corda/docs/source/whitepaper/corda-technical-whitepaper.tex

613 lines
44 KiB
TeX
Raw Normal View History

\documentclass{article}
\author{Mike Hearn}
\date{December, 2016}
\title{Corda: A distributed ledger}
%%\setlength{\parskip}{\baselineskip}
\usepackage{amsfonts}
\usepackage{listings}
\usepackage{color}
\usepackage{epigraph}
\usepackage{graphicx}
\graphicspath{ {images/} }
\usepackage[export]{adjustbox}
\usepackage{float}
\usepackage{hyperref}
\usepackage[super,comma,sort&compress]{natbib}
\usepackage[nottoc]{tocbibind}
\usepackage[parfill]{parskip}
\usepackage{textcomp}
\usepackage{scrextend}
\addtokomafont{labelinglabel}{\sffamily}
%\usepackage[natbibapa]{apacite}
\renewcommand{\thefootnote}{\alph{footnote}}
%\epigraphfontsize{\small\itshape}
\setlength\epigraphwidth{4.5cm}
\setlength\epigraphrule{0pt}
\begin{document}
\maketitle
%\epigraphfontsize{\small\itshape}
%\renewcommand{\abstractname}{An introduction}
\begin{center}
2016-10-12 12:58:49 +00:00
Version 0.1
\emph{Confidential: Pre-Publication Draft For R3 DLG}
\end{center}
\vspace{10mm}
\begin{abstract}
A decentralised database with minimal trust between nodes would allow for the creation of a global ledger. Such a ledger
would not only be capable of implementing cryptocurrencies but also have many useful applications in finance, trade,
supply chain tracking and more. We present Corda, a decentralised global database, and describe in detail how it
achieves the goal of providing a robust and easy to use platform for decentralised app development. We elaborate on the
high level description provided in the paper \emph{Corda: An introduction}\cite{CordaIntro} and provide a detailed
technical overview, but assume no prior knowledge of the platform.
\end{abstract}
\newpage
\tableofcontents
\newpage
\section{Introduction}
In many industries significant effort is needed to keep organisation-specific databases in sync with each
other. In the financial sector the effort of keeping different databases synchronised, reconciling them to ensure
they actually are synchronised and resolving the `breaks' that occur when they are not represents a significant
fraction of the total work a bank actually does!
Why not just use a shared relational database? This would certainly solve a lot of problems with only existing technology,
but it would also raise more questions than answers:
\begin{itemize}
\item Who would run this database? Where would we find a sufficient supply of angels to own it?
\item In which countries would it be hosted? What would stop that country abusing the mountain of sensitive information it would have?
\item What if it got hacked?
\item Can you actually scale a relational database to fit the entire financial system within it?
\item What happens if The Financial System\texttrademark~needs to go down for maintenance?
\item What kind of nightmarish IT bureaucracy would guard changes to the database schemas?
\item How would you manage access control?
\end{itemize}
We can imagine many other questions. A decentralised database attempts to answer them.
In this paper we differentiate between a \emph{decentralised} database and a \emph{distributed} database. A distributed
database like BigTable\cite{BigTable} scales to large datasets and transaction volumes by spreading the data over many
computers. However it is assumed that the computers in question are all run by a single homogenous organisation and that
the nodes comprising the database all trust each other not to misbehave or leak data. In a decentralised database, such
as the one underpinning Bitcoin\cite{Bitcoin}, the nodes make much weaker trust assumptions and actively cross-check
2016-10-12 12:58:49 +00:00
each other's work. Such databases trade off performance and usability in order to gain security and global acceptance.
\emph{Corda} is a decentralised database platform with the following novel features:
\begin{itemize}
\item New transaction types can be defined using JVM\cite{JVM} bytecode.
\item Transactions may execute in parallel, on different nodes, without either node being aware of the other's transactions.
\item Nodes are arranged in an authenticated peer to peer network. All communication is direct.
\item There is no block chain\cite{Bitcoin}. Transaction races are deconflicted using pluggable \emph{notaries}. A single
Corda network may contain multiple notaries that provide their guarantees using a variety of different algorithms. Thus
Corda is not tied to any particular consensus algorithm.
\item Data is shared on a need-to-know basis. Nodes provide the dependency graph of a transaction they are sending to
another node on demand, but there is no global broadcast of \emph{all} transactions.
