You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 
 
 
 

7.4 KiB

Application Blockchain Interface (ABCI)

ABCI is the interface between Tendermint (a state-machine replication engine) and an application (the actual state machine).

The ABCI message types are defined in a protobuf file.

For full details on the ABCI message types and protocol, see the ABCI specificaiton. Be sure to read the specification if you're trying to build an ABCI app!

For additional details on server implementation, see the ABCI readme.

Here we provide some more details around the use of ABCI by Tendermint and clarify common "gotchas".

ABCI connections

Tendermint opens 3 ABCI connections to the app: one for Consensus, one for Mempool, one for Queries.

Async vs Sync

The main ABCI server (ie. non-GRPC) provides ordered asynchronous messages. This is useful for DeliverTx and CheckTx, since it allows Tendermint to forward transactions to the app before it's finished processing previous ones.

Thus, DeliverTx and CheckTx messages are sent asycnhronously, while all other messages are sent synchronously.

CheckTx and Commit

It is typical to hold three distinct states in an ABCI app: CheckTxState, DeliverTxState, QueryState. The QueryState contains the latest committed state for a block. The CheckTxState and DeliverTxState may be updated concurrently with one another. Before Commit is called, Tendermint locks and flushes the mempool so that no new changes will happen to CheckTxState. When Commit completes, it unlocks the mempool.

Thus, during Commit, it is safe to reset the QueryState and the CheckTxState to the latest DeliverTxState (ie. the new state from executing all the txs in the block).

Note, however, that it is not possible to send transactions to Tendermint during Commit - if your app tries to send a /broadcast_tx to Tendermint during Commit, it will deadlock.

EndBlock Validator Updates

Updates to the Tendermint validator set can be made by returning Validator objects in the ResponseBeginBlock:

message Validator {
  bytes address = 1;
  PubKey pub_key = 2;
  int64 power = 3;
}

message PubKey {
  string type = 1;
  bytes  data = 2;
}

The pub_key currently supports two types: - type = "ed25519" and data = <raw 32-byte public key>- type = "secp256k1" and data = <33-byte OpenSSL compressed public key>

If the address is provided, it must match the address of the pubkey, as specified here

(Note: In the v0.19 series, the pub_key is the Amino encoded public key. For Ed25519 pubkeys, the Amino prefix is always "1624DE6220". For example, the 32-byte Ed25519 pubkey 76852933A4686A721442E931A8415F62F5F1AEDF4910F1F252FB393F74C40C85 would be Amino encoded as 1624DE622076852933A4686A721442E931A8415F62F5F1AEDF4910F1F252FB393F74C40C85)

(Note: In old versions of Tendermint (pre-v0.19.0), the pubkey is just prefixed with a single type byte, so for ED25519 we'd have pub_key = 0x1 | pub)

The power is the new voting power for the validator, with the following rules:

  • power must be non-negative
  • if power is 0, the validator must already exist, and will be removed from the validator set
  • if power is non-0:
    • if the validator does not already exist, it will be added to the validator set with the given power
    • if the validator does already exist, its power will be adjusted to the given power

InitChain Validator Updates

ResponseInitChain has the option to return a list of validators. If the list is not empty, Tendermint will adopt it for the validator set. This way the application can determine the initial validator set for the blockchain.

Note that if addressses are included in the returned validators, they must match the address of the public key.

ResponseInitChain also includes ConsensusParams, but these are presently ignored.

Query

Query is a generic message type with lots of flexibility to enable diverse sets of queries from applications. Tendermint has no requirements from the Query message for normal operation - that is, the ABCI app developer need not implement Query functionality if they do not wish too. That said, Tendermint makes a number of queries to support some optional features. These are:

Peer Filtering

When Tendermint connects to a peer, it sends two queries to the ABCI application using the following paths, with no additional data:

  • /p2p/filter/addr/<IP:PORT>, where <IP:PORT> denote the IP address and the port of the connection
  • p2p/filter/id/<ID>, where <ID> is the peer node ID (ie. the pubkey.Address() for the peer's PubKey)

If either of these queries return a non-zero ABCI code, Tendermint will refuse to connect to the peer.

Info and the Handshake/Replay

On startup, Tendermint calls Info on the Query connection to get the latest committed state of the app. The app MUST return information consistent with the last block it succesfully completed Commit for.

If the app succesfully committed block H but not H+1, then last_block_height = H and last_block_app_hash = <hash returned by Commit for block H>. If the app failed during the Commit of block H, then last_block_height = H-1 and last_block_app_hash = <hash returned by Commit for block H-1, which is the hash in the header of block H>.

We now distinguish three heights, and describe how Tendermint syncs itself with the app.

storeBlockHeight = height of the last block Tendermint saw a commit for
stateBlockHeight = height of the last block for which Tendermint completed all
    block processing and saved all ABCI results to disk
appBlockHeight = height of the last block for which ABCI app succesfully
    completely Commit

Note we always have storeBlockHeight >= stateBlockHeight and storeBlockHeight >= appBlockHeight Note also we never call Commit on an ABCI app twice for the same height.

The procedure is as follows.

First, some simeple start conditions:

If appBlockHeight == 0, then call InitChain.

If storeBlockHeight == 0, we're done.

Now, some sanity checks:

If storeBlockHeight < appBlockHeight, error If storeBlockHeight < stateBlockHeight, panic If storeBlockHeight > stateBlockHeight+1, panic

Now, the meat:

If storeBlockHeight == stateBlockHeight && appBlockHeight < storeBlockHeight, replay all blocks in full from appBlockHeight to storeBlockHeight. This happens if we completed processing the block, but the app forgot its height.

If storeBlockHeight == stateBlockHeight && appBlockHeight == storeBlockHeight, we're done This happens if we crashed at an opportune spot.

If storeBlockHeight == stateBlockHeight+1 This happens if we started processing the block but didn't finish.

If `appBlockHeight < stateBlockHeight`
	replay all blocks in full from `appBlockHeight` to `storeBlockHeight-1`,
	and replay the block at `storeBlockHeight` using the WAL.
This happens if the app forgot the last block it committed.

If `appBlockHeight == stateBlockHeight`,
	replay the last block (storeBlockHeight) in full.
This happens if we crashed before the app finished Commit

If appBlockHeight == storeBlockHeight {
	update the state using the saved ABCI responses but dont run the block against the real app.
This happens if we crashed after the app finished Commit but before Tendermint saved the state.