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76 lines
3.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
76 lines
3.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
Consensus
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=========
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.. topic:: Summary
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* *To be committed, transactions must achieve both validity and uniqueness consensus*
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* *Validity consensus requires contractual validity of the transaction and all its dependencies*
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* *Uniqueness consensus prevents double-spends*
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.. only:: htmlmode
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Video
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-----
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.. raw:: html
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<iframe src="https://player.vimeo.com/video/214138438" width="640" height="360" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen></iframe>
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<p></p>
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Two types of consensus
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----------------------
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Determining whether a proposed transaction is a valid ledger update involves reaching two types of consensus:
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* *Validity consensus* - this is checked by each required signer before they sign the transaction
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* *Uniqueness consensus* - this is only checked by a notary service
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Validity consensus
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------------------
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Validity consensus is the process of checking that the following conditions hold both for the proposed transaction,
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and for every transaction in the transaction chain that generated the inputs to the proposed transaction:
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* The transaction is accepted by the contracts of every input and output state
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* The transaction has all the required signatures
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It is not enough to verify the proposed transaction itself. We must also verify every transaction in the chain of
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transactions that led up to the creation of the inputs to the proposed transaction.
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This is known as *walking the chain*. Suppose, for example, that a party on the network proposes a transaction
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transferring us a treasury bond. We can only be sure that the bond transfer is valid if:
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* The treasury bond was issued by the central bank in a valid issuance transaction
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* Every subsequent transaction in which the bond changed hands was also valid
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The only way to be sure of both conditions is to walk the transaction's chain. We can visualize this process as follows:
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.. image:: resources/validation-consensus.png
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:scale: 25%
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:align: center
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When verifying a proposed transaction, a given party may not have every transaction in the transaction chain that they
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need to verify. In this case, they can request the missing transactions from the transaction proposer(s). The
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transaction proposer(s) will always have the full transaction chain, since they would have requested it when
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verifying the transaction that created the proposed transaction's input states.
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Uniqueness consensus
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--------------------
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Imagine that Bob holds a valid central-bank-issued cash state of $1,000,000. Bob can now create two transaction
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proposals:
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* A transaction transferring the $1,000,000 to Charlie in exchange for £800,000
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* A transaction transferring the $1,000,000 to Dan in exchange for €900,000
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This is a problem because, although both transactions will achieve validity consensus, Bob has managed to
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"double-spend" his USD to get double the amount of GBP and EUR. We can visualize this as follows:
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.. image:: resources/uniqueness-consensus.png
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:scale: 25%
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:align: center
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To prevent this, a valid transaction proposal must also achieve uniqueness consensus. Uniqueness consensus is the
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requirement that none of the inputs to a proposed transaction have already been consumed in another transaction.
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If one or more of the inputs have already been consumed in another transaction, this is known as a *double spend*,
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and the transaction proposal is considered invalid.
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Uniqueness consensus is provided by notaries. See :doc:`key-concepts-notaries` for more details. |