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697 lines
36 KiB
Plaintext
<pre>
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BIP: 119
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Layer: Consensus (soft fork)
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Title: CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY
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Author: Jeremy Rubin <j@rubin.io>
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James O'Beirne <vaults@au92.org>
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Comments-URI: https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/wiki/Comments:BIP-0119
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Status: Draft
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Type: Standards Track
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Created: 2020-01-06
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License: BSD-3-Clause
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</pre>
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==Abstract==
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This BIP proposes a new opcode, OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY, to be activated
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as a change to the semantics of OP_NOP4.
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The new opcode has applications for transaction congestion control and payment
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channel instantiation, among others, which are described in the Motivation
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section of this BIP.
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==Summary==
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OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY uses opcode OP_NOP4 (0xb3) as a soft fork upgrade.
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OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY does the following:
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* There is at least one element on the stack, fail otherwise
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* The element on the stack is 32 bytes long, NOP otherwise
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* The DefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash of the transaction at the current input index is equal to the element on the stack, fail otherwise
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The DefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash commits to the serialized version, locktime, scriptSigs hash (if any
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non-null scriptSigs), number of inputs, sequences hash, number of outputs, outputs hash, and
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currently executing input index.
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The recommended standardness rules additionally:
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* Reject non-32 byte as SCRIPT_ERR_DISCOURAGE_UPGRADABLE_NOPS.
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==Motivation==
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Covenants are restrictions on how a coin may be spent beyond key ownership.
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This is a general definition based on the legal definition which even simple
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scripts using CSV would satisfy. Covenants in Bitcoin transactions usually
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refer to restrictions on where coins can be transferred. Covenants can be
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useful to construct smart contracts. Covenants have historically been widely
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considered to be unfit for Bitcoin because they are too complex to implement
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and risk reducing the fungibility of coins bound by them.
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This BIP introduces a simple covenant called a *template* which enables a
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limited set of highly valuable use cases without significant risk. BIP-119
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templates allow for '''non-recursive''' fully-enumerated covenants with no dynamic
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state. CTV serves as a replacement for a pre-signed transaction oracle, which
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eliminates the trust and interactivity requirements. Examples of uses include
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vaults, non-interactive payment channel creation, congestion controlled
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batching, efficient to construct discreet log contracts, and payment pools,
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among many others. For more details on these applications, please see the
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references.
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==Detailed Specification==
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The below code is the main logic for verifying CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY, described
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in pythonic pseudocode. The canonical specification for the semantics of
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OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY as implemented in C++ in the context of Bitcoin Core can
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be seen in the reference implementation.
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The execution of the opcode is as follows:
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<source lang="python">
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def execute_bip_119(self):
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# Before soft-fork activation / failed activation
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# continue to treat as NOP4
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if not self.flags.script_verify_default_check_template_verify_hash:
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# Potentially set for node-local policy to discourage premature use
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if self.flags.script_verify_discourage_upgradable_nops:
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return self.errors_with(errors.script_err_discourage_upgradable_nops)
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return self.return_as_nop()
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# CTV always requires at least one stack argument
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if len(self.stack) < 1:
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return self.errors_with(errors.script_err_invalid_stack_operation)
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# CTV only verifies the hash against a 32 byte argument
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if len(self.stack[-1]) == 32:
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# Ensure the precomputed data required for anti-DoS is available,
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# or cache it on first use
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if self.context.precomputed_ctv_data == None:
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self.context.precomputed_ctv_data = self.context.tx.get_default_check_template_precomputed_data()
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# If the hashes do not match, return error
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if stack[-1] != self.context.tx.get_default_check_template_hash(self.context.nIn, self.context.precomputed_ctv_data)
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return self.errors_with(errors.script_err_template_mismatch)
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return self.return_as_nop()
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# future upgrade can add semantics for this opcode with different length args
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# so discourage use when applicable
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if self.flags.script_verify_discourage_upgradable_nops:
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return self.errors_with(errors.script_err_discourage_upgradable_nops)
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else:
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return self.return_as_nop()
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</source>
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The computation of this hash can be implemented as specified below (where self
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is the transaction type). Care must be taken that in any validation context,
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the precomputed data must be initialized to prevent Denial-of-Service attacks.
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Any implementation *must* cache these parts of the hash computation to avoid
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quadratic hashing DoS. All variable length computations must be precomputed
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including hashes of the scriptsigs, sequences, and outputs. See the section
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"Denial of Service and Validation Costs" below. This is not a performance
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optimization.
