TxChain: Efficient Cryptocurrency Light Clients via Contingent Transaction Aggregation
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Date
2020Type
- Conference Paper
ETH Bibliography
yes
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Abstract
Cryptocurrency light- or simplified payment verification (SPV) clients allow nodes with limited resources to efficiently verify execution of payments. Instead of downloading the entire blockchain, only block headers and selected transactions are stored. Still, the storage and bandwidth cost, linear in blockchain size, remain non-negligible, especially for smart contracts and mobile devices: as of April 2020, these amount to 50 MB in Bitcoin and 5 GB in Ethereum.
Recently, two improved sublinear light clients were proposed: to validate the blockchain, NIPoPoWs and FlyClient only download a polylogarithmic number of block headers, sampled at random. The actual verification of payments, however, remains costly: for each verified transaction, the corresponding block must too be downloaded. This yields NIPoPoWs and FlyClient only effective under low transaction volumes.
We present TxChain, a novel mechanism to maintain efficiency of light clients even under high transaction volumes. Specifically, we introduce the concept of contingent transaction aggregation, where proving inclusion of a single contingent transaction implicitly proves that n other transactions exist in the blockchain. To verify n payments, TxChain requires a only single transaction in the best ( n≤c ), and Open image in new window transactions in the worst case ( n>c ), where c is a blockchain constant. We deploy TxChain on Bitcoin without consensus changes and implement a hard fork for Ethereum. To demonstrate effectiveness in the cross-chain setting, we implement TxChain as a smart contract on Ethereum to efficiently verify Bitcoin payments. Show more
Publication status
publishedBook title
Data Privacy Management, Cryptocurrencies and Blockchain TechnologyJournal / series
Lecture Notes in Computer ScienceVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
SpringerEvent
Organisational unit
03604 - Wattenhofer, Roger / Wattenhofer, Roger
Notes
Conference lecture held on September 17, 2020. Due to the Coronavirus (COVID-19) the conference was conducted virtually.More
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