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bitcoinbook/ch07.asciidoc

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[[ch07]]
[[adv_transactions]]
== Advanced Transactions and Scripting
==== Median-Time-Past
((("scripting", "timelocks",
"Median-Tme-Past")))((("Median-Tme-Past")))((("timelocks",
"Median-Tme-Past")))As part of the activation of relative timelocks,
there was also a change in the way "time" is calculated for timelocks
(both absolute and relative). In bitcoin there is a subtle, but very
significant, difference between wall time and consensus time. Bitcoin is
a decentralized network, which means that each participant has his or
her own perspective of time. Events on the network do not occur
instantaneously everywhere. Network latency must be factored into the
perspective of each node. Eventually everything is synchronized to
create a common ledger. Bitcoin reaches consensus every 10 minutes about
the state of the ledger as it existed in the _past_.
The timestamps set in block headers are set by the miners. There is a
certain degree of latitude allowed by the consensus rules to account for
differences in clock accuracy between decentralized nodes. However, this
creates an unfortunate incentive for miners to lie about the time in a
block so as to earn extra fees by including timelocked transactions that
are not yet mature. See the following section for more information.
To remove the incentive to lie and strengthen the security of timelocks,
a BIP was proposed and activated at the same time as the BIPs for
relative timelocks. This is BIP-113, which defines a new consensus
measurement of time called _Median-Time-Past_.
Median-Time-Past is calculated by taking the timestamps of the last 11
blocks and finding the median. That median time then becomes consensus
time and is used for all timelock calculations. By taking the midpoint
from approximately two hours in the past, the influence of any one
block's timestamp is reduced. By incorporating 11 blocks, no single
miner can influence the timestamps in order to gain fees from
transactions with a timelock that hasn't yet matured.
Median-Time-Past changes the implementation of time calculations for
+nLocktime+, +CLTV+, +nSequence+, and +CSV+. The consensus time
calculated by Median-Time-Past is always approximately one hour behind
wall clock time. If you create timelock transactions, you should account
for it when estimating the desired value to encode in +nLocktime+,
+nSequence+, +CLTV+, and +CSV+.
Median-Time-Past is specified in
https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0113.mediawiki[BIP-113].
[[fee_sniping]]
==== Timelock Defense Against Fee Sniping
((("scripting", "timelocks", "defense against
fee-sniping")))((("timelocks", "defense against
fee-sniping")))((("fees", "fee sniping")))((("security", "defense
against fee-sniping")))((("sniping")))Fee-sniping is a theoretical
attack scenario, where miners attempting to rewrite past blocks "snipe"
higher-fee transactions from future blocks to maximize their
profitability.
For example, let's say the highest block in existence is block
#100,000. If instead of attempting to mine block #100,001 to extend the
chain, some miners attempt to remine #100,000. These miners can choose
to include any valid transaction (that hasn't been mined yet) in their
candidate block #100,000. They don't have to remine the block with the
same transactions. In fact, they have the incentive to select the most
profitable (highest fee per kB) transactions to include in their block.
They can include any transactions that were in the "old" block
#100,000, as well as any transactions from the current mempool.
Essentially they have the option to pull transactions from the "present"
into the rewritten "past" when they re-create block #100,000.
Today, this attack is not very lucrative, because block reward is much
higher than total fees per block. But at some point in the future,
transaction fees will be the majority of the reward (or even the
entirety of the reward). At that time, this scenario becomes inevitable.
To prevent "fee sniping," when Bitcoin Core creates transactions, it
uses +nLocktime+ to limit them to the "next block," by default. In our
scenario, Bitcoin Core would set +nLocktime+ to 100,001 on any
transaction it created. Under normal circumstances, this +nLocktime+ has
no effect—the transactions could only be included in block
#100,001 anyway; it's the next block.
But under a blockchain fork attack, the miners would not be able to pull
high-fee transactions from the mempool, because all those transactions
would be timelocked to block #100,001. They can only remine #100,000
with whatever transactions were valid at that time, essentially gaining
no new fees.
To achieve this, Bitcoin Core sets the +nLocktime+ on all new
transactions to <current block # + 1> and sets the +nSequence+ on all
the inputs to 0xFFFFFFFE to enable +nLocktime+.((("",
startref="Stimelock07")))
===== Segregated Witness addresses
Even after segwit activation, it will take some time until most wallets
are upgraded. At first, segwit will be embedded in P2SH, as we saw in
the previous section, to ease compatibility between segit-aware and
unaware wallets.