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<source lang="python">
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def ser_compact_size(l):
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r = b""
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if l < 253:
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# Serialize as unsigned char
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r = struct.pack("B", l)
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elif l < 0x10000:
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# Serialize as unsigned char 253 followed by unsigned 2 byte integer (little endian)
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r = struct.pack("<BH", 253, l)
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elif l < 0x100000000:
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# Serialize as unsigned char 254 followed by unsigned 4 byte integer (little endian)
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r = struct.pack("<BI", 254, l)
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else:
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# Serialize as unsigned char 255 followed by unsigned 8 byte integer (little endian)
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r = struct.pack("<BQ", 255, l)
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return r
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def ser_string(s):
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return ser_compact_size(len(s)) + s
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class CTxOut:
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def serialize(self):
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r = b""
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# serialize as signed 8 byte integer (little endian)
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r += struct.pack("<q", self.nValue)
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r += ser_string(self.scriptPubKey)
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return r
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def get_default_check_template_precomputed_data(self):
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result = {}
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# If there are no scriptSigs we do not need to precompute a hash
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if any(inp.scriptSig for inp in self.vin):
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result["scriptSigs"] = sha256(b"".join(ser_string(inp.scriptSig) for inp in self.vin))
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# The same value is also pre-computed for and defined in BIP-341 and can be shared.
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# each nSequence is packed as 4 byte unsigned integer (little endian)
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result["sequences"] = sha256(b"".join(struct.pack("<I", inp.nSequence) for inp in self.vin))
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# The same value is also pre-computed for and defined in BIP-341 and can be shared
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# See class CTxOut above for details.
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result["outputs"] = sha256(b"".join(out.serialize() for out in self.vout))
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return result
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# parameter precomputed must be passed in for DoS resistance
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def get_default_check_template_hash(self, nIn, precomputed = None):
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if precomputed == None:
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precomputed = self.get_default_check_template_precomputed_data()
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r = b""
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# Serialize as 4 byte signed integer (little endian)
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r += struct.pack("<i", self.nVersion)
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# Serialize as 4 byte unsigned integer (little endian)
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r += struct.pack("<I", self.nLockTime)
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# we do not include the hash in the case where there is no
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# scriptSigs
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if "scriptSigs" in precomputed:
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r += precomputed["scriptSigs"]
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# Serialize as 4 byte unsigned integer (little endian)
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r += struct.pack("<I", len(self.vin))
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r += precomputed["sequences"]
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# Serialize as 4 byte unsigned integer (little endian)
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r += struct.pack("<I", len(self.vout))
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r += precomputed["outputs"]
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# Serialize as 4 byte unsigned integer (little endian)
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r += struct.pack("<I", nIn)
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return sha256(r)
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</source>
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A PayToBareDefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash output matches the following template:
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<source lang="python">
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# Extra-fast test for pay-to-basic-standard-template CScripts:
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def is_pay_to_bare_default_check_template_verify_hash(self):
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return len(self) == 34 and self[0] == 0x20 and self[-1] == OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY
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</source>
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==Deployment==
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Deployment could be done via BIP 9 VersionBits deployed through Speedy Trial.
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The Bitcoin Core reference implementation includes the below parameters,
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configured to match Speedy Trial, as that is the current activation mechanism
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implemented in Bitcoin Core. Should another method become favored by the wider
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Bitcoin comminity, that might be used instead.
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The start time and bit in the implementation are currently set to bit 5 and
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NEVER_ACTIVE/NO_TIMEOUT, but this is subject to change while the BIP is a draft.
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For the avoidance of unclarity, the parameters to be determined are:
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// Deployment of CTV (BIP 119)
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consensus.vDeployments[Consensus::DEPLOYMENT_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY].bit = 5;
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consensus.vDeployments[Consensus::DEPLOYMENT_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY].nStartTime = Consensus::BIP9Deployment::NEVER_ACTIVE;
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consensus.vDeployments[Consensus::DEPLOYMENT_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY].nTimeout = Consensus::BIP9Deployment::NO_TIMEOUT;
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consensus.vDeployments[Consensus::DEPLOYMENT_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY].min_activation_height = 0;
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Until BIP-119 reaches ACTIVE state and the
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SCRIPT_VERIFY_DEFAULT_CHECK_TEMPLATE_VERIFY_HASH flag is enforced, node implementations should (are recommended to)
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execute a NOP4 as SCRIPT_ERR_DISCOURAGE_UPGRADABLE_NOPS (to deny entry to the mempool) for policy and must evaluate as
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a NOP for consensus (during block validation).
