1
0
mirror of https://github.com/trezor/trezor-firmware.git synced 2024-12-16 11:28:14 +00:00
trezor-firmware/core/src/apps/monero
2019-07-09 12:51:48 +02:00
..
layout core/typing: add annotations 2019-07-09 12:51:48 +02:00
signing core: remove or mark star imports 2019-05-07 16:31:04 +02:00
xmr core: throw exception classes instead of instances where possible 2019-06-22 02:14:02 +02:00
__init__.py core/typing: add annotations 2019-07-09 12:51:48 +02:00
diag.py MONOREPO CREATE FROM trezor-core 2019-04-15 19:14:40 +02:00
get_address.py xmr: get_address - pagination, integrated address 2019-05-31 13:18:11 +02:00
get_tx_keys.py MONOREPO CREATE FROM trezor-core 2019-04-15 19:14:40 +02:00
get_watch_only.py MONOREPO CREATE FROM trezor-core 2019-04-15 19:14:40 +02:00
key_image_sync.py core/typing: add annotations 2019-07-09 12:51:48 +02:00
live_refresh.py core/typing: add annotations 2019-07-09 12:51:48 +02:00
misc.py core: remove or mark star imports 2019-05-07 16:31:04 +02:00
README.md all: rename TREZOR to Trezor where possible 2019-06-17 20:28:29 +02:00
sign_tx.py core/typing: add annotations 2019-07-09 12:51:48 +02:00

Monero

MAINTAINER = ...

AUTHOR = Dusan Klinec dusan.klinec@gmail.com

REVIEWER = Tomas Susanka tomas.susanka@satoshilabs.com, Jan Pochyla jan.pochyla@satoshilabs.com, Ondrej Vejpustek ondrej.vejpustek@satoshilabs.com


This Monero implementation was implemented from scratch originally for Trezor by porting Monero C++ code to the Python codebase.

The implementation heavily relies on the trezor-crypto Monero functionality which implements basic crypto primitives and other Monero related functionality (e.g., monero base58, accelerated and optimized Borromean range signatures)

A general high level description of the integration proposal is described in the documentation: monero-doc.

Features

The implementation provides the following features:

Transaction signature

Signs a Monero transaction on the Trezor.

  • Designed so number of UTXO is practically unlimited (hundreds to thousands)
  • Maximal number of outputs per transaction is 8 (usually there are only 2)
  • Supports 8 B encrypted payment ID and 32 B unencrypted payment ID.

Key Image sync

Key Image is computed with the spend key which is stored on the Trezor.

In order to detect if the UTXO has been already spent (thus computing balance due to change transactions) and correct spending UTXOs the key images are required. Without the key images the Monero view only wallet incorrectly computes balance as it sees all ever received transactions as unspent.

Key image sync is a protocol that allows to compute key images for incoming transfers by Trezor.

Example: 20 XMR in the single UTXO is received, thus real balance is 20. 1 XMR is sent to a different address and remaining 19 are sent back with a change transaction. Correct balance is 19 but without correct key image the view only wallet shows balance 39. Without knowing which UTXO is spent the newly constructed spending transactions can pick already spent input. Such transaction is rejected by a Monero daemon as a double spending transaction.

Normally, the Key image sync is not needed as the key image computation is done by the transaction signing algorithm. However, if the wallet file is somehow corrupted or the wallet is used on a new host / restored from the Trezor the key image sync is required for correct function of the wallet. It recomputes key images for all received transaction inputs.

Integration rationale

The Monero codebase already contains cold wallet support. I.e., wallet not connected to the Internet, which should provide better security guarantees as it minimizes attack surface compared to the hot wallet - always connected wallet.

As the cold wallet is not connected to the Internet and does not have access nor to the blockchain neither to the monero full node the all information for transaction construction have to be prepared by the hot wallet.

When using the cold wallet, hot wallet is watch-only. It has only the view-key so it can scan blockchain for incoming transactions but is not able to spend any transaction.

Transaction signature with cold wallet works like this:

  • Create transaction construction data on hot wallet. transfer <address> <amount>. Works similar to the normal wallet operation but instead of the signed transaction, the watch-only hot wallet generates unsigned_txset file which contains transaction construction data.

  • Cold wallet opens unsigned_txset, verifies the signature on the transaction construction data and creates Monero transaction using the data. Cold wallet creates signed_txset

  • Hot wallet opens signed_txset, verifies the transaction and asks user whether to submit transaction to the full node.

Cold wallet protocols

As cold wallet support is already present in Monero codebase, the protocols were well designed and analyzed. We decided to reuse the cold wallet approach when signing the transaction as the trezor pretty much behaves as the cold wallet, i.e., does not have access to the blockchain or full Monero node. The whole transaction is built in the trezor thus the integration has security properties of the cold wallet (which is belevied to be secure). This integration approach makes security analysis easier and enables to use existing codebase and protocols. This makes merging trezor support to the Monero codebase easier. We believe that by choosing a bit more high-level approach in the protocol design we could easily add more advanced features,

trezor implements cold wallet protocols in this integration scheme.