\item Bytecode-to-bytecode transpilation is used to allow complex, multi-step transaction building protocols called
\emph{flows} to be modelled as blocking code. The code is transformed into an asynchronous state machine, with
checkpoints written to the node's backing database when messages are sent and received. A node may potentially have
millions of flows active at once and they may last days, across node restarts and even upgrades. Flows expose progress
information to node administrators and users and may interact with people as well as other nodes.
\item The data model allows for arbitrary object graphs to be stored in the ledger. These graphs are called \emph{states} and are the atomic unit of data.
\item The platform provides a rich type system for the representation of things like dates, currencies, legal entities and so on.
\item States can declare a relational mapping and can be queried using SQL.
\item Integration with existing systems is considered from the start. The network can support rapid bulk data imports
from other database systems without placing load on the network. Global ledger data can be joined with existing,
internal RDBMS tables thanks to slots in the state definitions that are reserved for join keys. Events on the ledger
are exposed via an embedded JMS compatible message broker.
2016-10-12 12:58:49 +00:00
\item States can declare scheduled events. For example a bond state may declare an automatic transition to a ``in default'' state if it is not repaid in time.
\end{itemize}
Comparisons with Bitcoin and Ethereum will be provided throughout.
\newpage
\section{Overview}
Corda is a platform for the writing of ``CorDapps'': applications that extend the global database with new capabilities.
Such apps define new data types, new inter-node protocols and the ``smart contracts'' that determine allowed changes.
What is a smart contract? That depends on the model of computation we are talking about. There are two competing
2016-10-12 12:58:49 +00:00
computational models used in decentralised databases: the virtual computer model and the UTXO model. The virtual
computer model is used by Ethereum\cite{Ethereum}. It models the database as the in-memory state of a
global computer with a single thread of execution determined by the block chain. In the UTXO model, as used in
Bitcoin, the database is a set of immutable rows keyed by \texttt{(hash:output index)}. Transactions define
outputs that append new rows and inputs which consume existing rows. The term ``smart contract'' has a different
meaning in each model. A deeper discussion of the tradeoffs and terminology in the different approaches can
be found in the Corda introductory paper\cite{CordaIntro}.
We use the UTXO model and as a result our transactions are structurally similar to Bitcoin transactions: they have
inputs, outputs and signatures. Unlike Bitcoin, Corda database rows can contain arbitrary data, not just a value field.
Because the data consumed and added by transactions is not necessarily a set of key/value pairs, we don't talk about rows
but rather \emph{states}. Like Bitcoin, Corda states are associated with bytecode programs that must accept a transaction
for it to be valid, but unlike Bitcoin, a transaction must satisfy the programs for both the input and output states
at once. \emph{Issuance transactions} may append new states to the database without consuming any existing states but
unlike in Bitcoin these transactions are not special and may be created at any time, by anyone.
In contrast to both Bitcoin and Ethereum, Corda does not order transactions using a block chain and by implication does
not use miners or proof-of-work. Instead each state points to a \emph{notary}, which is a service that guarantees it
will sign a transaction only if all the input states are un-consumed. A transaction is not allowed to consume states
controlled by multiple notaries and thus there is never any need for two-phase commit between notaries. If a combination of
states would cross notaries then a special transaction type is used to move them onto a single notary first.
Notaries are expected to be composed of multiple mutually distrusting parties who use a byzantine fault
tolerant algorithm like HoneyBadgerBFT\cite{HBBFT} to reach consensus. Notaries are identified by and sign with compound
public keys that conceptually follow the Interledger Crypto-Conditions specification\cite{ILPCC}. Note that whilst it
would be conventional to use a BFT algorithm for a notary service, there is no requirement to do so and in cases where
the legal system is sufficient to ensure protocol compliance a higher performance algorithm like RAFT may be used.
Because multiple notaries can co-exist a single network may provide a single global BFT notary for
general use and region-specific RAFT notaries for low latency trading within a unified regulatory area, for example
London or New York.
The Corda transaction format has various other features which are described in later sections.
\section{The peer to peer network}
\subsection{Network overview}
A Corda network consists of the following components:
\begin{itemize}
\item Nodes, communicating using AMQP/1.0 over TLS. Nodes use a relational database for data storage.
\item A permissioning service that automates the process of provisioning TLS certificates.
\item A network map service that publishes information about nodes on the network.
\item One or more notary services. A notary may itself be distributed over multiple nodes.
\item Zero or more oracle services. An oracle is a well known service that signs transactions if they state a fact
and that fact is considered to be true. They may also optionally also provide the facts. This is how the ledger can be
connected to the real world, despite being fully deterministic.
