Library with support for de/serialization, parsing and executing on data-structures and network messages related to Kaon Network.
Supports (or should support)
- De/serialization of Bitcoin/Kaon protocol network messages
- De/serialization of blocks and transactions
- Script de/serialization
- Private keys and address creation, de/serialization and validation (including full BIP32 support)
- PSBT v0 de/serialization and all but the Input Finalizer role. Use rust-miniscript to finalize.
For JSONRPC interaction with Kaon Core, it is recommended to use rust-kaoncore-rpc.
It is recommended to always use cargo-crev to verify the trustworthiness of each of your dependencies, including this one.
This library must not be used for consensus code (i.e. fully validating blockchain data). It technically supports doing this, but doing so is very ill-advised because there are many deviations, known and unknown, between this library and the Kaon Core reference implementation. In a consensus based cryptocurrency such as Kaon Network it is critical that all parties are using the same rules to validate data, and this library is simply unable to implement the same rules as Core.
Given the complexity of both C++ and Rust, it is unlikely that this will ever be fixed, and there are no plans to do so. Of course, patches to fix specific consensus incompatibilities are welcome.
Since Kaon uses int128 containers to store values of transactions, it affects sizes of transactions, the way they are processing and storing resulted values. Please keep in mind that since the value can be negative, using simple compact number encryption won't due to 0x80 byte collision. Kaon uses its own ZigZag implementation to solve this. Also it is important to know that script sigs are also supporting int128 values there.
Another important note that Kaon has EVM and thus it has additional opcodes and standard transaction types.
Kaon utilizes double-hashing.
Schemes of blocks and transactions has some fields specific for dPos consensus and fields needed to provide transparent EVM state and gas prices.
Also since Kaon supports cascade signature from the Metamask it also supports signing by RLP transaction the UTXO transaction which means that there is one completely different standard signature type aside from ECDSA, Taproots and others.
At the moment the node is supported only partially. Tests aren't supported due to difference in magic bytes. There is a plan to provide a full support later.
Also it is important to note that the original Bitcoin Rust repository interpreting CompactSize as a VarInt which is incorrect. But normally that wouldn't be a problem due to rare use of VarInt in the Bitcoin Core's code. Yet it may become critical when the application tries to read blockdata from Bitcoin data folder. For the Kaon it has significant value since basically every amount value in the chain stored using very similar algorithm.
We will create a PR to the Bitcoin Rust with the fix later.
16-bit pointer sizes are not supported and we can't promise they will be. If you care about them please let us know, so we can know how large the interest is and possibly decide to support them.
Currently can be found on docs.rs/bitcoin. Patches to add usage examples and to expand on existing docs would be extremely appreciated.
Contributions are generally welcome. If you intend to make larger changes please discuss them in an issue before PRing them to avoid duplicate work and architectural mismatches. If you have any questions or ideas you want to discuss please join us in #bitcoin-rust on libera.chat.
For more information please see ./CONTRIBUTING.md
.
This library should always compile with any combination of features on Rust 1.56.1.
To build with the MSRV you will likely need to pin a bunch of dependencies, see ./contrib/test.sh
for the current list.
We integrate with a few external libraries, most notably serde
. These
are available via feature flags. To ensure compatibility and MSRV stability we
provide two lock files as a means of inspecting compatible versions:
Cargo-minimal.lock
containing minimal versions of dependencies and
Cargo-recent.lock
containing recent versions of dependencies tested in our CI.
We do not provide any guarantees about the content of these lock files outside of "our CI didn't fail with these versions". Specifically, we do not guarantee that the committed hashes are free from malware. It is your responsibility to review them.
Rust can be installed using your package manager of choice or rustup.rs. The
former way is considered more secure since it typically doesn't involve trust in the CA system. But
you should be aware that the version of Rust shipped by your distribution might be out of date.
Generally this isn't a problem for rust-kaon
since we support much older versions than the
current stable one (see MSRV section).
The cargo feature std
is enabled by default. At least one of the features std
or no-std
or
both must be enabled.
Enabling the no-std
feature does not disable std
. To disable the std
feature you must disable
default features. The no-std
feature only enables additional features required for this crate to
be usable without std
. Both can be enabled without conflict.
The library can be built and tested using cargo
:
git clone git@github.com:akropolisio/rust-kaon.git
cd rust-kaon
cargo build
You can run tests with:
cargo test
Please refer to the cargo
documentation for more
detailed instructions.
It is recommended to use rust-analyzer with VS Code but at the moment it's not supporting use macro_use with re-export of derived feature "serde", so the feature "rust-analyzer.diagnostics" is disabled for now. You can turn it on but at that case you'll have to ignore errors about unresolved-external-crate.
We support just
for running dev workflow commands. Run just
from
your shell to see list available sub-commands.
We build docs with the nightly toolchain, you may wish to use the following shell alias to check your documentation changes build correctly.
alias build-docs='RUSTDOCFLAGS="--cfg docsrs" cargo +nightly rustdoc --features="$FEATURES" -- -D rustdoc::broken-intra-doc-links'
Unit and integration tests are available for those interested, along with benchmarks. For project developers, especially new contributors looking for something to work on, we do:
There are always more tests to write and more bugs to find, contributions to our testing efforts extremely welcomed. Please consider testing code a first class citizen, we definitely do take PRs improving and cleaning up test code.
Run as for any other Rust project cargo test --all-features
.
We use a custom Rust compiler configuration conditional to guard the bench mark code. To run the
bench marks use: RUSTFLAGS='--cfg=bench' cargo +nightly bench
.
We have started doing mutation testing with mutagen. To run
these tests first install the latest dev version with cargo +nightly install --git https://github.com/llogiq/mutagen
then run with RUSTFLAGS='--cfg=mutate' cargo +nightly mutagen
.
We have started using kani, install with cargo install --locked kani-verifier
(no need to run cargo kani setup
). Run the tests with cargo kani
.
Every PR needs at least two reviews to get merged. During the review phase maintainers and
contributors are likely to leave comments and request changes. Please try to address them, otherwise
your PR might get closed without merging after a longer time of inactivity. If your PR isn't ready
for review yet please mark it by prefixing the title with WIP:
.
The CI pipeline requires approval before being run on each MR.
In order to speed up the review process the CI pipeline can be run locally using
act. The fuzz
and Cross
jobs will be skipped when using act
due to caching being unsupported at this time. We do not actively support act
but will merge PRs
fixing act
issues.
To assist devs in catching errors before running CI we provide some githooks. If you do not already have locally configured githooks you can use the ones in this repository by running, in the root directory of the repository:
git config --local core.hooksPath githooks/
Alternatively add symlinks in your .git/hooks
directory to any of the githooks we provide.
Release notes are done per crate, see:
The code in this project is licensed under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal license. We use the SPDX license list and SPDX IDs.