# c-kzg - work in progress The very beginnings of a simple implementation of [KZG commitments](https://dankradfeist.de/ethereum/2020/06/16/kate-polynomial-commitments.html) in C, using the [Blst library](https://github.com/supranational/blst) from Supranational for field and curve operations. Initially, at least, this largely follows the [go-kzg](https://github.com/protolambda/go-kzg) implementation. Done so far: - FFT and inverse FFT over the finite field. - FFTs over the G1 group - Polynomial single commitment and verification - Polynomial multi commitment and verification - [FK20](https://github.com/khovratovich/Kate/blob/master/Kate_amortized.pdf) single proof method (needs a tidy up) ## Installation Build the [Blst library](https://github.com/supranational/blst) following the instructions there. Then, 1. Copy the resulting `libblst.a` file into the `lib/` directory here. 2. From Blst's `bindings/` directory copy `blst.h` and `blst_aux.h` to `inc/` That is, ``` cp ../blst/libblast.a lib/ cp ../blst/bindings/*.h inc/ ``` ## Build Build the `libckzg.a` library: ``` cd src make lib ``` Build a debug version that aborts on error conditions and attempts to print some helpful info (file, line number, condition that failed): ``` cd src make debuglib ``` ## Run tests ``` cd src make test ``` Unit tests for an individual file can be built and run with `make fft_fr_test` for example. Once a test runner such as *fft_fr_test* has been built, individual unit tests can be run with `./fft_fr_test `. Thanks to [Acutest](https://github.com/mity/acutest) for the unit test harness, which is used here under the MIT licence. ## Run benchmarks This will run all available benchmarks, for the default one second per test size: ``` cd src make bench ``` You can run individual benchmarks, and optionally specify how long to run each test size: ``` make fft_fr_bench ./fft_fr_bench 5 ``` Doing `make clean` should resolve any weird build issues. ## Make debug builds of the tests The default build is designed not to exit on errors, and will (should) return fairly coarse error codes for any issue. This is good for a utility library, but unhelpful for debugging. The `-DDEBUG` compiler flag builds a version such that any assertion failure aborts the run and outputs file and line info. This is much more useful for tracking down deeply buried errors. Each test suite can be compiled into its debug version. For example, as follows: ``` make fk20_proofs_test_debug ./fk20_proofs_test_debug fk_single_strided ``` This magic is implemented via the `ASSERT` macro in _c_kzg.h_. ## Prerequisites - Blst library (see above) - `clang` compiler. I'm using Clang 10.0.0. I'll likely add `gcc` options in future. - The Makefile is GNU make compatible. - I'm developing on Ubuntu 20.04. Will check portability later.