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In order to facilitate using CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY, the common case of a
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PayToBareDefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash
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with no scriptSig data may (is recommended to) be made standard to permit relaying. Future template types may be
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standardized later as policy changes at the preference of the implementor.
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==Reference Implementation==
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A reference implementation and tests are available here in the PR to Bitcoin Core https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21702.
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It is not ideal to link to a PR, as it may be rebased and changed, but it is the best place to find
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the current implementation and review comments of others.
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A recent commit hash in that PR including tests and vectors can be found here https://github.com/jeremyrubin/bitcoin/commit/3109df5616796282786706738994a5b97b8a5a38.
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Once the PR is merged, this BIP should be updated to point to the specific code released.
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Test vectors are available in [/bip-0119/vectors the bip-0119/vectors
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directory] for checking compatibility with the reference implementation and BIP.
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==Rationale==
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The goal of CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY is to be minimal impact on the existing codebase -- in the
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future, as we become aware of more complex but shown to be safe use cases, new template types can be added.
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Below we'll discuss the rules one-by-one:
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====The DefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash of the transaction at the current input index matches the top of the stack====
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The set of data committed to is a superset of data which can impact the TXID of the transaction,
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other than the inputs. This ensures that for a given known input, the TXIDs can also be known ahead
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of time. Otherwise, CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY would not be usable for Batched Channel Creation constructions
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as the redemption TXID could be malleated and pre-signed transactions invalidated, unless the channels
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are built using an Eltoo-like protocol. Note that there may be other types of pre-signed contracts that
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may or may not be able to use Eltoo-like constructs, therefore making TXIDs predictable makes CTV more
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composable with arbitrary sub-protocols.
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=====Committing to the version and locktime=====
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Were these values not committed, it would be possible to delay the spending of
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an output arbitrarily as well as possible to change the TXID.
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Committing these values, rather than restricting them to specific values, is
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more flexible as it permits users of CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY to set the version and
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locktime as they please.
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=====Committing to the ScriptSigs Hash=====
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The scriptsig in a segwit transaction must be exactly empty, unless it is a P2SH
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segwit transaction in which case it must be only the exact redeemscript. P2SH is incompatible
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(unless the P2SH hash is broken) with CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY because the template hash must commit
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to the ScriptSig, which must contain the redeemscript, which is a hash cycle.
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To prevent malleability when not using a segwit input, we also commit to the
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scriptsig. This makes it possible to use a 2 input CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY with a legacy pre-signed
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spend, as long as the exact scriptsig for the legacy output is committed. This is more robust than
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simply disallowing any scriptSig to be set with CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY.
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If no scriptSigs are set in the transaction, there is no purpose in hashing the data or including it
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in the DefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash, so we elide it. It is expected to be common that no scriptSigs will be
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set as segwit mandates that the scriptSig must be empty (to avoid malleability).
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We commit to the hash rather than the values themselves as this is already
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precomputed for each transaction to optimize SIGHASH_ALL signatures.
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Committing to the hash additionally makes it simpler to construct DefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash safely and unambiguously from
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script.
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=====Committing to the number of inputs=====
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If we allow more than one input to be spent in the transaction then it would be
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possible for two outputs to request payment to the same set of outputs,
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resulting in half the intended payments being discarded, the "half-spend" problem.
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Furthermore, the restriction on which inputs can be co-spent is critical for
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payments-channel constructs where a stable TXID is a requirement (updates would
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need to be signed on all combinations of inputs).
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However, there are legitimate use cases for allowing multiple inputs. For
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example:
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Script paths:
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Path A: <+24 hours> OP_CHECKSEQUENCEVERIFY OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY <Pay Alice 1 Bitcoin (1 input) nLockTime for +24 hours>
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Path B: OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY <Pay Bob 2 Bitcoin (2 inputs)>
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In this case, there are 24 hours for the output to, with the addition of a
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second output, pay Bob 2 BTC. If 24 hours lapses, then Alice may redeem her 1
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BTC from the contract. Both input UTXOs may have the exact same Path B, or only one.
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The issue with these constructs is that there are N! orders that the inputs can
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be ordered in and it's not generally possible to restrict the ordering.
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CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY allows for users to guarantee the exact number of inputs being
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spent. In general, using CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY with more than one input is difficult
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and exposes subtle issues, so multiple inputs should not be used except in
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specific applications.
