28                 ` Andrew Chow
2018-06-24  9:00                   ` Andrea
2018-06-23 18:27           ` Peter D. Gray
2018-06-25 19:47           ` Tomas Susanka
2018-06-25 20:10             ` Jonas Schnelli
2018-06-25 20:30             ` Achow101
2018-06-26 15:33               ` matejcik
2018-06-26 16:58                 ` William Casarin
2018-06-26 17:11                   ` Marek Palatinus
2018-06-27 14:11                   ` matejcik
2018-06-26 20:30                 ` Pieter Wuille
2018-06-27 14:04                   ` matejcik
2018-06-27 15:06                     ` Pieter Wuille
2018-06-29  9:53                       ` matejcik
2018-06-29 19:12                         ` Achow101
2018-06-29 20:31                           ` Peter D. Gray
2018-07-04 13:19                           ` matejcik
2018-07-04 18:35                             ` Achow101
2018-07-05 17:23                               ` Jason Les
2018-07-04 19:09                             ` Pieter Wuille
2018-07-05 11:52                               ` matejcik
2018-07-05 22:06                                 ` Pieter Wuille
2018-07-10 12:10                                   ` matejcik
2018-07-11 18:27                                     ` Pieter Wuille
2018-07-11 20:05                                       ` Gregory Maxwell
2018-07-11 20:54                                         ` [bitcoin-dev] BIP 174 thoughts on graphics vv01f
2018-06-26 21:56                 ` [bitcoin-dev] BIP 174 thoughts Achow101
2018-06-27  6:09                   ` William Casarin
2018-06-27 13:39                     ` Andrea
2018-06-27 17:55                     ` Achow101
2018-06-28 20:42                       ` Rodolfo Novak
2018-07-05 19:20                       ` William Casarin
2018-07-06 18:59                         ` Achow101
2018-06-20  0:39 Jason Les

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