EIP-152: Add BLAKE2 compression function `F` precompile
Author | Tjaden Hess, Matt Luongo, Piotr Dyraga, James Hancock |
---|---|
Discussions-To | https://github.com/ethereum/EIPs/issues/152 |
Status | Final |
Type | Standards Track |
Category | Core |
Created | 2016-10-04 |
Table of Contents
Simple Summary
This EIP will enable the BLAKE2b hash function and other higher-round 64-bit BLAKE2 variants to run cheaply on the EVM, allowing easier interoperability between Ethereum and Zcash as well as other Equihash-based PoW coins.
Abstract
This EIP introduces a new precompiled contract which implements the compression function F
used in the BLAKE2 cryptographic hashing algorithm, for the purpose of allowing interoperability between the EVM and Zcash, as well as introducing more flexible cryptographic hash primitives to the EVM.
Motivation
Besides being a useful cryptographic hash function and SHA3 finalist, BLAKE2 allows for efficient verification of the Equihash PoW used in Zcash, making a BTC Relay - style SPV client possible on Ethereum. A single verification of an Equihash PoW verification requires 512 iterations of the hash function, making verification of Zcash block headers prohibitively expensive if a Solidity implementation of BLAKE2 is used.
BLAKE2b, the common 64-bit BLAKE2 variant, is highly optimized and faster than MD5 on modern processors.
Interoperability with Zcash could enable contracts like trustless atomic swaps between the chains, which could provide a much needed aspect of privacy to the very public Ethereum blockchain.
Specification
We propose adding a precompiled contract at address 0x09
wrapping the BLAKE2 F
compression function.
The precompile requires 6 inputs tightly encoded, taking exactly 213 bytes, as explained below. The encoded inputs are corresponding to the ones specified in the BLAKE2 RFC Section 3.2:
rounds
- the number of rounds - 32-bit unsigned big-endian wordh
- the state vector - 8 unsigned 64-bit little-endian wordsm
- the message block vector - 16 unsigned 64-bit little-endian wordst_0, t_1
- offset counters - 2 unsigned 64-bit little-endian wordsf
- the final block indicator flag - 8-bit word
[4 bytes for rounds][64 bytes for h][128 bytes for m][8 bytes for t_0][8 bytes for t_1][1 byte for f]
The boolean f
parameter is considered as true
if set to 1
.
The boolean f
parameter is considered as false
if set to 0
.
All other values yield an invalid encoding of f
error.
The precompile should compute the F
function as specified in the RFC and return the updated state vector h
with unchanged encoding (little-endian).
Example Usage in Solidity
The precompile can be wrapped easily in Solidity to provide a more development-friendly interface to F
.
function F(uint32 rounds, bytes32[2] memory h, bytes32[4] memory m, bytes8[2] memory t, bool f) public view returns (bytes32[2] memory) {
bytes32[2] memory output;
bytes memory args = abi.encodePacked(rounds, h[0], h[1], m[0], m[1], m[2], m[3], t[0], t[1], f);
assembly {
if iszero(staticcall(not(0), 0x09, add(args, 32), 0xd5, output, 0x40)) {
revert(0, 0)
}
}
return output;
}
function callF() public view returns (bytes32[2] memory) {
uint32 rounds = 12;
bytes32[2] memory h;
h[0] = hex"48c9bdf267e6096a3ba7ca8485ae67bb2bf894fe72f36e3cf1361d5f3af54fa5";
h[1] = hex"d182e6ad7f520e511f6c3e2b8c68059b6bbd41fbabd9831f79217e1319cde05b";
bytes32[4] memory m;
m[0] = hex"6162630000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000";
m[1] = hex"0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000";
m[2] = hex"0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000";
m[3] = hex"0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000";
bytes8[2] memory t;
t[0] = hex"03000000";
t[1] = hex"00000000";
bool f = true;
// Expected output:
// ba80a53f981c4d0d6a2797b69f12f6e94c212f14685ac4b74b12bb6fdbffa2d1
// 7d87c5392aab792dc252d5de4533cc9518d38aa8dbf1925ab92386edd4009923
return F(rounds, h, m, t, f);
}
Gas costs and benchmarks
Each operation will cost GFROUND * rounds
gas, where GFROUND = 1
. Detailed benchmarks are presented in the benchmarks appendix section.
Rationale
BLAKE2 is an excellent candidate for precompilation. BLAKE2 is heavily optimized for modern 64-bit CPUs, specifically utilizing 24 and 63-bit rotations to allow parallelism through SIMD instructions and little-endian arithmetic. These characteristics provide exceptional speed on native CPUs: 3.08 cycles per byte, or 1 gibibyte per second on an Intel i5.
In contrast, the big-endian 32 byte semantics of the EVM are not conducive to efficient implementation of BLAKE2, and thus the gas cost associated with computing the hash on the EVM is disproportionate to the true cost of computing the function natively.