However, once wallets are broadly supporting segwit, it makes sense to
encode witness scripts directly in a native address format designed for
segwit, rather than embed it in P2SH.
The native segwit address format is defined in BIP-173:
https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0173.mediawiki[BIP-173]::
Base32 address format for native v0-16 witness outputs
BIP-173 only encodes witness (P2WPKH and P2WSH) scripts. It is not
compatible with non-segwit P2PKH or P2SH scripts. BIP-173 is a
checksummed Base32 encoding, as compared to the Base58 encoding of a
"traditional" Bitcoin address. BIP-173 addesses are also called _bech32_
addresses, pronounced "beh-ch thirty two", alluding to the use of a
"BCH" error detection algorithm and 32-character encoding set.
BIP-173 addresses use 32 lower-case-only alphanumeric character set,
carefully selected to reduce errors from misreading or mistyping. By
choosing a lower-case-only character set, bech32 is easier to read,
speak, and 45% more efficient to encode in QR codes.
The BCH error detection algorithm is a vast improvement over the
previous checksum algorithm (from Base58Check), allowing not only
detection but also _correction_ of errors. Address-input interfaces
(such as text-fields in forms) can detect and highlight which character
was most likely mistyped when they detect an error.
From the BIP-173 specification, here are some examples of bech32 addresses:
Mainnet P2WPKH:: bc1qw508d6qejxtdg4y5r3zarvary0c5xw7kv8f3t4
Testnet P2WPKH:: tb1qw508d6qejxtdg4y5r3zarvary0c5xw7kxpjzsx
Mainnet P2WSH:: bc1qrp33g0q5c5txsp9arysrx4k6zdkfs4nce4xj0gdcccefvpysxf3qccfmv3
Testnet P2WSH:: tb1qrp33g0q5c5txsp9arysrx4k6zdkfs4nce4xj0gdcccefvpysxf3q0sl5k7
As you can see in these examples, a segwit bech32 string is up to 90
characters long and consists of three parts:
The human readable part:: This prefix "bc" or "tb" identifying mainnet
or testnet.
The separator:: The digit "1", which is not part of the 32-character
encoding set and can only appear in this position as a separator
The data part:: A minimum of 6 alphanumeric characters, the checksum
encoded witness script
At this time, only a few wallets accept or produce native segwit bech32
addresses, but as segwit adoption increases, you will see these more and
more often.
==== Segregated Witness' New Signing Algorithm
Segregated Witness modifies the semantics of the four signature
verification functions (+CHECKSIG+, +CHECKSIGVERIFY+, +CHECKMULTISIG+,
and +CHECKMULTISIGVERIFY+), changing the way a transaction commitment
hash is calculated.
Signatures in bitcoin transactions are applied on a _commitment hash_,
which is calculated from the transaction data, locking specific parts of
the data indicating the signer's commitment to those values. For
example, in a simple +SIGHASH_ALL+ type signature, the commitment hash
includes all inputs and outputs.
Unfortunately, the way the commitment hash was calculated introduced the
possibility that a node verifying the signature can be forced to perform
a significant number of hash computations. Specifically, the hash
operations increase in O(n^2^) with respect to the number of signature
operations in the transaction. An attacker could therefore create a
transaction with a very large number of signature operations, causing
the entire Bitcoin network to have to perform hundreds or thousands of
hash operations to verify the transaction.
Segwit represented an opportunity to address this problem by changing
the way the commitment hash is calculated. For segwit version 0 witness
programs, signature verification occurs using an improved commitment
hash algorithm as specified in BIP-143.
The new algorithm achieves two important goals. Firstly, the number of
hash operations increases by a much more gradual O(n) to the number of
signature operations, reducing the opportunity to create
denial-of-service attacks with overly complex transactions. Secondly,
the commitment hash now also includes the value (amounts) of each input
as part of the commitment. This means that a signer can commit to a
specific input value without needing to "fetch" and check the previous
transaction referenced by the input. In the case of offline devices,
such as hardware wallets, this greatly simplifies the communication
between the host and the hardware wallet, removing the need to stream
previous transactions for validation. A hardware wallet can accept the
input value "as stated" by an untrusted host. Since the signature is
invalid if that input value is not correct, the hardware wallet doesn't
need to validate the value before signing the input.