52 lines
2.5 KiB
Markdown
52 lines
2.5 KiB
Markdown
|
An evaluation of the Storj whitepaper
|
||
|
=====================================
|
||
|
|
||
|
2020-12-22 Mark Spanbroek
|
||
|
|
||
|
https://storj.io/storjv3.pdf
|
||
|
|
||
|
Goal of this evaluation is to find things to adopt or avoid while designing
|
||
|
Dagger. It is not meant to be a criticism of Storj.
|
||
|
|
||
|
#### Pros:
|
||
|
|
||
|
+ Performance is considered throughout the design
|
||
|
+ Provides an Amazon S3 compatible API (§2.4)
|
||
|
+ Bandwidth usage of storage nodes is aggressively minimized to enable people
|
||
|
with bandwidth caps to participate, which is good for decentralization (§2.7)
|
||
|
+ Erasure codes are used for redundancy (§3.4), upload and download speed
|
||
|
(§3.4.2), proof of retrievability (§4.13) and repair (§4.7)!
|
||
|
+ BIP32 hierarchical keys are used to grant access to file paths (§3.6, §4.11)
|
||
|
+ Ethereum based token for payments (§3.9)
|
||
|
+ Storage nodes are not paid for uploads to avoid nodes that delete immediately
|
||
|
after upload (§4.3)
|
||
|
+ Proof of Work on the node id is used to counter some Sybil attacks (§4.4)
|
||
|
+ Handles key revocations in a decentralized manner (§4.4)
|
||
|
+ Uses a simplified Kademlia DHT for node lookup (§4.6)
|
||
|
+ Uses caching to speed up Kademlia lookups (§4.6)
|
||
|
+ Uses standard-sized chunks (segments) throughout the network (§4.8.2)
|
||
|
+ Erasure coding is applied after encryption, allowing the network to repair
|
||
|
redundancy without the need to know the decryption key (§4.8.4)
|
||
|
+ Streaming and seeking within a file are supported (§4.8.4)
|
||
|
+ Micropayments via payment channels (§4.17)
|
||
|
+ Paper has a very nice overview of possible attacks and mitigations (§B)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
#### Cons:
|
||
|
|
||
|
- Mostly designed for long-lived stable nodes (§2.5)
|
||
|
- Satellites are the gateway nodes to the network (§4.1.1), whose requirements
|
||
|
for uptime and reputation lead to centralization (§4.10). They are also a
|
||
|
single point of failure for a user, because it stores file metadata (§4.9).
|
||
|
- Centralization is further encouraged by having a separate network of approved
|
||
|
satellites (§4.21)
|
||
|
- Clients have to actively perform for audits (§4.13) and execute repair (§4.14)
|
||
|
(through their trusted satellite)
|
||
|
- The network has a complex reputation system (§4.15)
|
||
|
- Consecutive micropayments are presented as a solution for the trust problems
|
||
|
while retrieving (§4.17), which doesn't entirely mitigate withholding attacks.
|
||
|
- Scaling is hampered by the centralization that happens in the satellites
|
||
|
(§6.1)
|
||
|
- The choice to avoid Byzantine distributed consensus, such as a blockchain
|
||
|
(§2.10, §A.3) results in the need for trusted centralized satellites
|