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174 lines
7.0 KiB
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174 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
------------------------------------------------------------
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BIP: 14
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Title: BIP Protocol Version and User Agent
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Author: Amir Taaki <genjix@riseup.net>
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Patrick Strateman <bitcoin-bips@covertinferno.org>
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Status: Accepted
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Type: Standards Track
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Created: 2011-11-10
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Post-History: 2011-11-02
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------------------------------------------------------------
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In this document, bitcoin will be used to refer to the protocol while
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Satoshi will refer to the current client in order to prevent confusion.
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[[past-situation]]
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Past Situation
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Bitcoin as a protocol began life with the Satoshi client. Now that the
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community is diversifying, a number of alternative clients with their
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own codebases written in a variety of languages (Java, Python,
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Javascript, C++) are rapidly developing their own feature-sets.
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Embedded in the protocol is a version number. Primarily this version
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number is in the "version" and "getblocks" messages, but is also in the
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"block" message to indicate the software version that created that
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block. Currently this version number is the same version number as that
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of the client. This document is a proposal to separate the protocol
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version from the client version, together with a proposed method to do
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so.
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[[rationale]]
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Rationale
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~~~~~~~~~
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With non-separated version numbers, every release of the Satoshi client
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will increase its internal version number. Primarily this holds every
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other client hostage to a game of catch-up with Satoshi version number
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schemes. This plays against the decentralised nature of bitcoin, by
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forcing every software release to remain in step with the release
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schedule of one group of bitcoin developers.
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Version bumping can also introduce incompatibilities and fracture the
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network. In order that the health of the network is maintained, the
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development of the protocol as a shared common collaborative process
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requires being split off from the implementation of that protocol.
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Neutral third entities to guide the protocol with representatives from
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all groups, present the chance for bitcoin to grow in a positive manner
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with minimal risks.
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By using a protocol version, we set all implementations on the network
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to a common standard. Everybody is able to agree within their confines
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what is protocol and what is implementation-dependent. A user agent
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string is offered as a 'vanity-plate' for clients to distinguish
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themselves in the network.
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Separation of the network protocol from the implemention, and forming
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development of said protocol by means of a mutual consensus among
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participants, has the democratic disadvantage when agreement is hard to
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reach on contentious issues. To mitigate this issue, strong
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communication channels and fast release schedules are needed, and are
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outside the scope of this document (concerning a process-BIP type).
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User agents provide extra tracking information that is useful for
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keeping tabs on network data such as client implementations used or
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common architectures/operating-systems. In the rare case they may even
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provide an emergency method of shunning faulty clients that threaten
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network health- although this is strongly unrecommended and extremely
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bad form. The user agent does not provide a method for clients to work
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around and behave differently to different implementations, as this will
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lead to protocol fracturing.
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In short:
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* Protocol version: way to distinguish between nodes and behave
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different accordingly.
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* User agent: simple informational tool. Protocol should not be modified
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depending on user agent.
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[[browser-user-agents]]
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Browser User-Agents
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1945[RFC 1945] vaguely specifies a user
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agent to be a string of the product with optional comments.
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` Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; en-US; rv:1.9.1.6) Gecko/20100127 Gentoo Shiretoko/3.5.6`
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User agents are most often parsed by computers more than humans. The
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space delimited format, does not provide an easy, fast or efficient way
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for parsing. The data contains no structure indicating hierarchy in this
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placement.
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The most immediate pieces of information there are the browser product,
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rendering engine and the build (Gentoo Shiretoko) together with version
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number. Various other pieces of information as included as comments such
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as desktop environment, platform, language and revision number of the
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build.
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[[proposal]]
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Proposal
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~~~~~~~~
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The version field in "version" and "getblocks" packets will become the
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protocol version number. The version number in the "blocks" reflects the
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protocol version from when that block was created.
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The currently unused sub_version_num field in "version" packets will
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become the new user-agent string.
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Bitcoin user agents are a modified browser user agent with more
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structure to aid parsers and provide some coherence. In bitcoin, the
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software usually works like a stack starting from the core code-base up
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to the end graphical interface. Therefore the user agent strings codify
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this relationship.
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Basic format:
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` /Name:Version/Name:Version/.../`
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Example:
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` /Satoshi:5.64/bitcoin-qt:0.4/` +
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` /Satoshi:5.12/Spesmilo:0.8/`
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Here bitcoin-qt and Spesmilo may use protocol version 5.0, however the
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internal codebase they use are different versions of the same software.
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The version numbers are not defined to any strict format, although this
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guide recommends:
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* Version numbers in the form of Major.Minor.Revision (2.6.41)
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* Repository builds using a date in the format of YYYYMMDD (20110128)
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For git repository builds, implementations are free to use the git
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commitish. However the issue lies in that it is not immediately obvious
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without the repository which version precedes another. For this reason,
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we lightly recommend dates in the format specified above, although this
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is by no means a requirement.
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Optional -r1, -r2, ... can be appended to user agent version numbers.
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This is another light recommendation, but not a requirement.
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Implementations are free to specify version numbers in whatever format
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needed insofar as it does not include (, ), : or / to interfere with the
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user agent syntax.
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An optional comments field after the version number is also allowed.
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Comments should be delimited by brackets (...). The contents of comments
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is entirely implementation defined although this BIP recommends the use
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of semi-colons ; as a delimiter between pieces of information.
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Example:
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` /BitcoinJ:0.2(iPad; U; CPU OS 3_2_1)/AndroidBuild:0.8/`
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Reserved symbols are therefore: / : ( )
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They should not be misused beyond what is specified in this section.
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* / separates the code-stack
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* ::
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specifies the implementation version of the particular stack
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* ( and ) delimits a comment which optionally separates data using ;
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[[timeline]]
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Timeline
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~~~~~~~~
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When this document was published, the bitcoin protocol and Satoshi
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client versions were currently at 0.5 and undergoing changes. In order
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to minimise disruption and allow the undergoing changes to be completed,
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the next protocol version at 0.6 became peeled from the client version
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(also at 0.6). As of that time (January 2012), protocol and
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implementation version numbers are distinct from each other.
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