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In principle, committing to the Sequences Hash (below) implicitly commits to the number of inputs,
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making this field strictly redundant. However, separately committing to this number makes it easier
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to construct DefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash from script.
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We treat the number of inputs as a `uint32_t` because Bitcoin's consensus decoding logic limits vectors
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to `MAX_SIZE=33554432` and that is larger than `uint16_t` and smaller than `uint32_t`. 32 bits is also
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friendly for manipulation using Bitcoin's current math opcodes, should `OP_CAT` be added. Note that
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the max inputs in a block is further restricted by the block size to around 25,000, which would fit
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into a `uint16_t`, but that is an uneccessary abstraction leak.
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=====Committing to the Sequences Hash=====
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If we don't commit to the sequences, then the TXID can be malleated. This also allows us to enforce
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a relative sequence lock without an OP_CSV. It is insufficient to just pair CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY
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with OP_CSV because OP_CSV enforces a minimum nSequence value, not a literal value.
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We commit to the hash rather than the values themselves as this is already
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precomputed for each transaction to optimize SIGHASH_ALL signatures.
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Committing to the hash additionally makes it simpler to construct DefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash safely and unambiguously from
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script.
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=====Committing to the Number of Outputs=====
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In principle, committing to the Outputs Hash (below) implicitly commits to the number of outputs,
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making this field strictly redundant. However, separately committing to this number makes it easier
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to construct DefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash from script.
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We treat the number of outputs as a `uint32_t` because a `COutpoint` index is a `uint32_t`.
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Further, Bitcoin's consensus decoding logic limits vectors to `MAX_SIZE=33554432` and that is
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larger than `uint16_t` and smaller than `uint32_t`. 32 bits is also friendly for manipulation using
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Bitcoin's current math opcodes, should `OP_CAT` be added.
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=====Committing to the outputs hash=====
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This ensures that spending the UTXO is guaranteed to create the exact outputs
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requested.
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We commit to the hash rather than the values themselves as this is already
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precomputed for each transaction to optimize SIGHASH_ALL signatures.
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Committing to the hash additionally makes it simpler to construct DefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash safely and unambiguously from
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script.
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=====Committing to the current input's index=====
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Committing to the currently executing input's index is not strictly needed for anti-malleability,
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however it does restrict the input orderings eliminating a source of malleability for protocol
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designers.
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However, committing to the index eliminates key-reuse vulnerability to the half-spend problem.
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As CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY scripts commit to being spent at particular index, reused instances of these
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scripts cannot be spent at the same index, which implies that they cannot be spent in the same transaction.
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This makes it safer to design wallet vault contracts without half-spend vulnerabilities.
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Committing to the current index doesn't prevent one from expressing a CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY which can
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be spent at multiple indicies. In current script, the CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY operation can be wrapped
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in an OP_IF for each index (or Tapscript branches in the future). If OP_CAT or OP_SHA256STREAM are
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added to Bitcoin, the index may simply be passed in by the witness before hashing.
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=====Committing to Values by Hash=====
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Committing to values by hash makes it easier and more efficient to construct a
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DefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash
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from script. Fields which are not intended to be set may be committed to by hash without incurring
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O(n) overhead to re-hash.
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Furthermore, if OP_SHA256STREAM is added in the future, it may be possible to write a script which
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allows adding a single output to a list of outputs without incurring O(n) overhead by committing to
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a hash midstate in the script.
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=====Using SHA256=====
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SHA256 is a 32 byte hash which meets Bitcoin's security standards and is
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available already inside of Bitcoin Script for programmatic creation of template
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programs.
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RIPEMD160, a 20 byte hash, might also be a viable hash in some contexts and has some benefits. For fee efficiency,
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RIPEMD160 saves 12 bytes. However, RIPEMD160 was not chosen for BIP-119 because it introduces
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risks around the verification of programs created by third parties to be subject to a
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[birthday-attack https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/54841/birthday-attack-on-p2sh] on
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transaction preimages.
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=====Using Non-Tagged Hashes=====
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The Taproot/Schnorr BIPs use Tagged Hashes
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(`SHA256(SHA256(tag)||SHA256(tag)||msg)`) to prevent taproot leafs, branches,
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tweaks, and signatures from overlapping in a way that might introduce a security
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[vulnerability https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2018-June/016091.html].
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OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY is not subject to this sort of vulnerability as the
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hashes are effectively tagged externally, that is, by OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY
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itself and therefore cannot be confused for another hash.
