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− | The job consensus layer of the IC is to order transaction requests so that all replicas in a subnet will process
| + | Please see [https://internetcomputer.org/how-it-works/consensus/ How Consensus Layer works] |
− | transaction requests in the same order.
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− | There are many protocols in the literature for this problem.
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− | The IC uses a new consensus protocol, which is described here at a high level.
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− | For more details, see the paper https://eprint.iacr.org/2021/1330 (in particular, Protocol ICC1 in that paper).
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− | Any secure consensus protocol should guarantee two properties, which (roughly stated) are:
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− | * <b>safety</b>: all replicas in fact agree on the same ordering of transaction requests, and
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− | * <b>liveness</b>: all replicas should make steady progress.
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− | The IC consensus protocol is design to be
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− | * extremely simple, and
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− | * robust (performance degrades gracefully when some replicas are malicious).
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− | As discussed [[The Internet Computer for Computer Scientists|in the introduction]], we assume
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− | * a subnet of <math>n</math> replicas, and
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− | * at most <math>f < n/3</math> of the replicas are faulty.
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− | Faulty replicas may exhibit arbitrary, malicious (i.e., Byzantine) behavior.
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− | We assume that communication is <b>asynchronous</b>, with no <i>a priori</i>
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− | bound on the delay of messages sent between replicas.
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− | In fact, the scheduling of message delivery may be completely under adversarial control.
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− | The IC consensus protocol guarantees safety under this very weak communication assumption.
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− | However, to guarantee liveness, we need to assume a form of <b>partial synchrony</b>,
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− | which (roughly stated) says that the network will be <b>timely</b> periodically.
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− | Somewhat more precisely, there exists a bound <math>\Delta</math> such that
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− | periodically all undelivered
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− | messages will be delivered within time <math>\Delta</math>.
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− | The bound <math>\Delta</math> does not have to be known in advance (the protocol can
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− | adapt itself to an unknown <math>\Delta</math> value).
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− | Regardless of whether we are assuming an asynchronous
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− | or partially synchronous network,
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− | we assume that every message sent from one honest
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− | party to another will <i>eventually</i> be delivered.
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− | Like a number of consensus protocols,
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− | the IC consensus protocol is based in a [[wikipedia:blockchain|blockchain]].
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− | As the protocol progresses, a tree of blocks is grown,
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− | starting from a special <i>genesis block</i> that is the root of the tree.
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− | Each non-genesis block in the tree contains (among other things)
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− | a <i>payload</i>, consisting of a sequence of transaction requests,
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− | and a hash of the block's parent in the tree.
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− | The honest replicas have a consistent view of this tree:
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− | while each replica may have a different, partial view
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− | of this tree, all the replicas have a view of the <i>same</i> tree.
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− | In addition, as the protocol progresses,
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− | there is always a path of <i>finalized</i> blocks in this tree.
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− | Again, the honest replicas have a consistent view of this path:
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− | while each replica may have a different, partial view
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− | of this path, all the parties have a view of the <i>same</i> path.
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− | The transaction requests in the payloads of the blocks along this
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− | path are the ordered transaction requests will be processed by the [[IC execution layer|execution layer]]
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− | of the Internet Computer.
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− | The protocol proceeds in <b>rounds</b>.
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− | In round <math>h</math> of the protocol,
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− | one or more blocks of <b>height</b> <math>h</math> are added to the tree.
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− | That is, the blocks added in round <math>h</math> are always at a distance
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− | of exactly <math>h</math> from the root.
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− | In each round, a [[random beacon]] is used to
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− | generate a random permutation of the <math>n</math> parties,
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− | so as to assign to each party a <b>rank</b>.
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− | The party of lowest rank is the <b>leader</b> of that round.
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− | When the leader is honest and the network is timely,
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− | the leader will propose a block which will be added to the tree.
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− | If the leader is not honest or the network is not timely,
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− | some other parties of higher rank may also propose blocks,
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− | and also have their blocks added to the tree.
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− | In any case, the logic of the protocol gives highest priority
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− | to the leader's proposed block.
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− | To implement the protocol, each replica is associated with a
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− | public key for the [[wikipedia:BLS_digital_signature|BLS signature scheme]], and each replica also holds
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− | the corresponding secret signing key.
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− | The association of replicas to public keys is maintained by the
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− | [[IC network nervous system (NNS)|network nervous system (NNS) of the Internet Computer]].
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− | These BLS signatures will be used to authenticate messages, also called <b>artifacts</b>,
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− | sent by replicas.
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− | The protocol also uses the <b>signature aggregation</b> feature of BLS signatures,
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− | which allows many signatures on the same message to be aggregated into
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− | a compact multi-signature.
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− | FIXME: citation, discussion of rogue key attack mitigation.
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− | In addition to BLS signatures and multi-signatures as discussed above,
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− | the protocol makes use of a BLS [[wikipedia:Threshold_cryptosystem|threshold signature scheme]] to implement the
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− | above-mentioned [[random beacon]].
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− | To set up such a threshold signature scheme, the Internet Computer runs a
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− | [[wikipedia:Distributed_key_generation|distributed key generation (DKG)]] protocol.
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− | There are many DKG protocols in the literature.
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− | The Internet Computer implements a new [[non-interactive DKG (NiDKG) protocol]].
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