[bitcoin-dev] OP_CODESEPARATOR Re: BIP Proposal: The Great Consensus Cleanup

Russell O'Connor roconnor at blockstream.io
Sun Mar 10 15:22:44 UTC 2019


I fear that we cannot simply wait 10 years to address the vulnerability
that OP_CODESEPARATOR has in its current form.

On Fri, Mar 8, 2019 at 7:32 PM LORD HIS EXCELLENCY JAMES HRMH <
willtech at live.com.au> wrote:

> Opinion: Lock in a blockheight to get rid of it 10 years in the future.
> Use it as press that Bitcoin is going to lose $1,000,000 if some mystery
> person does not put their transaction through by then, try for global
> presses. Use the opportunity to get rid of it while you are able. Once
> gazetted anything is public knowledge.
>
> Regards,
> LORD HIS EXCELLENCY JAMES HRMH
> ------------------------------
> *From:* bitcoin-dev-bounces at lists.linuxfoundation.org <
> bitcoin-dev-bounces at lists.linuxfoundation.org> on behalf of Sjors
> Provoost via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org>
> *Sent:* Saturday, 9 March 2019 6:12 AM
> *To:* Matt Corallo; Russell O'Connor; Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
> *Subject:* Re: [bitcoin-dev] OP_CODESEPARATOR Re: BIP Proposal: The Great
> Consensus Cleanup
>
>
> > (1) It has been well documented again and again that there is desire to
> remove OP_CODESEPARATOR, (2) it is well-documented OP_CODESEPARATOR in
> non-segwit scripts represents a rather significant vulnerability in Bitcoin
> today, and (3) lots of effort has gone into attempting to find practical
> use-cases for OP_CODESEPARATOR's specific construction, with no successes
> as of yet. I strongly, strongly disagree that the highly-unlikely remote
> possibility that someone created something before which could be rendered
> unspendable is sufficient reason to not fix a vulnerability in Bitcoin
> today.
> >
> >> I suggest an alternative whereby the execution of OP_CODESEPARATOR
> increases the transactions weight suitably as to temper the vulnerability
> caused by it.  Alternatively there could be some sort of limit (maybe 1) on
> the maximum number of OP_CODESEPARATORs allowed to be executed per script,
> but that would require an argument as to why exceeding that limit isn't
> reasonable.
> >
> > You could equally argue, however, that any such limit could render some
> moderately-large transaction unspendable, so I'm somewhat skeptical of this
> argument. Note that OP_CODESEPARATOR is non-standard, so getting them mined
> is rather difficult in any case.
>
> Although I'm not a fan of extra complicity, just to explore these two
> ideas a bit further.
>
> What if such a transaction:
>
> 1. must have one input; and
> 2. must be smaller than 400 vbytes; and
> 3. must spend from a UTXO older than fork activation
>
> Adding such a contextual check seems rather painful, perhaps comparable to
> nLockTime. Anything more specific than the above, e.g. counting the number
> of OP_CODESEPARATOR calls, seems like guess work.
>
> Transaction weight currently doesn't consider OP codes, it only considers
> if bytes are part of the witness. Changing that to something more akin to
> Ethereums gas pricing sounds too complicated to even consider.
>
>
> I would also like to believe that whoever went through the trouble of
> using OP_CODESEPARATOR reads this list.
>
> Sjors
>
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