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It would be a conservative design decisison to make it a tagged hash even if
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there was no obvious benefit and no cost. However, in the future, if OP_CAT were
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to be introduced to Bitcoin, it would make programs which dynamically build
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OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY hashes less space-efficient. Therefore, bare untagged hashes
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are used in BIP-119.
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=====The Ordering of Fields=====
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Strictly speaking, the ordering of fields is insignificant. However, with a
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carefully selected order, the efficiency of future scripts (e.g., those using a
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OP_CAT or OP_SHA256STREAM) may be improved (as described in the Future Upgrades
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section).
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In particular, the order is selected in order of least likely to change to most.
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#nVersion
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#nLockTime
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#scriptSig hash (maybe!)
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#input count
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#sequences hash
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#output count
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#outputs hash
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#input index
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Several fields are infrequently modified. nVersion should change infrequently. nLockTime should
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generally be fixed to 0 (in the case of a payment tree, only the *first* lock time is needed to
|
|
prevent fee-sniping the root). scriptSig hash should generally not be set at all.
|
|
|
|
Since there are many possible sequences hash for a given input count, the input count comes before
|
|
the sequences hash.
|
|
|
|
Since there are many possible outputs hashes for a given out count, the output count comes before
|
|
the outputs hash.
|
|
|
|
Since we're generally using a single input to many output design, we're more likely to modify the
|
|
outputs hash than the inputs hash.
|
|
|
|
We usually have just a single input on a CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY script, which would suggest that it
|
|
does not make sense for input index to be the last field. However, given the desirability of being
|
|
able to express a "don't care" index easily (e.g., for decentralized kickstarter-type transactions),
|
|
this value is placed last.
|
|
|
|
===Design Tradeoffs and Risks===
|
|
Covenants have historically been controversial given their potential for fungibility risks -- coins
|
|
could be minted which have a permanent restriction on how they may or may not be spent or required
|
|
to propagate metadata.
|
|
|
|
In the CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY approach, the covenants are severely restricted to simple templates. The
|
|
structure of CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY template is such that the outputs must be known exactly at the
|
|
time of construction. Based on a destructuring argument, it is only possible to create templates
|
|
which expand in a finite number of steps. Thus templated transactions are in theory as safe as
|
|
transactions which create all the inputs directly in this regard.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, templates are restricted to be spendable as a known number of inputs only, preventing
|
|
unintentional introduction of the 'half spend' problem.
|
|
|
|
Templates, as restricted as they are, bear some risks.
|
|
|
|
====Denial of Service and Validation Costs====
|
|
|
|
CTV is designed to be able to be validated very cheaply without introducing DoS, either by checking a
|
|
precomputed hash or computing a hash of fixed length arguments (some of which may be cached from more
|
|
expensive computations).
|
|
|
|
In particular, CTV requires that clients cache the computation of a hash over all the scriptSigs, sequences,
|
|
and outputs. Before CTV, the hash of the scriptSigs was not required. CTV also requires that the presence of
|
|
any non-empty scriptSig be hashed, but this can be handled as a part of the scriptSigs hash.
|
|
|
|
As such, evaluating a CTV hash during consensus is always O(1) computation when the caches are available.
|
|
These caches usually must be available due to similar issues in CHECKSIG behavior. Computing the caches
|
|
is O(T) (the size of the transaction).
|
|
|
|
An example of a script that could experience an DoS issue without caching is:
|
|
|
|
<H> CTV CTV CTV... CTV
|
|
|
|
Such a script would cause the intepreter to compute hashes (supposing N CTV's) over O(N*T) data.
|
|
If the scriptSigs non-nullity is not cached, then the O(T) transaction could be scanned over O(N)
|
|
times as well (although cheaper than hashing, still a DoS). As such, CTV caches hashes and computations
|
|
over all variable length fields in a transaction.
|
|
|
|
For CTV, the Denial-of-Service exposure and validation costs are relatively clear. Implementors must be careful
|
|
to correctly code CTV to make use of existing caches and cache the (new for CTV) computations over scriptSigs.
|
|
Other more flexible covenant proposals may have a more difficult time solving DoS issues as more complex computations may
|
|
be less cacheable and expose issues around quadratic hashing, it is a tradeoff CTV makes in favor of cheap and secure
|
|
validation at the expense of flexibility. For example, if CTV allowed the hashing only select outputs by a bitmask,
|
|
caching of all combinations of outputs would not be possible and would cause a quadratic hashing DoS vulnerability.