\end{itemize}
A purely in-memory implementation of the messaging subsystem is provided which can inject simulated latency between
nodes and visualise communications between them. This can be useful for debugging, testing and educational purposes.
Oracles and notaries are covered in later sections.
\subsection{Identity and the permissioning service}
Unlike Bitcoin and Ethereum, Corda is designed for semi-private networks in which admission requires obtaining an
identity signed by a root authority. This assumption is pervasive - the flow API provides messaging in terms of identities,
with routing and delivery to underlying nodes being handled automatically. There is no global broadcast at any point.
This `identity' does not have to be a legal or true identity. In the same way that an email address is a globally
unique pseudonym that is ultimately rooted by the top of the DNS hierarchy, so too can a Corda network work with
arbitrary self-selected usernames. The permissioning service can implement any policy it likes as long as the
identities it signs are globally unique. Thus an entirely anonymous Corda network is possible if a suitable
IP obfuscation system like Tor is also used.
Whilst simple string identities are likely sufficient for some networks, the financial industry typically requires some
level of \emph{know your customer} checking, and differentiation between different legal entities, branches and desks
that may share the same brand name. Corda reuses the standard PKIX infrastructure for connecting public keys to
identities and thus names are actually X.500 names. When a single string is sufficient the \emph{common name} field can
be used alone, similar to the web PKI. In more complex deployments the additional structure X.500 provides may be useful
to differentiate between entities with the same name. For example there are at least five different companies called
\emph{American Savings Bank} and in the past there may have been more than 40 independent banks with that name.
More complex notions of identity that may attest to many time-varying attributes are not handled at this layer of the
system: the base identity is always just an X.500 name. Note that even though messaging is always identified, transactions
themselves may still contain anonymous public keys.
\subsection{The network map}
Every network requires a network map service, which may itself be composed of multiple cooperating nodes. This is
similar to Tor's concept of \emph{directory authorities}. The network map publishes the IP addresses through which
every node on the network can be reached, along with the identity certificates of those nodes and the services they
provide. On receiving a connection, nodes check that the connecting node is in the network map.
The network map abstracts the underlying IP addresses of the nodes from more useful business concepts like identities
and services. Each participant on the network, called a \emph{party}, publishes one or more IP addresses in the
network map. Equivalent domain names may be helpful for debugging but are not required. User interfaces and APIs
always work in terms of identities - there is thus no equivalent to Bitcoin's notion of an address (hashed public key),
and user-facing applications rely on auto-completion and search rather than QRcodes to identify a logical recipient.
It is possible to subscribe to network map changes and registering with the map is the first thing a node does at
startup. Nodes may optionally advertise their nearest city for load balancing and network visualisation purposes.
The map is a document that may be cached and distributed throughout the network. The map is therefore not required
to be highly available: if the map service becomes unreachable new nodes may not join the network and existing nodes
may not change their advertised service set, but otherwise things continue as normal.
\subsection{Message delivery}
The network is structurally similar to the email network. Nodes are expected to be long lived but may depart
temporarily due to crashes, connectivity interruptions or maintenance. Messages are written to disk
and delivery is retried until the remote node has acknowledged a message, at which point it is expected to have
either reliably stored the message or processed it completely. Connections between nodes are built and torn down as
needed: there is no assumption of constant connectivity. An ideal network would be entirely flat with high quality
connectivity between all nodes, but Corda recognises that this is not always compatible with common network
setups and thus the message routing component of a node can be separated from the rest and run outside the firewall.
In this way nodes that do not have duplex connectivity can still take part in the network as first class citizens.
Additionally a single node may have multiple advertised IP addresses.
The reference implementation provides this functionality using the Apache Artemis message broker, through which it
obtains journalling, load balancing, flow control, high availability clustering, streaming of messages too large to fit
in RAM and many other useful features. The network uses the \emph{AMQP/1.0}\cite{AMQP} protocol which is a widely
implemented binary messaging standard, combined with TLS to secure messages in transit and authenticate the endpoints.
\subsection{Serialization, sessioning, deduplication and signing}
All messages are encoded using a compact binary format. Each message has a UUID set in an AMQP header which is used
as a deduplication key, thus accidentally redelivered messages will be ignored.
% TODO: Describe the serialization format in more detail once finalised.
Messages may also have an associated organising 64-bit \emph{session ID}. Note that this is distinct from the AMQP
notion of a session. Sessions can be long lived and persist across node restarts and network outages. They exist in order
to group messages that are part of a \emph{flow}, described in more detail below.