Description

Main high level protocol logic is implemented in apps/monero/protocol/ directory.

Serialization

The serialization in apps/monero/xmr/serialize is the cryptonote serialization format used to serialize data to blockchain. The serialization was ported from Monero C++. Source comes from the library monero-serialize.

Serialization scheme was inspired by protobuf serialization scheme. Fields are specified as a classmethod which is easier to gc.collect() after serialization is done.

    @classmethod
    def f_specs(cls):
        return (("size", SizeT),)

Serialization is synchronous.

Protocols

Transaction signing and Key Image (KI) sync are multi-step stateful protocols. The protocol have several roundtrips.

In the signing protocol the connected host mainly serves as a dumb storage providing values to the trezor when needed, mainly due to memory constrains on trezor. The offloaded data can be in plaintext. In this case data is HMACed with unique HMAC key to avoid data tampering, reordering, replay, reuse, etc... Some data are offloaded as protected, encrypted and authenticated with Chacha20Poly1305 with unique key (derived from the protocol step, message, purpose, counter, master secret).

trezor builds the signed Monero transaction incrementally, i.e., one UTXO per round trip, one transaction output per roundtrip.

Protocol workflow

Key image sync and transaction signing protocols are stateful. Both protocols implement custom workflow managing the protocol state and state transitions explicitly.

Entry to the protocol workflow is passed on the initial protocol message, i.e., only the initial protocol message is registered via wire.add(). The workflow internally manages receiving / sending protocol messages.

Each finished protocol step specifies the next expected message set which helps to govern protocol state transitions, i.e., exception is thrown if another message is received as expected.

As the protocols implement custom workflow the general package unimport in wire is not called which could lead to memory problems as locally imported packages are not freed from memory on gc.collect(). Thus protocols call unimport manually after processing the protocol messages.

Protobuf messages are following the convention MoneroXRequest, MoneroXAck.

Key Image sync work flow

In the KI sync cold wallet protocol KIs are generated by the cold wallet. For each KI there is a ring signature generated by the cold wallet (KI proof).

KI sync is mainly needed to recover from some problem or when using a new hot-wallet (corruption of a wallet file or using trezor on a different host).

The KI protocol has 3 steps.

Init step

  • MoneroKeyImageExportInitRequest
  • Contains commitment to all KIs we are going to compute (hash of all UTXOs).
  • User can confirm / reject the KI sync in this step. Init message contains number of KIs for computation.

Sync

  • MoneroKeyImageSyncStepRequest
  • Computes N KIs in this step. N = 10 for now.
  • Returns encrypted result, MoneroExportedKeyImage

Finalization

  • MoneroKeyImageSyncFinalRequest
  • When commitment on all KIs is correct (i.e, number of UTXOs matches, hashes match) the encryption key is released to the agent/hot-wallet so it can decrypt computed KIs and import it

Transaction signing

For detailed description and rationale please refer to the monero-doc.

  • The protocol workflow apps/monero/sign_tx.py
  • The protocol is implemented in apps/monero/protocol/signing/

MoneroTransactionInitRequest:

  • Contains basic construction data for the transaction, e.g., transaction destinations, fee, mixin level, range proof details (type of the range proof, batching scheme).

After receiving this message:

  • The trezor prompts user for verification of the destination addresses and amounts.
  • Commitments are computed thus later potential deviations from transaction destinations are detected and signing aborts.
  • Secrets for HMACs / encryption are computed, TX key is computed.
  • Precomputes required sub-addresses (init message indicates which sub-addresses are needed).

MoneroTransactionSetInputRequest

  • Sends one UTXO to the trezor for processing, encoded as MoneroTransactionSourceEntry.
  • Contains construction data needed for signing the transaction, computing spending key for UTXO.

trezor computes spending keys, TxinToKey, pseudo_out, HMACs for offloaded data

MoneroTransactionInputsPermutationRequest

UTXOs have to be sorted by the key image in the valid blockchain transaction. This message caries permutation on the key images so they are sorted in the desired way.

MoneroTransactionInputViniRequest

  • Step needed to correctly hash all transaction inputs, in the right order (permutation computed in the previous step).
  • Contains MoneroTransactionSourceEntry and TxinToKey computed in the previous step.
  • trezor Computes tx_prefix_hash is part of the signed data.

MoneroTransactionAllInputsSetRequest

  • Sent after all inputs have been processed.
  • Used in the range proof offloading to the host. E.g., in case of batched Bulletproofs with more than 2 transaction outputs. The message response contains trezor-generated commitment masks so host can compute range proof correctly.

