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132 lines
7.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
Notaries
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========
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.. topic:: Summary
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* *Notary clusters prevent "double-spends"*
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* *Notary clusters are also time-stamping authorities. If a transaction includes a time-window, it can only be notarised during that window*
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* *Notary clusters may optionally also validate transactions, in which case they are called "validating" notaries, as opposed to "non-validating"*
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* *A network can have several notary clusters, each running a different consensus algorithm*
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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/214138458" width="640" height="360" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen></iframe>
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<p></p>
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Overview
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--------
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A *notary cluster* is a network service that provides **uniqueness consensus** by attesting that, for a given
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transaction, it has not already signed other transactions that consumes any of the proposed transaction's input states.
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Upon being sent asked to notarise a transaction, a notary cluster will either:
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* Sign the transaction if it has not already signed other transactions consuming any of the proposed transaction's
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input states
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* Reject the transaction and flag that a double-spend attempt has occurred otherwise
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In doing so, the notary cluster provides the point of finality in the system. Until the notary cluster's signature is
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obtained, parties cannot be sure that an equally valid, but conflicting, transaction will not be regarded as the
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"valid" attempt to spend a given input state. However, after the notary cluster's signature is obtained, we can be sure
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that the proposed transaction's input states have not already been consumed by a prior transaction. Hence, notarisation
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is the point of finality in the system.
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Every state has an appointed notary cluster, and a notary cluster will only notarise a transaction if it is the
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appointed notary cluster of all the transaction's input states.
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Consensus algorithms
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--------------------
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Corda has "pluggable" consensus, allowing notary clusters to choose a consensus algorithm based on their requirements in
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terms of privacy, scalability, legal-system compatibility and algorithmic agility.
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In particular, notary clusters may differ in terms of:
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* **Structure** - a notary cluster may be a single node, several mutually-trusting nodes, or several
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mutually-distrusting nodes
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* **Consensus algorithm** - a notary cluster may choose to run a high-speed, high-trust algorithm such as RAFT, a
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low-speed, low-trust algorithm such as BFT, or any other consensus algorithm it chooses
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.. _key_concepts_notaries_validation:
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Validation
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^^^^^^^^^^
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A notary cluster must also decide whether or not to provide **validity consensus** by validating each transaction
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before committing it. In making this decision, it faces the following trade-off:
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* If a transaction **is not** checked for validity (non-validating notary), it creates the risk of "denial of state" attacks, where a node
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knowingly builds an invalid transaction consuming some set of existing states and sends it to the
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notary cluster, causing the states to be marked as consumed
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* If the transaction **is** checked for validity (validating notary), the notary will need to see the full contents of the transaction and
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its dependencies. This leaks potentially private data to the notary cluster
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There are several further points to keep in mind when evaluating this trade-off. In the case of the non-validating
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model, Corda's controlled data distribution model means that information on unconsumed states is not widely shared.
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Additionally, Corda's permissioned network means that the notary cluster can store the identity of the party that
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created the "denial of state" transaction, allowing the attack to be resolved off-ledger.
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In the case of the validating model, the use of anonymous, freshly-generated public keys instead of legal identities to
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identify parties in a transaction limit the information the notary cluster sees.
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Data visibility
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Below is a summary of what specific transaction components have to be revealed to each type of notary:
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+-----------------------------------+---------------+-----------------------+
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| Transaction components | Validating | Non-validating |
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+===================================+===============+=======================+
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| Input states | Fully visible | References only [1]_ |
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+-----------------------------------+---------------+-----------------------+
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| Output states | Fully visible | Hidden |
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+-----------------------------------+---------------+-----------------------+
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| Commands (with signer identities) | Fully visible | Hidden |
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+-----------------------------------+---------------+-----------------------+
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| Attachments | Fully visible | Hidden |
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+-----------------------------------+---------------+-----------------------+
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| Time window | Fully visible | Fully visible |
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+-----------------------------------+---------------+-----------------------+
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| Notary identity | Fully visible | Fully visible |
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+-----------------------------------+---------------+-----------------------+
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| Signatures | Fully visible | Hidden |
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+-----------------------------------+---------------+-----------------------+
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Both types of notaries record the calling party's identity: the public key and the X.500 Distinguished Name.
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.. [1] A state reference is composed of the issuing transaction's id and the state's position in the outputs. It does not
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reveal what kind of state it is or its contents.
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Multiple notaries
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-----------------
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Each Corda network can have multiple notary clusters, each potentially running a different consensus algorithm. This
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provides several benefits:
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* **Privacy** - we can have both validating and non-validating notary clusters on the same network, each running a
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different algorithm. This allows nodes to choose the preferred notary cluster on a per-transaction basis
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* **Load balancing** - spreading the transaction load over multiple notary clusters allows higher transaction
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throughput for the platform overall
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* **Low latency** - latency can be minimised by choosing a notary cluster physically closer to the transacting parties
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Changing notaries
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Remember that a notary cluster will only sign a transaction if it is the appointed notary cluster of all of the
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transaction's input states. However, there are cases in which we may need to change a state's appointed notary cluster.
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These include:
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* When a single transaction needs to consume several states that have different appointed notary clusters
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* When a node would prefer to use a different notary cluster for a given transaction due to privacy or efficiency
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concerns
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Before these transactions can be created, the states must first all be re-pointed to the same notary cluster. This is
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achieved using a special notary-change transaction that takes:
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* A single input state
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* An output state identical to the input state, except that the appointed notary cluster has been changed
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The input state's appointed notary cluster will sign the transaction if it doesn't constitute a double-spend, at which
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point a state will enter existence that has all the properties of the old state, but has a different appointed notary
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cluster. |