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ADR 45 - ABCI Evidence Handling

Changelog

  • 21-09-2019: Initial draft

Context

Evidence is a distinct component in a Tendermint block and has it's own reactor for high priority gossipping. Currently, Tendermint supports only a single form of evidence, an explicit equivocation, where a validator signs conflicting blocks at the same height/round. It is detected in real-time in the consensus reactor, and gossiped through the evidence reactor. Evidence can also be submitted through the RPC.

Currently, Tendermint does not gracefully handle a fork on the main chain. If a fork is detected, the node panics. At this point manual intervention and social consensus are required to reconfigure. We'd like to do something more graceful here, but that's for another day.

It's possible to fool lite clients without there being a fork on the main chain - so called Fork-Lite. See the fork accountability document for more details. For a sequential lite client, this can happen via equivocation or amnesia attacks. For a skipping lite client this can also happen via lunatic validator attacks. There must be some way for applications to punish all forms of misbehaviour.

The essential question is whether Tendermint should manage the evidence verification, or whether it should treat evidence more like a transaction (ie. arbitrary bytes) and let the application handle it (including all the signature checking).

Currently, evidence verification is handled by Tendermint. Once committed, evidence is passed over ABCI in BeginBlock in a reduced form that includes only the type of evidence, its height and timestamp, the validator it's from, and the total voting power of the validator set at the height. The app trusts Tendermint to perform the evidence verification, as the ABCI evidence does not contain the signatures and additional data for the app to verify itself.

Arguments in favor of leaving evidence handling in Tendermint:

  1. Attacks on full nodes must be detectable by full nodes in real time, ie. within the consensus reactor. So at the very least, any evidence involved in something that could fool a full node must be handled natively by Tendermint as there would otherwise be no way for the ABCI app to detect it (ie. we don't send all votes we receive during consensus to the app ... ).

  2. Amensia attacks can not be easily detected - they require an interactive protocol among all the validators to submit justification for their past votes. Our best notion of how to do this currently is via a centralized monitor service that is trusted for liveness to aggregate data from current and past validators, but which produces a proof of misbehaviour (ie. via amnesia) that can be verified by anyone, including the blockchain. Validators must submit all the votes they saw for the relevant consensus height to justify their precommits. This is quite specific to the Tendermint protocol and may change if the protocol is upgraded. Hence it would be awkward to co-ordinate this from the app.

  3. Evidence gossipping is similar to tx gossipping, but it should be higher priority. Since the mempool does not support any notion of priority yet, evidence is gossipped through a distinct Evidence reactor. If we just treated evidence like any other transaction, leaving it entirely to the application, Tendermint would have no way to know how to prioritize it, unless/until we significantly upgrade the mempool. Thus we would need to continue to treat evidence distinctly and update the ABCI to either support sending Evidence through CheckTx/DeliverTx, or to introduce new CheckEvidence/DeliverEvidence methods. In either case we'd need to make more changes to ABCI then if Tendermint handled things and we just added support for another evidence type that could be included in BeginBlock.

  4. All ABCI application frameworks will benefit from most of the heavy lifting being handled by Tendermint, rather than each of them needing to re-implement all the evidence verification logic in each language.

Arguments in favor of moving evidence handling to the application:

  1. Skipping lite clients require us to track the set of all validators that were bonded over some period in case validators that are unbonding but still slashable sign invalid headers to fool lite clients. The Cosmos-SDK staking/slashing modules track this, as it's used for slashing. Tendermint does not currently track this, though it does keep track of the validator set at every height. This leans in favour of managing evidence in the app to avoid redundantly managing the historical validator set data in Tendermint

  2. Applications supporting cross-chain validation will be required to process evidence from other chains. This data will come in the form of a transaction, but it means the app will be required to have all the functionality to process evidence, even if the evidence for its own chain is handled directly by Tendermint.

  3. Evidence from lite clients may be large and constitute some form of DoS vector against full nodes. Putting it in transactions allows it to engage the application's fee mechanism to pay for cost of executions in the event the evidence is false. This means the evidence submitter must be able to afford the fees for the submission, but of course it should be refunded if the evidence is valid. That said, the burden is mostly on full nodes, which don't necessarily benefit from fees.

Decision

The above mostly seems to suggest that evidence detection belongs in Tendermint. (5) does not impose particularly large obligations on Tendermint and (6) just means the app can use Tendermint libraries. That said, (7) is potentially cause for some concern, though it could still attack full nodes that weren't associated with validators (ie. that don't benefit from fees). This could be handled out of band, for instance by full nodes offering the light client service via payment channels or via some other payment service. This can also be mitigated by banning client IPs if they send bad data. Note the burden is on the client to actually send us a lot of data in the first place.

A separate ADR will describe how Tendermint will handle these new forms of evidence, in terms of how it will engage the monitoring protocol described in the fork detection document, and how it will track past validators and manage DoS issues.

Status

Proposed.

Consequences

Positive

  • No real changes to ABCI
  • Tendermint handles evidence for all apps

Neutral

  • Need to be careful about denial of service on the Tendermint RPC

Negative

  • Tendermint duplicates data by tracking all pubkeys that were validators during the unbonding period