Messages that are successfully processed by a node generate a signed acknowledgement message called a `receipt'. Note that
this is distinct from the unsigned acknowledgements that live at the AMQP level and which simply flag that a message was
successfully downloaded over the wire. A receipt may be generated some time after the message is processed in the case
where acknowledgements are being batched to amortise signing overhead, and the receipt identifies the message by the hash
of its content. The purpose of the receipts is to give a node undeniable evidence that a counterparty received a
notification that would stand up later in a dispute mediation process. Corda does not attempt to support deniable
messaging.
\section{Flow framework}
It is common in decentralised ledger systems for complex multi-party protocols to be needed. The Bitcoin payment channel
protocol\cite{PaymentChannels} involves two parties putting money into a multi-signature pot, then iterating with your
counterparty a shared transaction that spends that pot, with extra transactions used for the case where one party or the
other fails to terminate properly. Such protocols typically involve reliable private message passing, checkpointing to
disk, signing of transactions, interaction with the p2p network, reporting progress to the user, maintaining a complex
state machine with timeouts and error cases, and possibly interaction with internal systems on either side. All
this can become quite involved. The implementation of Bitcoin payment channels in the bitcoinj library is approximately
9000 lines of Java, very little of which involves cryptography.
As another example, the core Bitcoin protocol only
allows you to append transactions to the ledger. Transmitting other information that might be useful such as a text message,
refund address, identity information and so on is not supported and must be handled in some other way - typically by
wrapping the raw ledger transaction bytes in a larger message that adds the desired metadata and giving responsibility
for broadcasting the embedded transaction to the recipient, as in Bitcoin's BIP 70\cite{BIP70}.
In Corda transaction data is not globally broadcast. Instead it is transmitted to the relevant parties only when they
need to see it. Moreover even quite simple use cases - like sending cash - may involve a multi-step negotiation between
counterparties and the involvement of a third party such as a notary. Additional information that isn't put into the
ledger is considered essential, as opposed to nice-to-have. Thus unlike traditional blockchain systems in which the primary
form of communication is global broadcast, in Corda \emph{all} communication takes the form of small multi-party sub-protocols
called flows.
The flow framework presents a programming model that looks to the developer as if they have the ability to run millions
of long lived threads which can survive node restarts, and even node upgrades. APIs are provided to send and receive
object graphs to and from other identities on the network, embed sub-flows, and report progress to observers. In this
way business logic can be expressed at a very high level, with the details of making it reliable and efficient
abstracted away. This is achieved with the following components.
\paragraph{Just-in-time state machine compiler.}Code that is written in a blocking manner typically cannot be stopped
and transparently restarted later. The first time a flow's \texttt{call} method is invoked a bytecode-to-bytecode
transformation occurs that rewrites the classes into a form that implements a resumable state machine. These state
machines are sometimes called fibers or coroutines, and the transformation engine Corda uses is capable of rewriting
code arbitrarily deep in the stack on the fly. The developer may thus break his or her logic into multiple methods and
classes, use loops, and generally structure their program as if it were executing in a single blocking thread. There's only a
small list of things they should not do: sleeping, directly accessing the network APIs, or doing other tasks that might
block outside of the framework.
\paragraph{Transparent checkpointing.}When a flow wishes to wait for a message from another party (or input from a
human being) the underlying stack frames are suspended onto the heap, then crawled and serialized into the node's
underlying relational database using an object serialization framework. The written objects are prefixed with small
schema definitions that allow some measure of portability across changes to the layout of objects, although
portability across changes to the stack layout is left for future work. Flows are resumed and suspended on demand, meaning
it is feasible to have far more flows active at once than would fit in memory. The checkpointing process is atomic with
changes to local storage and acknowledgement of network messages.
\paragraph{Identity to IP address mapping.}Flows are written in terms of identities. The framework takes care of routing
messages to the right IP address for a given identity, following movements that may take place whilst the flow is active
and handling load balancing for multi-homed parties as appropriate.
\paragraph{A library of subflows.}Flows can invoke sub-flows, and a library of flows is provided to automate common tasks
like notarising a transaction or atomically swapping ownership of two assets.
\paragraph{Progress reporting.}Flows can provide a progress tracker that indicates which step they are up to. Steps can
have human-meaningful labels, along with other tagged data like a progress bar. Progress trackers are hierarchical and
steps can have sub-trackers for invoked sub-flows.
