forked from DecentralizedClimateFoundation/DCIPs
158 lines
7.5 KiB
Markdown
158 lines
7.5 KiB
Markdown
---
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eip: 4788
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title: Beacon state root in the EVM
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description: Expose beacon chain state roots in the EVM
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author: Alex Stokes (@ralexstokes), Danny Ryan (@djrtwo)
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discussions-to: https://ethereum-magicians.org/t/eip-4788-beacon-state-root-in-evm/8281
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status: Stagnant
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type: Standards Track
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category: Core
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created: 2022-02-10
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---
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## Abstract
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Commit to the state root of the beacon chain in the `ommers` field in the post-merge execution block. Reflect the changes in the `ommersHash` field of the execution block header.
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Store each beacon chain state root into a contract and add a new opcode that reads this contract.
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## Motivation
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Exposing the beacon chain state root allows for proofs about the beacon state to be verified inside the EVM. This functionality supports a wide variety of use cases in smart contracts involving validator status and finality produced by the consensus layer.
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In particular, this functionality is required for beacon chain validator withdrawals to the EVM.
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## Specification
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| constants | value | units
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|--- |--- |---
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| `FORK_TIMESTAMP` | TBD |
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| `FORK_EPOCH` | TBD |
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| `HISTORY_STORAGE_ADDRESS` | `0xfffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffd` |
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| `OPCODE_VALUE` | `0x48` |
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| `G_beacon_state_root` | 20 | gas
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### Background
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The method of injecting the beacon state root in this EIP follows the general strategy of [EIP-4399](./eip-4399.md) to make a post-merge change to the EVM integrating information from the beacon chain. This EIP along with [EIP-3675](./eip-3675.md) should be taken as relevant background to understand the particular approach of this EIP.
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The method for exposing the state root data via opcode is inspired by [EIP-2935](./eip-2935.md).
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### Block structure and validity
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Beginning at the execution timestamp `FORK_TIMESTAMP`, execution clients **MUST**:
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1. set the value of the `ommers` field in the block to an RLP list with one element: the 32 byte [hash tree root](https://github.com/ethereum/consensus-specs/blob/dev/ssz/simple-serialize.md#merkleization) of the [beacon state](https://github.com/ethereum/consensus-specs/blob/dev/specs/bellatrix/beacon-chain.md#beaconstate) from the previous slot to this block.
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2. set the value of the `ommersHash` field in the block header to the Keccak256 hash of the `ommers` field.
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```python
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beaconStateRoot = <32 byte value> # provided by consensus client
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ommers = RLP([beaconStateRoot]) # in the block body
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ommersHash = Keccak256(ommers) # in the block header
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```
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3. Add the block validation that the `ommersHash` does indeed match the expected commitment given the `ommers` value.
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### EVM changes
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#### Block processing
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At the start of processing any execution block where `block.timestamp >= FORK_TIMESTAMP` (i.e. before processing any transactions), write the beacon state root provided in the block into the storage of the smart contract at `HISTORY_STORAGE_ADDRESS`. This data is keyed by the block number.
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In pseudocode:
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```python
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beacon_state_root = block.ommers[0]
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sstore(HISTORY_STORAGE_ADDRESS, block.number, beacon_state_root)
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```
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#### New opcode
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Beginning at the execution timestamp `FORK_TIMESTAMP`, introduce a new opcode `BEACON_STATE_ROOT` at `OPCODE_VALUE`. This opcode consumes one word from the stack encoding the block number for the root. The opcode has a gas cost of `G_beacon_state_root`.
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The result of executing this opcode leaves one word on the stack corresponding to a read of the history contract's storage; in pseudocode:
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```python
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block_number = evm.stack.pop()
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sload(HISTORY_STORAGE_ADDRESS, block_number)
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```
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If there is no root stored at the requested block number, the opcode follows the existing EVM semantics of `sload` returning `0`.
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## Rationale
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### General strategy
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See the rationale for EIP-4399 for discussion about this general strategy of reusing execution block elements for beacon chain data.
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### Fork mechanics
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This EIP requires the consensus layer and execution layer to execute a network upgrade in lockstep.
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To carry out this task, a `FORK_EPOCH` (of the beacon chain) will be chosen and then used to compute a timestamp `FORK_TIMESTAMP`.
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This `FORK_TIMESTAMP` can be used in the execution layer to identify when the protocol change should be deployed.
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This technique works because the timestamps in post-merge execution blocks are aligned to beacon chain slots and thus serve as a proxy for the slot number.
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Another option for the fork definition would be to pick a beacon chain epoch and an execution payload block number.
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This design however is not reliable due to the presence of skipped slots on the beacon chain.
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### Execution layer validations
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By including the beacon state root in the execution block in the deprecated `ommers` field, execution clients can still verify the chain in a self-contained way without relying on an available consensus client.
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This property is important during syncing (and likely other phases of execution node operation).
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### Minimizing client code change
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By including the `ommersHash` validation, clients can use existing code with only minimal changes (supplying the actual state root) during block production and verification.
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Having the beacon state root value in the `ommers` field means that it is fairly straightforward to provide the value from the block data to the EVM execution context for client implementations as they stand today.
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### Gas cost of opcode
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The suggested gas cost is just using the value for the `BLOCKHASH` opcode as `BEACON_STATE_ROOT` is an analogous operation.
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### Why not repurpose `BLOCKHASH`?
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The `BLOCKHASH` opcode could be repurposed to provide a beacon state root instead of the current execution block hash.
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To minimize code change and simplify deployment to mainnet, this EIP suggests leaving `BLOCKHASH` alone and adding a new opcode with the desired semantics.
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### Why not bound history of state roots?
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Marginal state growth; adding every single root results in an additional ~84MB of state growth per year compared to ~30 GB of state overall.
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TODO: say something about statelessness
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TODO: get latest numbers on state size, and compare against predicted growth
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### Beacon state root instead of block root
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Each slot on the beacon chain containing a block has both a block root and a state root (reflecting the state after applying said block).
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The beacon block includes the state root so a proof about the state could also be authored against a block root at the cost of a few additional hashes.
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Given that most use cases want to prove data encapsulated in a given state, rather than a given block, this EIP suggests exposing state roots over block roots.
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### Block number in lieu of slot
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The state roots are keyed by the `number` of the execution block.
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Another option is to key roots by the beacon chain slot they belong to.
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While at first pass this may seem more direct, the beacon chain can have "skipped" slots where a beacon proposer failed to produce a block that was included at a given slot.
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Handling roots of skipped slots would complicate the EVM mechanism so this EIP suggests to use the execution block number where each distinct block number is guaranteed to have a distinct root.
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## Backwards Compatibility
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No issues.
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## Test Cases
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TODO
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## Reference Implementation
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TODO
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## Security Considerations
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TODO
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## Copyright
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Copyright and related rights waived via [CC0](../LICENSE.md).
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