- /*
- package light provides a light client implementation.
-
- The concept of light clients was introduced in the Bitcoin white paper. It
- describes a watcher of distributed consensus process that only validates the
- consensus algorithm and not the state machine transactions within.
-
- Tendermint light clients allow bandwidth & compute-constrained devices, such as
- smartphones, low-power embedded chips, or other blockchains to efficiently
- verify the consensus of a Tendermint blockchain. This forms the basis of safe
- and efficient state synchronization for new network nodes and inter-blockchain
- communication (where a light client of one Tendermint instance runs in another
- chain's state machine).
-
- In a network that is expected to reliably punish validators for misbehavior by
- slashing bonded stake and where the validator set changes infrequently, clients
- can take advantage of this assumption to safely synchronize a light client
- without downloading the intervening headers.
-
- Light clients (and full nodes) operating in the Proof Of Stake context need a
- trusted block height from a trusted source that is no older than 1 unbonding
- window plus a configurable evidence submission synchrony bound. This is called
- weak subjectivity.
-
- Weak subjectivity is required in Proof of Stake blockchains because it is
- costless for an attacker to buy up voting keys that are no longer bonded and
- fork the network at some point in its prior history. See Vitalik's post at
- [Proof of Stake: How I Learned to Love Weak
- Subjectivity](https://blog.ethereum.org/2014/11/25/proof-stake-learned-love-weak-subjectivity/).
-
- NOTE: Tendermint provides a somewhat different (stronger) light client model
- than Bitcoin under eclipse, since the eclipsing node(s) can only fool the light
- client if they have two-thirds of the private keys from the last root-of-trust.
-
- # Common structures
-
- * SignedHeader
-
- SignedHeader is a block header along with a commit -- enough validator
- precommit-vote signatures to prove its validity (> 2/3 of the voting power)
- given the validator set responsible for signing that header.
-
- The hash of the next validator set is included and signed in the SignedHeader.
- This lets the light client keep track of arbitrary changes to the validator set,
- as every change to the validator set must be approved by inclusion in the
- header and signed in the commit.
-
- In the worst case, with every block changing the validators around completely,
- a light client can sync up with every block header to verify each validator set
- change on the chain. In practice, most applications will not have frequent
- drastic updates to the validator set, so the logic defined in this package for
- light client syncing is optimized to use intelligent bisection.
-
- # What this package provides
-
- This package provides three major things:
-
- 1. Client implementation (see client.go)
- 2. Pure functions to verify a new header (see verifier.go)
- 3. Secure RPC proxy
-
- ## 1. Client implementation (see client.go)
-
- Example usage:
-
- db, err := dbm.NewGoLevelDB("light-client-db", dbDir)
- if err != nil {
- // handle error
- }
-
- c, err := NewHTTPClient(
- chainID,
- TrustOptions{
- Period: 504 * time.Hour, // 21 days
- Height: 100,
- Hash: header.Hash(),
- },
- "http://localhost:26657",
- []string{"http://witness1:26657"},
- dbs.New(db, ""),
- )
- if err != nil {
- // handle error
- }
-
- h, err := c.TrustedHeader(100)
- if err != nil {
- // handle error
- }
- fmt.Println("header", h)
-
- Check out other examples in example_test.go
-
- ## 2. Pure functions to verify a new header (see verifier.go)
-
- Verify function verifies a new header against some trusted header. See
- https://github.com/tendermint/spec/blob/master/spec/consensus/light-client/verification.md
- for details.
-
- There are two methods of verification: sequential and bisection
-
- Sequential uses the headers hashes and the validator sets to verify each adjacent header until
- it reaches the target header.
-
- Bisection finds the middle header between a trusted and new header, reiterating the action until it
- verifies a header. A cache of headers requested by the primary is kept such that when a
- verification is made, and the light client tries again to verify the new header in the middle,
- the light client does not need to ask for all the same headers again.
-
- refer to docs/imgs/light_client_bisection_alg.png
-
- ## 3. Secure RPC proxy
-
- Tendermint RPC exposes a lot of info, but a malicious node could return any
- data it wants to queries, or even to block headers, even making up fake
- signatures from non-existent validators to justify it. Secure RPC proxy serves
- as a wrapper, which verifies all the headers, using a light client connected to
- some other node.
-
- See
- https://docs.tendermint.com/master/tendermint-core/light-client-protocol.html
- for usage example.
- Or see
- https://github.com/tendermint/spec/tree/master/spec/consensus/light-client
- for the full spec
- */
- package light
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