An obvious implementation would be a direct BLAKE2b hash function precompile. At first glance, a BLAKE2b precompile satisfies most hashing and interoperability requirements on the EVM. Once we started digging in, however, it became clear that any BLAKE2b implementation would need specific features and internal modifications based on different projects’ requirements and libraries.
A thread with the Zcash team makes the issue clear.
The minimal thing that is necessary for a working ZEC-ETH relay is an implementation of BLAKE2b Compression F in a precompile.
A BLAKE2b Compression Function F precompile would also suffice for the Filecoin and Handshake interop goals.
A full BLAKE2b precompile would suffice for a ZEC-ETH relay, provided that the implementation provided the parts of the BLAKE2 API that we need (personalization, maybe something else—I’m not sure).
I’m not 100% certain if a full BLAKE2b precompile would also suffice for the Filecoin and Handshake goals. It almost certainly could, provided that it supports all the API that they need.
BLAKE2s — whether the Compression Function F or the full hash — is only a nice-to-have for the purposes of a ZEC-ETH relay.
From this and other conversations with teams in the space, we believe we should focus first on the F
precompile as a strictly necessary piece for interoperability projects. A BLAKE2b precompile is a nice-to-have, and we support any efforts to add one– but it’s unclear whether complete requirements and a flexible API can be found in time for Istanbul.
Implementation of only the core F compression function also allows substantial flexibility and extensibility while keeping changes at the protocol level to a minimum. This will allow functions like tree hashing, incremental hashing, and keyed, salted, and personalized hashing as well as variable length digests, none of which are currently available on the EVM.
Backwards Compatibility
There is very little risk of breaking backwards-compatibility with this EIP, the sole issue being if someone were to build a contract relying on the address at 0x09
being empty. The likelihood of this is low, and should specific instances arise, the address could be chosen to be any arbitrary value with negligible risk of collision.
Test Cases
Test vector 0
- input: (empty)
- output: error “input length for BLAKE2 F precompile should be exactly 213 bytes”
Test vector 1
- input:
00000c48c9bdf267e6096a3ba7ca8485ae67bb2bf894fe72f36e3cf1361d5f3af54fa5d182e6ad7f520e511f6c3e2b8c68059b6bbd41fbabd9831f79217e1319cde05b61626300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000300000000000000000000000000000001
- output: error “input length for BLAKE2 F precompile should be exactly 213 bytes”
Test vector 2
- input:
000000000c48c9bdf267e6096a3ba7ca8485ae67bb2bf894fe72f36e3cf1361d5f3af54fa5d182e6ad7f520e511f6c3e2b8c68059b6bbd41fbabd9831f79217e1319cde05b61626300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000300000000000000000000000000000001
- output: error “input length for BLAKE2 F precompile should be exactly 213 bytes”
Test vector 3
- input:
0000000c48c9bdf267e6096a3ba7ca8485ae67bb2bf894fe72f36e3cf1361d5f3af54fa5d182e6ad7f520e511f6c3e2b8c68059b6bbd41fbabd9831f79217e1319cde05b61626300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000300000000000000000000000000000002
- output: error “incorrect final block indicator flag”
Test vector 4
- input:
0000000048c9bdf267e6096a3ba7ca8485ae67bb2bf894fe72f36e3cf1361d5f3af54fa5d182e6ad7f520e511f6c3e2b8c68059b6bbd41fbabd9831f79217e1319cde05b61626300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000300000000000000000000000000000001
- output:
08c9bcf367e6096a3ba7ca8485ae67bb2bf894fe72f36e3cf1361d5f3af54fa5d282e6ad7f520e511f6c3e2b8c68059b9442be0454267ce079217e1319cde05b
Test vector 5
- input:
0000000c48c9bdf267e6096a3ba7ca8485ae67bb2bf894fe72f36e3cf1361d5f3af54fa5d182e6ad7f520e511f6c3e2b8c68059b6bbd41fbabd9831f79217e1319cde05b61626300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000300000000000000000000000000000001
- output:
ba80a53f981c4d0d6a2797b69f12f6e94c212f14685ac4b74b12bb6fdbffa2d17d87c5392aab792dc252d5de4533cc9518d38aa8dbf1925ab92386edd4009923
Test vector 6
- input:
0000000c48c9bdf267e6096a3ba7ca8485ae67bb2bf894fe72f36e3cf1361d5f3af54fa5d182e6ad7f520e511f6c3e2b8c68059b6bbd41fbabd9831f79217e1319cde05b61626300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000300000000000000000000000000000000
- output:
75ab69d3190a562c51aef8d88f1c2775876944407270c42c9844252c26d2875298743e7f6d5ea2f2d3e8d226039cd31b4e426ac4f2d3d666a610c2116fde4735
Test vector 7
- input:
0000000148c9bdf267e6096a3ba7ca8485ae67bb2bf894fe72f36e3cf1361d5f3af54fa5d182e6ad7f520e511f6c3e2b8c68059b6bbd41fbabd9831f79217e1319cde05b61626300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000300000000000000000000000000000001
- output:
b63a380cb2897d521994a85234ee2c181b5f844d2c624c002677e9703449d2fba551b3a8333bcdf5f2f7e08993d53923de3d64fcc68c034e717b9293fed7a421
Test vector 8
- input:
ffffffff48c9bdf267e6096a3ba7ca8485ae67bb2bf894fe72f36e3cf1361d5f3af54fa5d182e6ad7f520e511f6c3e2b8c68059b6bbd41fbabd9831f79217e1319cde05b61626300000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000300000000000000000000000000000001
- output:
fc59093aafa9ab43daae0e914c57635c5402d8e3d2130eb9b3cc181de7f0ecf9b22bf99a7815ce16419e200e01846e6b5df8cc7703041bbceb571de6631d2615
Implementation
An initial implementation of the F
function in Go, adapted from the standard library, can be found in our Golang BLAKE2 library fork. There’s also an implementation of the precompile in our fork of go-ethereum.
