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183 lines
7.2 KiB
183 lines
7.2 KiB
# Optics
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OPTimistic Interchain Communication
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## Overview
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Optics is a cross-chain communication system. It handles passing raw buffers
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between blockchains cheaply, and with minimal fuss. Like IBC and other
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cross-chain communication systems, Optics creates channels between chains, and
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then passes its messages over the channel. Once a channel is established, any
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application on the chain can use it to send messages to any other chain.
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Compared to IBC and PoS light client based cross-chain communication, Optics
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has weaker security guarantees, and a longer latency period. However, Optics
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may be implemented on any smart contract chain, with no bespoke light client
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engineering. Because it does not run a light client, Optics does not spend
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extra gas verifying remote chain block headers.
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In other words, Optics is designed to prioritize:
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- Cost: No header verification or state management.
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- Speed of implementation: Requires only simple smart contracts, no complex
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cryptography.
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- Ease of use: Simple interface for maintaining XApp connections.
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You can read more about Optics' architecture [at Celo's main documentation site](https://docs.celo.org/celo-codebase/protocol/optics).
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## Integrating with Optics
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Optics establishes communication channels with other chains, but it's up to XApp (pronounced "zap", and short for "cross-chain applications")
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developers to use those. This repo provides a standard pattern for integrating
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Optics channels, and ensuring that communication is safe and secure.
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Integrations require a few key components:
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- A `Home` and any number of `Replica` contracts deployed on the chain already.
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These contracts manage Optics communication channels. and will be used by the
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XApp to send and receive messages.
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- A `XAppConnectionManager` (in `solidity/optics-core/contracts`). This
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contract connects the XApp to Optics by allowing the XApp admin to enroll new
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`Home` and `Replica` contracts. Enrolling and unenrolling channels is the
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primary way to ensure that your XApp handles messages correctly. XApps may
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deploy their own connection manager, or share one with other XApps.
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- A `Message` library. Optics sends raw byte arrays between chains. The XApp
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must define a message specification that can be serialized for sending, and
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deserialized for handling on the remote chain
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- A `Router` contract. The router translates between the Optics cross-chain
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message format, and the local chain's call contract. It also implements the
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business logic of the XApp. It exposes the user-facing interface, handles
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messages coming in from other chains, and dispatches messages being sent to
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other chains.
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Solidity developers interested in implementing their own `Message` library and
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`Router` contract should check out the [optics-XApps](https://github.com/celo-org/optics-monorepo/tree/main/solidity/optics-xapps)
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package. It contains several example XApps.
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It is **Strongly Recommended** that XApp admins run a `watcher` daemon to
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maintain their `XAppConnectionManager` and guard from fraud. Please see the
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documentation in the `rust/` directory and the
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[Optics architecture documentation](https://docs.celo.org/celo-codebase/protocol/optics)
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for more details.
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## Working on Optics
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### Pre-commit hooks
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Set up your pre-commit hook:
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```bash
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echo "./pre-commit.sh" > .git/hooks/pre-commit
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chmod +x .git/hooks/pre-commit
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```
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Note: In the event you need to bypass the pre-commit hooks, pass the
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`--no-verify` flag to your `git commit` command
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### Solidity
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1. Install dependencies
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```bash
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cd solidity/optics-core
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npm i
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cd ../optics-XApps
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npm i
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```
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2. Install jq
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```bash
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brew install jq
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```
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OR
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```bash
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sudo apt-get install jq
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```
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3. Install solhint
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```bash
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npm install -g solhint
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// to check it is installed:
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solhint --version
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```
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### Rust
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- install `rustup`
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- [link here](https://rustup.rs/)
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- see `rust/README.md`
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# What is Optics?
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We present Optics - a system for sending messages between consensus systems
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without paying header validation costs by creating the illusion of cross-chain
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communication. Similar to an atomic swap, Optics uses non-global protocol
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validation to simulate cross-chain communication. Optics can carry arbitrary
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messages (raw byte vectors), uses a single-producer multi-consumer model, and
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has protocol overhead sublinear in the number of messages being sent.
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## Key Points
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System sketch:
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1. A "home" chain commits messages in a merkle tree
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2. A bonded "updater" attests to the commitment
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3. The home chain ensures the attestation is accurate, and slashes if not
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4. Attested updates are replayed on any number of "replica" chains, after a
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time delay
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As a result, one of the following is always true:
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1. All replicas have a valid commitment to messages from the home chain
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2. Failure was published before processing, and the updater can be slashed on
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the home chain
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This guarantee, although weaker than header-chain validation, is still likely
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acceptable for most applications.
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## Summary
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Optics is a new strategy for simulating cross-chain communication without
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validating headers. The goal is to create a single short piece of state (a
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32-byte hash) that can be updated regularly. This hash represents a merkle tree
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containing a set of cross-chain messages being sent by a single chain (the
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"home" chain for the Optics system). Contracts on the home chain can submit
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messages, which are put into a merkle tree (the "message tree"). The message
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tree's root may be transferred to any number of "replica" chains.
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Rather than proving validity of the commitment, we put a delay on message
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receipt, and ensure that failures are publicly visible. This ensures that
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participants in the protocol have a chance to react to failures before the
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failure can harm them. Which is to say, rather than preventing the inclusion of
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bad messages, Optics guarantees that message recipients are aware of the
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inclusion, and have a chance to refuse to process them.
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To produce this effect, the home chain designates a single "updater." The
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updater places a bond ensuring her good behavior. She is responsible for
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producing signed attestations of the new message tree root. The home chain
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accepts and validates these attestations. It ensures that they extend a
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previous attestation, and contain a valid new root of the message set. These
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attestations are then sent to each replica.
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The replica accepts an update attestation signed by the updater, and puts it in
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a pending state. After a timeout, it accepts the update from that attestation
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and stores a new local root. Because this root contains a commitment of all
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messages sent by the home chain, these messages can be proven (using the
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replica's root) and then dispatched to contracts on the replica chain.
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The timeout on new updates to the replica serves two purposes:
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1. It ensures that any misbehavior by the updater is published **in advance**
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of message processing. This guarantees that data necessary for home chain
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slashing is available for all faults.
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2. It gives message recipients a chance to opt-out of message processing for
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the update. If an incorrect update is published, recipients always have the
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information necessary to take defensive measures before any messages can be
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processed.
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