|
|
|
|
====Permanently Unspendable Outputs====
|
|
|
|
The preimage argument passed to CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY may be unknown or otherwise unsatisfiable.
|
|
However, requiring knowledge that an address is spendable from is incompatible with sender's ability
|
|
to spend to any address (especially, OP_RETURN). If a sender needs to know the template can be spent
|
|
from before sending, they may request a signature of an provably non-transaction challenge string
|
|
from the leafs of the CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY tree.
|
|
|
|
====Forwarding Addresses====
|
|
|
|
Key-reuse with CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY may be used as a form of "forwarding address contract".
|
|
A forwarding address is an address which can automatically execute in a predefined way.
|
|
For example, a exchange's hot wallet might use an address which can automatically be moved to a cold
|
|
storage address after a relative timeout.
|
|
|
|
The issue is that reusing addresses in this way can lead to loss of funds.
|
|
Suppose one creates an template address which forwards 1 BTC to cold storage.
|
|
Creating an output to this address with less than 1 BTC will be frozen permanently.
|
|
Paying more than 1 BTC will lead to the funds in excess of 1BTC to be paid as a large miner fee.
|
|
CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY could commit to the exact amount of bitcoin provided by the inputs/amount of fee
|
|
paid, but as this is a user error and not a malleability issue this is not done.
|
|
Future soft-forks could introduce opcodes which allow conditionalizing which template or script
|
|
branches may be used based on inspecting the amount of funds available in a transaction
|
|
|
|
As a general best practice, it is incumbent on Bitcoin users to not reuse any address unless you are
|
|
certain that the address is acceptable for the payment attempted. This limitation and risk is not
|
|
unique to CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY. For example, atomic swap scripts are single use once the hash is
|
|
revealed. Future Taproot scripts may contain many logical branches that would be unsafe for being
|
|
spent to multiple times (e.g., a Hash Time Lock branch should be instantiated with unique hashes
|
|
each time it is used). Keys which have signed a SIGHASH_ANYPREVOUT transaction can similarly become
|
|
reuse-unsafe.
|
|
|
|
Because CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY commits to the input index currently being spent, reused-keys are
|
|
guaranteed to execute in separate transactions which reduces the risk of "half-spend" type issues.
|
|
|
|
====NOP-Default and Recommended Standardness Rules====
|
|
|
|
If the argument length is not exactly 32, CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY treats it as a NOP during
|
|
consensus validation. Implementations are recommended to fail in such circumstances during non-consensus
|
|
relaying and mempool validation. In particular, making an invalid-length argument a failure aids future
|
|
soft-forks upgrades to be able to rely on the tighter standard restrictions to safely loosen
|
|
the restrictions for standardness while tightening them for consensus with the upgrade's rules.
|
|
|
|
The standardness rules may lead an unscrupulous script developer to accidentally rely on the
|
|
stricter standardness rules to be enforced during consensus. Should that developer submit a
|
|
transaction directly to the network relying on standardness rejection, an standardness-invalid but
|
|
consensus-valid transaction may be caused, leading to a potential loss of funds.
|
|
|
|
====Feature Redundancy====
|
|
|
|
CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY templates are substantially less risky than other covenant systems. If
|
|
implemented, other covenant systems could make the CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY's functionality redundant.
|
|
However, given CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY's simple semantics and low on chain cost it's likely that it
|
|
would continue to be favored even if redundant with other capabilities.
|
|
|
|
More powerful covenants like those proposed by MES16, would also bring some benefits in terms of
|
|
improving the ability to adjust for things like fees rather than relying on child-pays-for-parent or
|
|
other mechanisms. However, these features come at substantially increased complexity and room for
|
|
unintended behavior.