\paragraph{Flow hospital.}Flows can pause if they throw exceptions or explicitly request human assistance. A flow that
has stopped appears in the \emph{flow hospital} where the node's administrator may decide to kill the flow or provide it
with a solution. The ability to request manual solutions is useful for cases where the other side isn't sure why you
are contacting them, for example, the specified reason for sending a payment is not recognised, or when the asset used for
a payment is not considered acceptable.
Flows are named using reverse DNS notation and several are defined by the base protocol. Note that the framework is
not required to implement the wire protocols, it is just a development aid.
\subsection{Data visibility and dependency resolution}
When a transaction is presented to a node as part of a flow it may need to be checked. Simply sending you
a message saying that I am paying you \pounds1000 is only useful if youa are sure I own the money I'm using to pay me.
Checking transaction validity is the responsibility of the \texttt{ResolveTransactions} flow. This flow performs
a breadth-first search over the transaction graph, downloading any missing transactions into local storage and
validating them. The search bottoms out at the issuance transactions. A transaction is not considered valid if
any of its transitive dependencies are invalid.
It is required that a node be able to present the entire dependency graph for a transaction it is asking another
node to accept. Thus there is never any confusion about where to find transaction data. Because transactions are
always communicated inside a flow, and flows embed the resolution flow, the necessary dependencies are fetched
and checked automatically from the correct peer. Transactions propagate around the network lazily and there is
no need for distributed hash tables.
This approach has several consequences. One is that transactions that move highly liquid assets like cash may
end up becoming a part of a very long chain of transactions. The act of resolving the tip of such a graph can
involve many round-trips and thus take some time to fully complete. How quickly a Corda network can send payments
is thus difficult to characterise: it depends heavily on usage and distance between nodes. Whilst nodes could
pre-push transactions in anticipation of them being fetched anyway, such optimisations are left for future work.
A more important consequence is that in the absence of additional privacy measures it is difficult to reason
about who may get to see transaction data. We can say it's definitely better than a system that uses global
broadcast, but how much better is hard to characterise. This uncertainty is mitigated by several factors.
\paragraph{Small-subgraph transactions.}Some uses of the ledger do not involve widely circulated asset states.
For example, two institutions that wish to keep their view of a particular deal synchronised but who are making
related payments off-ledger may use transactions that never go outside the involved parties. A discussion of
on-ledger vs off-ledger cash can be found in a later section.
\paragraph{Transaction privacy techniques.}Corda supports a variety of transaction data hiding techniques. For
example, public keys can be randomised to make it difficult to link transactions to an identity. ``Tear-offs''
allow some parts of a transaction to be presented without the others. In future versions of the system secure hardware
and/or zero knowledge proofs could be used to convince a party of the validity of a transaction without revealing the
underlying data.
\paragraph{State re-issuance.}In cases where a state represents an asset that is backed by a particular issuer,
and the issuer is trusted to behave atomically even when the ledger isn't forcing atomicity, the state can
simply be `exited' from the ledger and then re-issued. Because there are no links between the exit and reissue
transactions this shortens the chain. In practice most issuers of highly liquid assets are already trusted with
far more sensitive tasks than reliably issuing pairs of signed data structures, so this approach is unlikely to
be an issue.
2016-10-12 12:58:49 +00:00
\section{Data model}
Transactions consist of the following components:
\begin{labeling}{Input references}
\item [Input references] These are \texttt{(hash, output index)} pairs that point to the states a
transaction is consuming.
\item [Output states] Each state specifies the notary for the new state, the contract(s) that define its allowed
transition functions and finally the data itself.
\item [Attachments] Transactions specify an ordered list of zip file hashes. Each zip file may contain
code, data, certificates or supporting documentation for the transaction. Contract code has access to the contents
of the attachments when checking the transaction for validity.
\item [Commands] There may be multiple allowed output states from any given input state. For instance
an asset can be moved to a new owner on the ledger, or issued, or exited from the ledger if the asset has been
redeemed by the owner and no longer needs to be tracked. A command is essentially a parameter to the contract
that specifies more information than is obtainable from examination of the states by themselves (e.g. data from an oracle
service). Each command has an associated list of public keys. Like states, commands are object graphs.
\item [Signatures] The set of required signatures is equal to the union of the commands' public keys.
\item [Type] Transactions can either be normal or notary-changing. The validation rules for each are
different.
\item [Timestamp] When present, a timestamp defines a time range in which the transaction is considered to
have occurrred. This is discussed in more detail below.
\end{labeling}
% TODO: Update this one transaction types are separated.
% TODO: This description ignores the participants field in states, because it probably needs a rethink.
% TODO: Specify the curve used here once we decide how much we care about BIP32 public derivation.
