📅 Original date posted:2014-02-12
📝 Original message:Agreed. I'm not suggesting that malleability shouldn't be fixed or isn't a
problem. I would love to be able to leverage chained TX for Bitcoin
contracts. But that in its current state it doesn't have to be complicated
to deal with it.
Changing the protocol to use these static IDs is a pretty fundamental
change that would never happen in Bitcoin. But they can still be useful
at the application level to mitigate these issues.
Sent from my overpriced smartphone
On Feb 12, 2014 11:38 AM, "Allen Piscitello" <allen.piscitello at gmail.com>
wrote:
> While that solution does work for many use cases, it does make it much
> harder to do anything needing chained transactions. Granted, this is the
> short term solution for current implementations, but having a transaction
> identifier that does not change does open up other use cases.
>
> For example, Alice wants to send coins to a multisignature address with
> Bob, such that both parties are required to spend the coins. Alice also
> requires for Bob to send coins to this address as well before they will
> proceed. Alice cannot guarantee that Bob will cooperate (and vice versa),
> so before she broadcasts the transaction to send to A+B, she sends Bob a
> transaction that spends her incoming transaction back to herself, but has a
> time lock of far into the future. Bob signs this, returns it to Alice, and
> she broadcasts her funding transaction. At this point, Bob disappears,
> loses his key, or just decides to spite Alice and her coins are locked.
> Since she has a refund transaction, she can broadcast it in a month and
> get her coins back. Except her funding transaction has been modified such
> that the txhash is different, so her refund is now invalid. She would need
> Bob to issue a new refund as soon as her funding transaction hits the
> blockchain if it is modified, which defeats the point of the trustless
> refund transaction.
>
> Longer term it would be more ideal have a canonical identifier for the
> transaction before it even gets to the chain to support these use cases,
> even if wallets are able to properly identify the status of it's
> transactions. Obviously this is a difficult problem to solve and cannot be
> implemented without breaking changes, but it would be a nice goal to be
> able to completely remove malleability. There are other important use
> cases where having a unique identifier just for internal accounting is
> insufficient.
>
> -Allen
>
>
> On Wed, Feb 12, 2014 at 10:22 AM, Alan Reiner <etotheipi at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> I think the solution is simply to encourage Bitcoin software developers
>> to design their software to use this static ID, instead of the full
>> transaction hash. If MtGox had talked those IDs instead of the TX ID,
>> their software would've correctly identified the mutated transactions and
>> there would be no problem.
>>
>> Armory is slightly different, since it doesn't deal with the same stuff
>> as exchanges do. But it didn't have any problems with malleability because
>> it doesn't track anything by ID, it only pays attention to whether inputs
>> and outputs are related to your wallets. It's not necessarily hard to do
>> it this way, people just have to be aware of it.
>>
>> -Alan
>>
>> Sent from my overpriced smartphone
>> On Feb 12, 2014 10:15 AM, "Rune Kjær Svendsen" <runesvend at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Instead of trying to remove the possibility of transaction
>>> malleability, would it make sense to define a new, "canonical
>>> transaction hash/ID" (cTxID), which would be a hash of the part of the
>>> transaction data which we know is not malleable, and have clients use
>>> this cTxID internally, thus making the traditional transaction hash
>>> irrelevant for a client to function correctly?
>>>
>>> We already have a non-malleable transaction hash: the hash that is
>>> signed, ie. the transaction with each scriptSig replaced by the
>>> scriptPubKey it redeems. This could be the cTxID.
>>>
>>> Or is this simply a too fundamental change to the way bitcoin-qt (and
>>> all other clients) work in order to be feasible?
>>>
>>> As far as I can see, it completely solves the issue of not having a
>>> canonical ID for a transaction, but it also increases the
>>> computational requirements for a node. For one, as far as I can see,
>>> it requires the node to index all transactions, because in order to
>>> calculate a cTxID, it would be necessary to fetch all transactions
>>> referred to by the transaction in question, in order to pull in the
>>> scriptPubKeys that are redeemed.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, Feb 10, 2014 at 4:00 AM, Peter Todd <pete at petertodd.org> wrote:
>>> > On Mon, Feb 10, 2014 at 12:33:02AM +0100, Pieter Wuille wrote:
>>> >> Hello all,
>>> >>
>>> >> it was something I planned to do since a long time, but with the
>>> >> recent related issues popping up, I finally got around to writing a
>>> >> BIP about how we can get rid of transaction malleability over time.
>>> >>
>>> >> The proposed document is here: https://gist.github.com/sipa/8907691
>>> >>
>>> >> I expect most rules to not be controversial. Maybe rules 1 and 3, as
>>> >> they require modifications to wallet software (Bitcoin Core 0.9 and
>>> >> BitcoinJ already implement it, though) and potentially invalidate some
>>> >> script functionality. However, these new rules remain optional and
>>> >> controlled by an nVersion increase.
>>> >>
>>> >> Comments please!
>>> >
>>> > You should probably add making CHECKMULTISIG require the dummy value to
>>> > be exactly equal to OP_FALSE; verifying that in the transaction itself
>>> is
>>> > laborious. A more subtle example is we may want both CHECKSIG and
>>> > CHECKMULTISIG to fail the transaction if the signature is invalid but
>>> > not exactly equal to OP_FALSE; some transaction forms are significantly
>>> > more compact if you can have failed signatures, but that's a source of
>>> > malleability. (are there counter examples people can think of?)
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > But as I said on IRC, I'm a bit hesitant to bake in assumptions about
>>> > malleability when we have no solid idea if ECC signatures are or are
>>> not
>>> > malleable on a fundemental level; if "whack-a-mole" anti-malleability
>>> is
>>> > all we've got it could be ugly if a break is found. Similarly, we may
>>> > find we missed something, or some needed change makes the malleability
>>> > rules difficult to work with for some new script type that is required.
>>> >
>>> > I'd rather see a new CHECKSIG mode for the case where malleability
>>> > absolutely must be eliminated - certain multi-party protocols - and fix
>>> > wallet software instead. (the malleability problems people see are
>>> > closely related to inability to handle double-spends and reorgs) But I
>>> > can easily see that being an impossible goal engineering wise...
>>> >
>>> > --
>>> > 'peter'[:-1]@petertodd.org
>>> > 0000000000000001465bc2730ffed7493d166d18d288f6cf15e8cdb5d4a3c7b1
>>> >
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