References
For reference, further discussion on this EIP also occurred in the following PRs and issues
Appendix - benchmarks
Assuming ecRecover precompile is perfectly priced, we executed a set of benchmarks comparing Blake2b F compression function precompile with ecRecover precompile. For benchmarks, we used 3.1 GHz Intel Core i7 64-bit machine.
$ sysctl -n machdep.cpu.brand_string
Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-7920HQ CPU @ 3.10GHz
12 rounds
An average gas price of F precompile call with 12 rounds compared to ecRecover should have been 6.74153
and it gives 0.5618
gas per round.
Name Gascost Time (ns) MGas/S Gasprice for 10MGas/S Gasprice for ECDSA eq
----------------------------------------- --------- ---------------- --------- ----------------------- -----------------------
PrecompiledEcrecover/ 3000 152636 19.6546 1526.36 3000
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_0 12 338 35.503 3.38 6.64326
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_3 12 336 35.7143 3.36 6.60395
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_70 12 362 33.1492 3.62 7.11497
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_140 12 339 35.3982 3.39 6.66291
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_230 12 339 35.3982 3.39 6.66291
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_300 12 343 34.9854 3.43 6.74153
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_370 12 336 35.7143 3.36 6.60395
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_440 12 337 35.6083 3.37 6.6236
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_510 12 345 34.7826 3.45 6.78084
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_580 12 355 33.8028 3.55 6.97738
Columns
MGas/S
- Shows what MGas per second was measured on that machine at that timeGasprice for 10MGas/S
shows what the gasprice should have been, in order to reach 10 MGas/secondGasprice for ECDSA eq
shows what the gasprice should have been, in order to have the same cost/cycle as ecRecover
1200 rounds
An average gas price of F precompile call with 1200 rounds compared to ecRecover should have been 436.1288
and it gives 0.3634
gas per round.
Name Gascost Time (ns) MGas/S Gasprice for 10MGas/S Gasprice for ECDSA eq
----------------------------------------- --------- ---------------- --------- ----------------------- -----------------------
PrecompiledEcrecover/ 3000 156152 19.212 1561.52 3000
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_0 1200 22642 52.9989 226.42 434.999
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_3 1200 22885 52.4361 228.85 439.668
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_70 1200 22737 52.7774 227.37 436.824
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_140 1200 22602 53.0926 226.02 434.231
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_230 1200 22501 53.331 225.01 432.29
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_300 1200 22435 53.4879 224.35 431.022
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_370 1200 22901 52.3995 229.01 439.975
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_440 1200 23134 51.8717 231.34 444.452
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_510 1200 22608 53.0786 226.08 434.346
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_580 1200 22563 53.1844 225.63 433.481
1 round
An average gas price of F precompile call with 1 round compared to ecRecover should have been 2.431701
. However, in this scenario the call cost would totally overshadow the dynamic cost anyway.
Name Gascost Time (ns) MGas/S Gasprice for 10MGas/S Gasprice for ECDSA eq
----------------------------------------- --------- ---------------- ---------- ----------------------- -----------------------
PrecompiledEcrecover/ 3000 157544 19.0423 1575.44 3000
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_0 1 126 7.93651 1.26 2.39933
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_3 1 127 7.87402 1.27 2.41837
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_70 1 128 7.8125 1.28 2.43741
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_140 1 125 8 1.25 2.38029
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_230 1 128 7.8125 1.28 2.43741
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_300 1 127 7.87402 1.27 2.41837
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_370 1 131 7.63359 1.31 2.49454
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_440 1 129 7.75194 1.29 2.45646
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_510 1 125 8 1.25 2.38029
PrecompiledBlake2F/testVectors2bX_580 1 131 7.63359 1.31 2.49454
Copyright
Copyright and related rights waived via CC0.
Citation
Please cite this document as:
Tjaden Hess, Matt Luongo, Piotr Dyraga, James Hancock, "EIP-152: Add BLAKE2 compression function `F` precompile," Ethereum Improvement Proposals, no. 152, October 2016. [Online serial]. Available: https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-152.