|
|
|
|
Alternatively, SIGHASH_ANYPREVOUTANYSCRIPT based covenant designs can implement
|
|
something similar to templates, via a scriptPubKey like:
|
|
|
|
<sig of desired TX with PK and fixed nonce R || SIGHASH_ANYPREVOUTANYSCRIPT <PK with public SK> OP_CHECKSIG
|
|
|
|
SIGHASH_ANYPREVOUTANYSCRIPT bears additional technical and implementation risks
|
|
that may preclude its viability for inclusion in Bitcoin, but the capabilities
|
|
above are similar to what CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY offers. The key functional
|
|
difference between SIGHASH_ANYPREVOUTANYSCRIPT and OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY is
|
|
that OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY restricts the number of additional inputs and
|
|
precludes dynamically determined change outputs while
|
|
SIGHASH_ANYPREVOUTANYSCRIPT can be combined with SIGHASH_SINGLE or
|
|
SIGHASH_ANYONECANPAY. For the additional inputs, OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY also
|
|
commits to the scriptsig and sequence, which allows for specifying specific P2SH
|
|
scripts (or segwit v0 P2SH) which have some use cases. Furthermore,
|
|
CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY has benefits in terms of script size (depending on choice of
|
|
PK, SIGHASH_ANYPREVOUTANYSCRIPT may use about 2x-3x the bytes) and verification
|
|
speed, as OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY requires only hash computation rather than
|
|
signature operations. This can be significant when constructing large payment
|
|
trees or programmatic compilations. CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY also has a feature-wise
|
|
benefit in that it provides a robust pathway for future template upgrades.
|
|
|
|
OP_CHECKSIGFROMSTACKVERIFY along with OP_CAT may also be used to emulate
|
|
CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY. However such constructions are more complicated to use
|
|
than CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY, and encumbers additional verification overhead absent
|
|
from CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY. These types of covenants also bear similar potential
|
|
recursion issues to OP_COV which make it unlikely for inclusion in Bitcoin.
|
|
|
|
Given the simplicity of this approach to implement and analyze, and the benefits realizable by user
|
|
applications, CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY's template based approach is proposed in lieu of more complete
|
|
covenants system.
|
|
|
|
|
|
====Future Upgrades====
|
|
|
|
This section describes updates to OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY that are possible in
|
|
the future as well as synergies with other possible upgrades.
|
|
|
|
=====CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY Versions=====
|
|
|
|
OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY currently only verifies properties of 32 byte arguments.
|
|
In the future, meaning could be ascribed to other length arguments. For
|
|
example, a 33-byte argument could just the last byte as a control program. In
|
|
that case, DefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash could be computed when the flag byte
|
|
is set to CTVHASH_ALL. Other programs could be added similar to SIGHASH_TYPEs.
|
|
For example, CTVHASH_GROUP could read data from the Taproot Annex for
|
|
compatibility with SIGHASH_GROUP type proposals and allow dynamic malleability
|
|
of which indexes get hashed for bundling.
|
|
|
|
=====Eltoo with OP_CHECKSIGFROMSTACKVERIFY=====
|
|
|
|
Were both OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY and OP_CHECKSIGFROMSTACKVERIFY to be added to
|
|
Bitcoin, it would be possible to implement a variant of Eltoo's floating
|
|
transactions using the following script:
|
|
|
|
witness(S+n): <sig> <H(tx with nLockTime S+n paying to program(S+n))>
|
|
program(S): OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY <musig_key(pk_update_a, pk_update_b)> OP_CHECKSIGFROMSTACKVERIFY <S+1> OP_CHECKLOCKTIMEVERIFY
|
|
|
|
Compared to SIGHASH_ANYPREVOUTANYSCRIPT, because OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY does not
|
|
allow something similar to SIGHASH_ANYONECANPAY or SIGHASH_SINGLE, protocol
|
|
implementers might elect to sign multiple versions of transactions with CPFP
|
|
Anchor Outputs or Inputs for paying fees or an alternative such as transaction
|
|
sponsors might be considered.
|
|
|
|
=====OP_AMOUNTVERIFY=====
|
|
|
|
An opcode which verifies the exact amount that is being spent in the
|
|
transaction, the amount paid as fees, or made available in a given output could
|
|
be used to make safer OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY addressses. For instance, if the
|
|
OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY program P expects exactly S satoshis, sending S-1
|
|
satoshis would result in a frozen UTXO and sending S+n satoshis would result in
|
|
n satoshis being paid to fee. A range check could restrict the program to only
|
|
apply for expected values and default to a keypath otherwise, e.g.:
|
|
|
|
IF OP_AMOUNTVERIFY <N> OP_GREATER <PK> CHECKSIG ELSE <H> OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY
|
|
|
|
=====OP_CAT/OP_SHA256STREAM=====
|
|
|
|
OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY is (as described in the Ordering of Fields section)
|
|
efficient for building covenants dynamically should Bitcoin get enhanced string
|
|
manipulation opcodes.
|
|
|
|
As an example, the following code checks an input index argument and
|
|
concatenates it to the template and checks the template matches the transaction.
