EIP665 - Add precompiled contract for Ed25519 signature verification
# Simple Summary
Support performant and cheap verification of Ed25519 cryptographic signatures in smart contracts in general by adding a precompiled contract for Ed25519 signature verification to the EVM.
# Abstract
Verification of Ed25519 cryptographic signatures is obviously possible in EVM bytecode. However, the gas cost will be very high, and computationally expensive, as such tight, wide word operations intensive code as required for Ed25519 is not a good fit for the EVM bytecode model.
The addition of a native compiled function, in a precompiled contract, to the EVM solves both cost and performance problems.
# Motivation
Ed25519 and Ed448 (that is, EdDSA using Curve25519 or Curve448) are IETF recommendations (RFC7748 (opens new window)) with some attractive properties:
- Ed25519 is intended to operate at around the 128-bit security level and Ed448 at around the 224-bit security level
- EdDSA uses small public keys (32 or 57 octets) and signatures (64 or 114 octets) for Ed25519 and Ed448, respectively
- Ed25519/Ed448 are designed so that fast, constant-time (timing attack resistant) and generally side-channel resistant implementations are easier to produce
Despite being around only for some years, post-Snowden, these curves have gained wide use (opens new window) quickly in various protocols and systems:
- TLS / ECDH(E) (session keys)
- TLS / x.509 (client and server certificates)
- DNSSEC (zone signing)
- OpenSSH (user keys)
- GNUPG/OpenPGP (user keys)
- OpenBSD Signify (software signing)
One motivation for Ed25519 signature verification in smart contracts is to associate existing off-chain systems, records or accounts that use Ed25519 (like above) with blockchain addresses or delegate by allowing to sign data with Ed25519 (only), and then submit this Ed25519-signed data anonymously (via any Eth sender address) to the blockchain, having the contract check the Ed25519 signature of the transaction.
Another motivation is the processing of external, Ed25519 proof-of-stake based blockchains within Ethereum smart contracts.
When a transactions contains data that comes with an Ed25519 signature, that proves that the sender of the Ethereum transaction was also in control of the private key (and the data), and this allows the contract to establish an association between the blockchain and the external system or account, and the external system establish the reverse relation.
For example, a contract might check a Ed25519 signed piece of data submitted to the Ethereum transaction like the current block number. That proves to the contract, that the sender is in possession of both the Ethereum private key and the Ed25519 private key, and hence the contract will accept an association between both. This again can be the root anchor for various powerful applications, as now a potentially crypto holding key owner has proven to be in control of some external off-chain system or account, like e.g. a DNS server, a DNS domain, a cluster node and so on.
# Specification
If block.number >= CONSTANTINOPLE_FORK_BLKNUM
, add a precompiled contract for Ed25519 signature verification (ED25519VFY
).
The proposal adds a new precompiled function ED25519VFY
with the following input and output.
ED25519VFY
takes as input 128 octets:
- message: the 32-octet message that was signed
- public key: the 32-octet Ed25519 public key of the signer
- signature: the 64-octet Ed25519 signature
ED25519VFY
returns as output 4 octets:
0x00000000
if signature is valid- any non-zero value indicates a signature verification failure
# Address
The address of ED25519VFY
is 0x9
.
# Gas costs
Gas cost for ED25519VFY
is 2000.
# Rationale
The proposed ED25519VFY
function takes the signer public key as a call parameter, as with Ed25519, I don't believe it is possible to derive the signers public key from the signature and message alone.
The proposed ED25519VFY
function uses a zero return value to indicate success, since this allows for different errors to be distinguished by return value, as all non-zero return values signal a verification failure.
ECRECOVER
has a gas cost of 3000. Since Ed25519 is computationally cheaper, the gas price should be less.
# Backwards Compatibility
As the proposed precompiled contract is deployed at a reserved (<255) and previously unused address, an implementation of the proposal should not introduce any backward compatibility issues.
# Test Cases
Test vectors for Ed25519 can be found in this IETF ID https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-josefsson-eddsa-ed25519-03#section-6.
More test vectors can be found in the regression tests of NaCl (see references).
# Implementation
# libsodium
libsodium is a mature, high-quality C implementation of Ed25519, with bindings for many languages.
Further, libsodium is (to my knowledge, and as of today 2018/04) the only Ed25519 implementation that has gone through a Security Assessment (opens new window).
To minimize consensus failure risks, the proposal recommends to use libsodium for adding the precompile in all Ethereum client implementations.
Note: as an alternative to libsodium, I looked into HACL, an implementation of Ed25519 in F* (a ML dialect) that can be transpiled to C, and that was formally verified for functional correctness and memory safety of the resulting C code. However, this is new and compared to libsodium which is a "know thing" seems risky nevertheless.
# libsodium bindings
Here is an overview of the language bindings to libsodium for four Ethereum clients this proposal recommends:
# | | Client | Language | libsodium binding | | | ------------ | -------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------- | | | Geth | Go | use cgo with C libsodium (opens new window) | | | Parity | Rust | sodiumoxide (opens new window) | | | PyEthereum | Python | PyNaCl (opens new window) | | | cpp-ethereum | C++ | libsodium (opens new window) |
# PRs
Implementations of this proposal are here:
- go-ethereum PR #16453 (opens new window)
- pyethereum PR #862 (opens new window)
- parity PR #8330 (opens new window)
- cpp-ethereum PR #4945 (opens new window)
# References
- RFC7748 - Elliptic Curves for Security https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7748
- Definition of Ed25519: https://ed25519.cr.yp.to/ed25519-20110926.pdf
- Ed25519 - high-speed high-security signatures: https://ed25519.cr.yp.to/
- NaCl - Networking and Cryptography library: https://nacl.cr.yp.to/sign.html
- NaCl Crypto Libraries (which contains Ed25519): https://ianix.com/pub/ed25519-deployment.html
- Test vectors for Ed25519: https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-josefsson-eddsa-ed25519-03#section-6
- NaCl regression tests: https://ed25519.cr.yp.to/python/sign.py and https://ed25519.cr.yp.to/python/sign.input
- On the recoverability of public keys from signature+message (alone): https://crypto.stackexchange.com/questions/9936/what-signature-schemes-allow-recovering-the-public-key-from-a-signature
- Bernstein, D., "Curve25519: new Diffie-Hellman speed records", DOI 10.1007/11745853_14, February 2006, https://cr.yp.to/ecdh.html
- Hamburg, M., "Ed448-Goldilocks, a new elliptic curve", June 2015, https://eprint.iacr.org/2015/625>
- RFC8080: Edwards-Curve Digital Security Algorithm (EdDSA) for DNSSEC (https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8080)
# Copyright
Copyright and related rights waived via CC0 (opens new window).