Signatures are appended to the end of a transaction and transactions are identified by the hash used for signing, so
signature malleability is not a problem. There is never a need to identify a transaction including its accompanying
signatures by hash. Signatures can be both checked and generated in parallel, and they are not directly exposed to
contract code. Instead contracts check that the set of public keys specified by a command is appropriate, knowing that
the transaction will not be valid unless every key listed in every command has a matching signature. Public key
structures are themselves opaque. In this way algorithmic agility is retained: new signature algorithms can be deployed
without adjusting the code of the smart contracts themselves.
\subsection{Compound keys}
The term ``public key'' in the description above actually refers to a \emph{compound key}. Compound keys are trees in
which leafs are regular cryptographic public keys with an accompanying algorithm identifiers. Nodes in the tree specify
both the weights of each child and a threshold weight that must be met. The validty of a set of signatures can be
determined by walking the tree bottom-up, summing the weights of the keys that have a valid signature and comparing
against the threshold. By using weights and thresholds a variety of conditions can be encoded, including boolean
formulas with AND and OR.
Compound keys are useful in multiple scenarios. For example, assets can be placed under the control of a 2-of-2
compound key where one leaf key is owned by a user, and the other by an independent risk analysis system. The
risk analysis system refuses to sign if the transaction seems suspicious, like if too much value has been
transferred in too short a time window. Another example involves encoding corporate structures into the key,
allowing a CFO to sign a large transaction alone but his subordinates are required to work together. Compound keys
are also useful for notaries. Each participant in a distributed notary is represented by a leaf, and the threshold
is set such that some participants can be offline or refusing to sign yet the signature of the group is still valid.
Whilst there are threshold signature schemes in the literature that allow compound keys and signatures to be produced
mathematically, we choose the less space efficient explicit form in order to allow a mixture of keys using different
algorithms. In this way old algorithms can be phased out and new algorithms phased in without requiring all
participants in a group to upgrade simultaneously.
\subsection{Timestamps}
Transaction timestamps specify a \texttt{[start, end]} time window within which the transaction is asserted to have
occurred. Timestamps are expressed as windows because in a distributed system there is no true time, only a large number
of desynchronised clocks. This is not only implied by the laws of physics but also by the nature of shared transactions
- especially if the signing of a transaction requires multiple human authorisations, the process of constructing
a joint transaction could take hours or even days.
It is important to note that the purpose of a transaction timestamp is to communicate the transaction's position
on the timeline to the smart contract code for the enforcement of contractual logic. Whilst such timestamps may
also be used for other purposes, such as regulatory reporting or ordering of events in a user interface, there is
no requirement to use them like that and locally observed timestamps may sometimes be preferable even if they will
not exactly match the time observed by other parties. Alternatively if a precise point on the timeline is required
and it must also be agreed by multiple parties, the midpoint of the time window may be used by convention. Even
though this may not precisely align to any particular action (like a keystroke or verbal agreement) it is often
useful nonetheless.
Timestamp windows may be open ended in order to communicate that the transaction occurred before a certain
time or after a certain time, but how much before or after is unimportant. This can be used in a similar
way to Bitcoin's \texttt{nLockTime} transaction field, which specifies a \emph{happens-after} constraint.
Timestamps are checked and enforced by notary services. As the participants in a notary service will themselves
not have precisely aligned clocks, whether a transaction is considered valid or not at the moment it is submitted
to a notary may be unpredictable if submission occurs right on a boundary of the given window. However, from the
perspective of all other observers the notaries signature is decisive: if the signature is present, the transaction
is assumed to have occurred within that time.
\paragraph{Reference clocks.}In order to allow for relatively tight time windows to be used when transactions are fully
under the control of a single party, notaries are expected to be synchronised to the atomic clocks at the US Naval
Observatory. Accurate feeds of this clock can be obtained from GPS satellites. Note that Corda uses the Java
timeline\cite{JavaTimeScale} which is UTC with leap seconds spread over the last 1000 seconds of the day, thus each day
always has exactly 86400 seconds. Care should be taken to ensure that changes in the GPS leap second counter are
correctly smeared in order to stay synchronised with Java time. When setting a transaction time window care must be
taken to account for network propagation delays between the user and the notary service, and messaging within the notary
service.
\subsection{Attachments and contract bytecodes}
Transactions may have a number of \emph{attachments}, identified by the hash of the file. Attachments are stored
and transmitted separately to transaction data and are fetched by the standard resolution flow only when the
attachment has not previously been seen before.