|
|
|
|
OP_SIZE 4 OP_EQUALVERIF
|
|
<nVersion || nLockTime || input count || sequences hash || output count || outputs hash>
|
|
OP_SWAP OP_CAT OP_SHA256 OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY
|
|
|
|
== Backwards Compatibility ==
|
|
|
|
OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY replaces a OP_NOP4 with stricter verification semantics. Therefore, scripts
|
|
which previously were valid will cease to be valid with this change. Stricter verification semantics
|
|
for an OP_NOP are a soft fork, so existing software will be fully functional without upgrade except
|
|
for mining and block validation. Similar soft forks for OP_CHECKSEQUENCEVERIFY and OP_CHECKLOCKTIMEVERIFY
|
|
(see BIP-0065 and BIP-0112) have similarly changed OP_NOP semantics without introducing compatibility issues.
|
|
|
|
In contrast to previous forks, OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY's reference implementation does not allow transactions with spending
|
|
scripts using it to be accepted to the mempool or relayed under standard policy until the new rule is active. Other implementations
|
|
are recommended to follow this rule as well, but not required.
|
|
|
|
Older wallet software will be able to accept spends from OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY outputs, but will
|
|
require an upgrade in order to treat PayToBareDefaultCheckTemplateVerifyHash chains with a confirmed ancestor as
|
|
being "trusted" (i.e., eligible for spending before the transaction is confirmed).
|
|
|
|
Backports of OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY can be trivially prepared (see the reference implementation)
|
|
for older node versions that can be patched but not upgraded to a newer major release.
|
|
|
|
== References ==
|
|
|
|
*[https://utxos.org utxos.org informational site]
|
|
*[https://learn.sapio-lang.org Sapio Bitcoin smart contract language]
|
|
*[https://rubin.io/advent21 27 Blog Posts on building smart contracts with Sapio and CTV, including examples described here.]
|
|
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YxsjdIl0034&t=2451 Scaling Bitcoin Presentation]
|
|
*[https://bitcoinops.org/en/newsletters/2019/05/29/ Optech Newsletter Covering OP_CHECKOUTPUTSHASHVERIFY]
|
|
*[https://cyber.stanford.edu/sites/g/files/sbiybj9936/f/jeremyrubin.pdf Structuring Multi Transaction Contracts in Bitcoin]
|
|
*[https://github.com/jeremyrubin/lazuli Lazuli Notes (ECDSA based N-of-N Signatures for Certified Post-Dated UTXOs)]
|
|
*[https://fc16.ifca.ai/bitcoin/papers/MES16.pdf Bitcoin Covenants]
|
|
*[https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=278122.0 CoinCovenants using SCIP signatures, an amusingly bad idea.]
|
|
*[https://fc17.ifca.ai/bitcoin/papers/bitcoin17-final28.pdf Enhancing Bitcoin Transactions with Covenants]
|
|
*[https://github.com/jamesob/simple-ctv-vault Simple CTV Vaults]
|
|
*[https://github.com/kanzure/python-vaults Python Vaults]
|
|
*[https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2022-January/019808.html CTV Dramatically Improves DLCs]
|
|
*[https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2022-April/020225.html Calculus of Covenants]
|
|
*[https://rubin.io/bitcoin/2021/12/10/advent-13/ Payment Pools with CTV]
|
|
*[https://rubin.io/bitcoin/2021/12/11/advent-14/ Channels with CTV]
|
|
*[https://rubin.io/bitcoin/2021/12/09/advent-12/ Congestion Control with CTV]
|
|
*[https://rubin.io/bitcoin/2021/12/07/advent-10/ Building Vaults on Bitcoin]
|
|
|
|
|
|
===Note on Similar Alternatives===
|
|
|
|
An earlier version of CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY, CHECKOUTPUTSHASHVERIFY, is withdrawn
|
|
in favor of CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY. CHECKOUTPUTSHASHVERIFY did not commit to the
|
|
version or lock time and was thus insecure.
|
|
|
|
CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY could also be implemented as an extension to Taproot, and was
|
|
proposed this way earlier. However, given that CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY has no dependency
|
|
on Taproot, it is preferable to deploy it independently.
|
|
|
|
CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY has also been previously referred to as OP_SECURETHEBAG, which is mentioned here
|
|
to aid in searching and referencing discussion on this BIP.
|
|
|
|
==Copyright==
|
|
|
|
This document is licensed under the 3-clause BSD license.
|