MoneroTransactionSetOutputRequest

  • Sends transaction output, MoneroTransactionDestinationEntry, one per message.
  • HMAC prevents tampering with previously accepted data (in the init step).
  • trezor computes data related to transaction output, e.g., range proofs, ECDH info for the receiver, output public key.
  • In case offloaded range proof is used the request can carry computed range proof.

MoneroTransactionAllOutSetRequest

Sent after all transaction outputs have been sent to the trezor for processing. Request is empty, the response contains computed extra field (may contain additional public keys if sub-addresses are used), computed tx_prefix_hash and basis for the final transaction signature MoneroRingCtSig (fee, transaction type).

MoneroTransactionMlsagDoneRequest

Message sent to ask trezor to compute pre-MLSAG hash required for the signature. Hash is computed incrementally by trezor since the init message and can be finalized in this step. Request is empty, response contains message hash, required for the signature.

MoneroTransactionSignInputRequest

  • Caries MoneroTransactionSourceEntry, similarly as previous messages MoneroTransactionSetInputRequest, MoneroTransactionInputViniRequest.
  • Caries computed transaction inputs, pseudo outputs, HMACs, encrypted spending keys and alpha masks
  • trezor generates MLSAG for this UTXO, returns the signature.
  • Code returns also cout value if the multisig mode is active - not fully implemented, will be needed later when implementing multisigs.

MoneroTransactionFinalRequest

  • Sent when all UTXOs have been signed properly
  • Finalizes transaction signature
  • Returns encrypted transaction private keys which are needed later, e.g. for TX proof. As trezor cannot store aux data for all signed transactions its offloaded encrypted to the wallet. Later when TX proof is implemented in the trezor it will load encrypted TX keys, decrypt it and generate the proof.

Implementation notes

Few notes on design / implementation.

Cryptography

Operation with Ed25519 points and scalars are implemented in trezor-crypto so the underlying cryptography layer is fast, secure and constant-time.

Ed Point coordinates are Extended Edwards, using type ge25519 with coordinates (x, y, z, t). Functions in Monero code in the trezor-crypto use the ge25519 for points (no other different point formats).

Functions like op256_modm (e.g., add256_modm) operate on scalar values, i.e., 256 bit integers modulo curve order 2**252 + 3*610042537739*15158679415041928064055629.

Functions curve25519_* operate on 256 bit integers modulo 2**255 - 19, the coordinates of the point. These are used mainly internally (e.g., for hash_to_point()) and not exported to the trezor-core.

trezor-crypto contains also some Monero-specific functions, such as xmr_hash_to_scalar, xmr_hash_to_ec, xmr_generate_key_derivation. Those are used in trezor-core where more high level operations are implemented, such as MLSAG.

Crypto API

API bridging trezor-crypto and trezor-core: embed/extmod/modtrezorcrypto/modtrezorcrypto-monero.h

It encapsulates Ed25519 points and scalars in corresponding Python classes which have memory-wiping destructor. API provides basic functions for work with scalars and points and Monero specific functions.

The API is designed in such a way it is easy to work with Ed25519 as there is only one point format which is always normed to avoid complications when chaining operations such as scalarmults.

Range signatures

Borromean range signatures were optimized and ported to trezor-crypto.

Range signatures xmr_gen_range_sig are CPU intensive and memory intensive operations which were originally implemented in python (trezor-core) but it was not feasible to run on the Trezor device due to a small amount of RAM and long computation times. It was needed to optimize the algorithm and port it to C so it is feasible to run it on the real hardware and run it fast.

Range signature is a well-contained problem with no allocations needed, simple API. For memory and timing reasons its implemented directly in trezor-crypto (as it brings real benefit to the user).

On the other hand, MLASG and other ring signatures are built from building blocks in python for easier development, code readability, maintenance and debugging. Porting to C is not that straightforward and I don't see any benefit here. The memory and CPU is not the problem as in the case of range signatures so I think it is fine to have it in Python. Porting to C would also increase complexity of trezor-crypto and could lead to bugs.

Using small and easily auditable & testable building blocks, such as ge25519_add (fast, in C) to build more complex schemes in high level language is, in my opinion, a scalable and secure way to build the system. Porting all Monero crypto schemes to C would be very time consuming and prone to errors.

Having access to low-level features also speeds up development of new features, such as multisigs.

MLSAG may need to be slightly changed when implementing multisigs (some preparations have been made already but we will see after this phase starts).

Bulletproof generation and verification is implemented, however the device can handle maximum 2 batched outputs in the bulletproof due to high memory requirements (more on that in monero-doc). If number of outputs is larger than 2 the offloading to host is required. In such case, the bulletproofs are first computed at the host and sent to Trezor for verification.

Bulletproof implementation is covered by unit tests, the proofs in unittest were generated by the Monero C++ implementation.