Attachments are always zip files\cite{ZipFormat} and cannot be referred to individually by contract code. The files
within the zips are collapsed together into a single logical file system, with overlapping files being resolved in
favour of the first mentioned. Not coincidentally, this is the mechanism used by Java classpaths.
Smart contracts in Corda are defined using JVM bytecode as specified in \emph{``The Java Virtual Machine Specification SE 8 Edition''}\cite{JVM},
with some small differences that are described in a later section. A contract is simply a class that implements
the \texttt{Contract} interface, which in turn exposes a single function called \texttt{verify}. The verify
function is passed a transaction and either throws an exception if the transaction is considered to be invalid,
or returns with no result if the transaction is valid. Embedding the JVM specification in the Corda specification
enables developers to write code in a variety of languages, use well developed toolchains, and to reuse code
already authored in Java or other JVM compatible languages.
The Java standards also specify a comprehensive type system for expressing common business data. Time and calendar
handling is provided by an implementation of the JSR 310 specification, decimal calculations can be performed either
using portable (`\texttt{strictfp}') floating point arithmetic or the provided bignum library, and so on. These
libraries have been carefully engineered by the business Java community over a period of many years and it makes
sense to build on this investment.
Contract bytecode also defines the states themselves, which may be arbitrary object graphs. Because JVM classes
are not a convenient form to work with from non-JVM platforms the allowed types are restricted and a standardised
binary encoding scheme is provided. States may label their properties with a small set of standardised annotations.
These can be useful for controlling how states are serialised to JSON and XML (using JSR 367 and JSR 222 respectively),
for expressing static validation constraints (JSR 349) and for controlling how states are inserted into relational
databases (JSR 338). This feature is discussed later.
Attachments may also contain data files that support the contract code. These may be in the same zip as the
bytecode files, or in a different zip that must be provided for the transaction to be valid. Examples of such
data files might include currency definitions, timezone data and public holiday calendars. Any public data may
be referenced in this way. Attachments are intended for data on the ledger that many parties may wish to reuse
over and over again. Data files are accessed by contract code using the same APIs as any file on the classpath
would be accessed. The platform imposes some restrictions on what kinds of data can be included in attachments
along with size limits, to avoid people placing inappropriate files on the global ledger (videos, PowerPoints etc).
Note that the creator of a transaction gets to choose which files are attached. Therefore, it is typical that
states place constraints on the data they're willing to accept. Attachments \emph{provide} data but do not
\emph{authenticate} it, so if there's a risk of someone providing bad data to gain an economic advantage
there must be a constraints mechanism to prevent that from happening. This is rooted at the contract constraints
encoded in the states themselves: a state can not only name a class that implements the \texttt{Contract}
interface but also place constraints on the zip/jar file that provides it. That constraint can in turn be used to
ensure that the contract checks the authenticity of the data - either by checking the hash of the data directly,
or by requiring the data to be signed by some trusted third party.
% TODO: The code doesn't match this description yet.
\subsection{Hard forks, specifications and dispute resolution}
Decentralised ledger systems often differ in their underlying political ideology as well as their technical
choices. The Ethereum project originally promised ``unstoppable apps'' which would implement ``code as law''. After
a prominent smart contract was hacked, an argument took place over whether what had occurred could be described
as a hack at all given the lack of any non-code specification of what the program was meant to do. The disagreement
eventually led to a split in the community.
As Corda contracts are simply zip files, it is easy to include a PDF or other documents describing what a contract
is meant to actually do. There is no requirement to use this mechanism, and there is no requirement that these
documents have any legal weight. However in financial use cases it's expected that they would be legal contracts that
take precedence over the software implementations in case of disagreement.
It is technically possible to write a contract that cannot be upgraded. If such a contract governed an asset that
existed only on the ledger, like a cryptocurrency, then that would provide an approximation of ``code as law''. We
leave discussion of this wisdom of this concept to political scientists and reddit.
\paragraph{Platform logging}There is no direct equivalent in Corda of a block chain ``hard fork'', so the only solution
to discarding buggy or fraudulent transaction chains would be to mutually agree out of band to discard an entire
transaction subgraph. As there is no global visibility either this mutual agreement would not need to encompass all
network participants: only those who may have received and processed such transactions. The flip side of lacking global
visibility is that there is no single point that records who exactly has seen which transactions. Determining the set
of entities that'd have to agree to discard a subgraph means correlating node activity logs. Corda nodes log sufficient
information to ensure this correlation can take place. The platform defines a flow to assist with this, which can be
used by anyone. A tool is provided that generates an ``investigation request'' and sends it to a seed node. The flow
signals to the node administrator that a decision is required, and sufficient information is transmitted to the node to
try and convince the administrator to take part (e.g. a signed court order). If the administrator accepts the request
through the node explorer interface, the next hops in the transaction chain are returned. In this way the tool can
semi-automatically crawl the network to find all parties that would be affected by a proposed rollback. The platform
does not take a position on what types of transaction rollback are justified and provides only minimal support for
implementing rollbacks beyond locating the parties that would have to agree.
