Mysticeti consensus algorithm
An implementation of Mysticeti, a highly performant DAG based Byzantine consensus protocol. This is just the bare consensus algorithm, you need to bring your own transaction types, networking, serialization, and cryptographic hashing and signature schemes.
The current implementation only supports the Mysticeti-C protocol, without the Mysticeti-FPC fast path extension.
This is very much a work in progress; expect to see many things that are incomplete or wrong. Use at your own risk.
Installation
Use the Nimble package manager to add mysticeti to an existing project.
Add the following to its .nimble file:
requires "https://github.com/codex-storage/nim-mysticeti >= 0.1.0 & < 0.2.0"
Note: requires at least Nim version 2.2.0
Dependencies
A Validator can work with any transaction type and any serialization, hashing
and signature scheme. The Validator type takes a single generic argument called
Dependencies, and this is used to inject the implementations of these
dependencies at compile time.
import mysticeti
# gather all dependencies:
type MyDependencies = Dependencies[
MyTransaction, # provide your own transaction type here
MySerialization, # provide your own serialization scheme here
MyHash, # provide your own hashing scheme here
MyIdentity # provide your own private key implementation here
MyIdentifier # provide your own public key implementation here
MySignature # provide your own signature scheme here
]
# create a validator type using these dependencies:
type Validator = mysticeti.Validator[MyDependencies]
The Validator implementation has certain expectations about each of these dependencies, and they are detailed below.
Transaction type
A transaction type can be anything, as long as it can be serialized as part of the block serialization.
Transaction: represents a transaction that can be added to a block
A toy example that shows how to provide this type can found in
mocks/transaction.nim.
Serialization
A serialization scheme for blocks is required so that a block can be converted to bytes, which can then be hashed and signed. The Validator implementation expects the following type and function to be present:
Serialization: represents a serialization schemeSerialization.toBytes(block): converts a block into bytes
A toy example that shows how to provide this type and function can be found in
mocks/serialization.nim.
Hashing
A cryptographic hashing scheme is required so that a block hash can be created
that uniquely identifies the block. The Validator implementation expects a
Hash type and the following functions:
Hash: represents a digest from a hashing functionHash.hash(bytes): digests the bytes to create a hash==: checks whether two hashes are equal
A toy example that shows how to provide this type and these functions can found
in mocks/hashing.nim.
Signature scheme
A cryptographic signature scheme is required so that validators can sign off on the blocks that they propose. The Validator implementation expects the following types and functions to be present:
Identity: represents the private key that a validator uses to signIdentifier: represents a public key that is used to identify a validatorSignature: represents a block signatureidentity.identifier: the public key that is derived from the private keyidentity.sign(hash): signs the hash and returns a Signaturesignature.signer(hash): returns the signer that signed the hash==: checks whether two identifiers or two signatures are equal
A toy example that shows how to provide these types and functions can found in
mocks/signing.nim.
Instantiating a Validator
Each validator node in the network has its own identity. This usually takes the form of a cryptographic private/public key pair. The validator uses the private key to sign off on blocks, and the public key to identify itself to other validators.
Validators form a committee, and each of them has voting power according to
their stake in the network. How this committee is formed, and how the stakes are
determined is outside the responsibility of this library. A validator instance
is simply informed about the members and stakes through a Committee object.
let committee = Committee.new({
identifier1: 1/8 # validator with public key `identifier1` has 1/8 of the total stake
identifier2: 1/2 # validator with public key `identifier2` has 1/2 of the total stake
identifier3: 1/4 # validator with public key `identifier3` has 1/4 of the total stake
identifier4: 1/8 # validator with public key `identifier4` has 1/8 of the total stake
})
A validator can be instantiated using its identity and the committee that it is part of:
let validator = Validator.new(identity, committee)
Note: the identity that you pass to the validator needs to have its corresponding identifier present in the commitee
Running a Validator
The Mysticeti protocol works in rounds. Each round all validators propose new blocks, and receive the blocks that other validators proposed. Because these blocks reference each other, they form a graph (DAG). Each validator looks at this graph and determines which blocks are agreed upon by the consensus protocol and commits them.
Proposing blocks
To propose a new block of transactions, invoke the propose function:
import questionable/results
if signedBlock =? validator.propose(transactions):
# send the signed block to other validators
The propose function returns a
Result that either contains a
signed block of transactions, or an error. Errors may occur because a block was
already proposed this round, or because there were not enough parent blocks to
construct a valid block.
Receiving blocks
When you recieve a signed block from another validator, you first need to check
its validity by invoking the check function:
let checked = validator.check(signedBlock)
This gives you a BlockCheck object containing a verdict about the block's
correctness. The verdict can be either correct, invalid, or incomplete.
When the verdict is correct, you can pass the correct block into the receive
function:
if checked.verdict == BlockVerdict.correct:
validator.receive(checked.blck)
When the verdict is invalid, the received block should be ignored:
if checked.verdict == BlockVerdict.invalid:
echo "ignoring block, reason: ", checked.reason
When the verdict is incomplete that means that some of the parent blocks are
unknown to the validator. It should then ask the validator that sent the block
for the missing parent blocks.
if checked.verdict == BlockVerdict.incomplete:
let missing = checked.missing # the block ids of the missing parent blocks
# ask sender for missing blocks
Moving to the next round
The Mysticeti protocol uses a threshold logical clock to move from one round to the next. This means that each validator moves to the next round when it's seen enough blocks in the current round to represent >2/3 of the stake.
Additionaly, the protocol mandates that all validators wait for the primary proposer of the round (with a timeout), before moving to the next round.
To move to the next round, invoke the nextRound function:
validator.nextRound()
The primary proposer for the current round can be retrieved from the validator:
let primaryProposer = validator.primaryProposer # changes each round
Sequencing
The outcome of the consensus algorithm is a sequence of blocks that is
guaranteed to be the same for all validators. This sequence of committed blocks can be accessed through the committed
iterator:
for blck in validator.committed:
let transactions = blck.transactions
# execute transactions
The validator only keeps track of rounds that have blocks that are not yet
committed. Calling the committed iterator allows the validator to clean up
resources for older rounds.
Thanks
Many thanks to Mystenlabs (no affiliation) and the authors of the Mysticeti paper.