|
|
- Merkle
- ======
-
- For an overview of Merkle trees, see
- `wikipedia <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merkle_tree>`__.
-
- There are two types of Merkle trees used in Tendermint.
-
- - **IAVL+ Tree**: An immutable self-balancing binary
- tree for persistent application state
- - **Simple Tree**: A simple compact binary tree for
- a static list of items
-
- IAVL+ Tree
- ----------
-
- The purpose of this data structure is to provide persistent storage for
- key-value pairs (e.g. account state, name-registrar data, and
- per-contract data) such that a deterministic merkle root hash can be
- computed. The tree is balanced using a variant of the `AVL
- algorithm <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AVL_tree>`__ so all operations
- are O(log(n)).
-
- Nodes of this tree are immutable and indexed by its hash. Thus any node
- serves as an immutable snapshot which lets us stage uncommitted
- transactions from the mempool cheaply, and we can instantly roll back to
- the last committed state to process transactions of a newly committed
- block (which may not be the same set of transactions as those from the
- mempool).
-
- In an AVL tree, the heights of the two child subtrees of any node differ
- by at most one. Whenever this condition is violated upon an update, the
- tree is rebalanced by creating O(log(n)) new nodes that point to
- unmodified nodes of the old tree. In the original AVL algorithm, inner
- nodes can also hold key-value pairs. The AVL+ algorithm (note the plus)
- modifies the AVL algorithm to keep all values on leaf nodes, while only
- using branch-nodes to store keys. This simplifies the algorithm while
- minimizing the size of merkle proofs
-
- In Ethereum, the analog is the `Patricia
- trie <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radix_tree>`__. There are tradeoffs.
- Keys do not need to be hashed prior to insertion in IAVL+ trees, so this
- provides faster iteration in the key space which may benefit some
- applications. The logic is simpler to implement, requiring only two
- types of nodes -- inner nodes and leaf nodes. The IAVL+ tree is a binary
- tree, so merkle proofs are much shorter than the base 16 Patricia trie.
- On the other hand, while IAVL+ trees provide a deterministic merkle root
- hash, it depends on the order of updates. In practice this shouldn't be
- a problem, since you can efficiently encode the tree structure when
- serializing the tree contents.
-
- Simple Tree
- -----------
-
- For merkelizing smaller static lists, use the Simple Tree. The
- transactions and validation signatures of a block are hashed using this
- simple merkle tree logic.
-
- If the number of items is not a power of two, the tree will not be full
- and some leaf nodes will be at different levels. Simple Tree tries to
- keep both sides of the tree the same size, but the left side may be one
- greater.
-
- ::
-
- Simple Tree with 6 items Simple Tree with 7 items
-
- * *
- / \ / \
- / \ / \
- / \ / \
- / \ / \
- * * * *
- / \ / \ / \ / \
- / \ / \ / \ / \
- / \ / \ / \ / \
- * h2 * h5 * * * h6
- / \ / \ / \ / \ / \
- h0 h1 h3 h4 h0 h1 h2 h3 h4 h5
-
- Simple Tree with Dictionaries
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- The Simple Tree is used to merkelize a list of items, so to merkelize a
- (short) dictionary of key-value pairs, encode the dictionary as an
- ordered list of ``KVPair`` structs. The block hash is such a hash
- derived from all the fields of the block ``Header``. The state hash is
- similarly derived.
|