% TODO: DB logging of tx transmits is COR-544.
Once involved parties are identified there are at least two strategies for editing the ledger. One is to extend
the transaction chain with new transactions that simply correct the database to match the intended reality. For
this to be possible the smart contract must have been written to allow arbitrary changes outside its normal
business logic when a sufficient threshold of signatures is present. This strategy is simple and makes the most
sense when the number of parties involved in a state is small and parties have no incentive to leave bad information
in the ledger. For asset states that are the result of theft or fraud the only party involved in a state may
resist attempts to patch things up in this way, as they may be able to benefit in the real world from the time
lag between the ledger becoming inaccurate and it catching up with reality. In this case a more complex approach
can be used in which the involved parties minus the uncooperative party agree to mark the relevant states as
no longer consumed/spent. This is essentially a limited form of database rollback.
2016-10-12 12:58:49 +00:00
\subsection{Identity lookups}
In all block chain inspired systems there exists a tension between wanting to know who you are dealing with and
not wanting others to know. A standard technique is to use randomised public keys in the shared data, and keep
the knowledge of the identity that key maps to private. For instance, it is considered good practice to generate
a fresh key for every received payment. This technique exploits the fact that verifying the integrity of the ledger
does not require knowing exactly who took part in the transactions, only that they followed the agreed upon
rules of the system.
Platforms such as Bitcoin and Ethereum have relatively ad-hoc mechanisms for linking identities and keys. Typically
it is the user's responsibility to manually label public keys in their wallet software using knowledge gleaned from
websites, shop signs and so on. Because these mechanisms are ad hoc and tedious many users don't bother, which
can make it hard to figure out where money went later. It also complicates the deployment of secure signing devices
and risk analysis engines. Bitcoin has BIP 70\cite{BIP70} which specifies a way of signed a ``payment
request'' using X.509 certificates linked to the web PKI, giving a cryptographically secured and standardised way
of knowing who you are dealing with. Identities in this system are the same as used in the web PKI: a domain name,
email address or EV (extended validation) organisation name.
Corda takes this concept further. States may define fields of type \texttt{Party}, which encapsulates an identity
and a public key. When a state is deserialised from a transaction in its raw form, the identity field of the
\texttt{Party} object is null and only the public (compound) key is present. If a transaction is deserialised
in conjunction with X.509 certificate chains linking the transient public keys to long term identity keys the
identity field is set. In this way a single data representation can be used for both the anonymised case, such
as when validating dependencies of a transaction, and the identified case, such as when trading directly with
a counterparty. Trading flows incorporate sub-flows to transmit certificates for the keys used, which are then
stored in the local database. However the transaction resolution flow does not transmit such data, keeping the
transactions in the chain of custody pseudonymous.
\paragraph{Deterministic key derivation} Corda allows for but does not mandate the use of determinstic key
derivation schemes such as BIP 32\cite{BIP32}. The infrastructure does not assume any mathematical relationship
between public keys because some cryptographic schemes are not compatible with such systems. Thus we take the
efficiency hit of always linking transient public keys to longer term keys with X.509 certificates.
% TODO: Discuss the crypto suites used in Corda.
2016-10-12 12:58:49 +00:00
\subsection{Merkle-structured transactions}
\subsection{Encumbrances}
\subsection{Contract constraints}
% TODO: Contract constraints aren't designed yet.
2016-10-12 12:58:49 +00:00
\section{Cash and Obligations}
\section{Non-asset instruments}
2016-10-12 12:58:49 +00:00
\section{Integration with existing infrastructure}
\section{Deterministic JVM}
\section{Notaries}
\section{Clauses}
2016-10-12 12:58:49 +00:00
\section{Secure signing devices}
\section{Client RPC and reactive collections}
\section{Event scheduling}
\section{Future work}
\paragraph Secure hardware
\paragraph Zero knowledge proofs
\section{Conclusion}
\bibliographystyle{unsrt}
\bibliography{Ref}
\end{document}