app

package module
v0.18.0 Latest Latest
Warning

This package is not in the latest version of its module.

Go to latest
Published: Jan 24, 2021 License: MIT Imports: 19 Imported by: 0

README

pipeline status coverage report Go Report Card

THORChain


Mirror

This repo mirrors from THORChain Gitlab to Github. To contribute, please contact the team and commit to the Gitlab repo:

https://gitlab.com/thorchain/thornode


======================================

THORChain is a decentralised liquidity network built with CosmosSDK.

THORNodes

The THORNode software allows a node to join and service the network, which will run with a minimum of four nodes. The only limitation to the number of nodes that can participate is set by the minimumBondAmount, which is the minimum amount of capital required to join. Nodes are not permissioned; any node that can bond the required amount of capital can be scheduled to churn in.

THORChain comes to consensus about events observed on external networks via witness transactions from nodes. Swap and stake logic is then applied to these finalised events. Each event causes a state change in THORChain, and some events generate an output transaction which require assets to be moved (outgoing swaps or bond/liquidity withdrawals). These output transactions are then batched, signed by a threshold signature scheme protocol and broadcast back to the respective external network. The final gas fee on the network is then accounted for and the transaction complete.

This is described as a "1-way state peg", where only state enters the system, derived from external networks. There are no pegged tokens or 2-way pegs, because they are not necessary. On-chain Bitcoin can be swapped with on-chain Ethereum in the time it takes to finalise the confirmed event.

All funds in the system are fully accounted for and can be audited. All logic is fully transparent.

Churn

THORChain actively churns its validator set to prevent stagnation and capture, and ensure liveness in signing committees. Churning is also the mechanism by which the THORNode software can safely facilitate non-contentious upgrades.

Every 50000 blocks (3 days) THORChain will schedule the oldest and the most unreliable node to leave, and rotate in two new nodes. The next two nodes chosen are simply the nodes with the highest bond.

During a churn event the following happens:

  • The incoming nodes participate in a TSS key-generation event to create new Asgard vault addresses
  • When successful, the new vault is tested with a on-chain challenge-response.
  • If successful, the vaults are rolled forward, moving all assets from the old vault to the new vault.
  • The outgoing nodes are refunded their bond and removed from the system.
Bifröst

The Bifröst faciliates connections with external networks, such as Binance Chain, Ethereum and Bitcoin. The Bifröst is generally well-abstracted, needing only minor changes between different chains. The Bifröst handles observations of incoming transactions, which are passed into THORChain via special witness transactions. The Bifröst also handles multi-party computation to sign outgoing transactions via a Genarro-Goldfeder TSS scheme. Only 2/3rds of nodes are required to be in each signing ceremony on a first-come-first-serve basis, and there is no log of who is present. In this way, each node maintains plausible deniabilty around involvement with every transaction.

To add a new chain, adapt one of the existing modules to the new chain, and submit a merge request to be tested and validated. Once merged, new nodes can start signalling support for the new chain. Once a super-majority (67%) of nodes support the new chain it will be added to the network.

To remove a chain, nodes can stop witnessing it. If a super-majority of nodes do not promptly follow suit, the non-witnessing nodes will attract penalties during the time they do not witness it. If a super-majority of nodes stop witnessing a chain it will invoke a chain-specific Ragnörok, where all funds attributed to that chain will be returned and the chain delisted.

Transactions

The THORChain facilitates the following transactions, which are made on external networks and replayed into the THORChain via witness transactions:

  • STAKE: Anyone can stake assets in pools. If the asset hasn't been seen before, a new pool is created.
  • WITHDRAW: Anyone who is staking can withdraw their claim on the pool.
  • SWAP: Anyone can send in assets and swap to another, including sending to a destination address, and including optional price protection.
  • BOND: Anyone can bond assets and attempt to become a Node. Bonds must be greater than the minimumBondAmount, else they will be refunded.
  • LEAVE: Nodes can voluntarily leave the system and their bond and rewards will be paid out. Leaving takes 6 hours.
  • RESERVE: Anyone can add assets to the Protocol Reserve, which pays out to Nodes and Stakers. 220,447,472 Rune will be funded in this way.
Continuous Liquidity Pools

The Staking, Unstaking and Swapping logic is based on the CLP Continuous Liquidity Pool algorithm.

Swaps The algorithm for processing assets swaps is given by: y = (x * Y * X) / (x + X)^2, where x = input, X = Input Asset, Y = Output Asset, y = output

The fee paid by the trader is given by: fee = ( x^2 * Y ) / ( x + X )^2

The slip-based fee model has the following benefits:

  • Resistant to manipulation
  • A proxy for demand of liquidity
  • Asymptotes to zero over time, ensuring pool prices match reference prices
  • Prevents Impermanent Loss to liquidity providers

Staking The stake units awarded to a liquidity provider is given by: stakeUnits = ((R + T) * (r * T + R * t))/(4 * R * T), where r = Rune Staked, R = Rune Balance, T = Token Balance, t = Token Staked

This allows them to stake asymmetrically since it has no opinion on price.

Incentives

The system is safest and most capital-efficient when 67% of Rune is bonded and 33% is staked in pools. At this point, nodes will be paid 67% of the System Income, and liquidity providers will be paid 33% of the income. The Sytem Income is the block rewards (blockReward = totalReserve / 6 / 6311390) plus the liquidity fees collected in that block.

An Incentive Pendulum ensures that liquidity providers receive 100% of the income when 0% is staked (inefficent), and 0% of the income when totalStaked >= totalBonded (unsafe). The Total Reserve accumulates the transactionFee, which pays for outgoing gas fees and stabilises long-term value accrual.

Governance

There is strictly minimal goverance possible through THORNode software. Each THORNode can only generate valid blocks that is fully-compliant with the binary run by the super-majority.

The best way to apply changes to the system is to submit a THORChain Improvement Proposal (TIP) for testing, validation and discussion among the THORChain developer community. If the change is beneficial to the network, it can be merged into the binary. New nodes may opt to run this updated binary, signalling via a semver versioning scheme. Once the super-majority are on the same binary, the system will update automatically. Schema and logic changes can be applied via this approach.

Changes to the Bifröst may not need coordination, as long as the changes don't impact THORChain schema or logic, such as adding new chains.

Emergency changes to the protocol may be difficult to coordinate, since there is no ability to communicate with any of the nodes. The best way to handle an emergency is to invoke Ragnarök, simply by leaving the system. When the system falls below 4 nodes all funds are paid out and the system can be shut-down.

======================================

Setup

Ensure you have a recent version of go (ie 1.15) and enabled go modules And have GOBIN in your PATH

export GOBIN=$GOPATH/bin
Automated Install Locally

Install via this make command.

make install

Once you've installed thorcli and thord, check that they are there.

thorcli help
thord help
Start Standalone Full Stack

For development and running a full chain locally (your own separate network), use the following make command.

make -C build/docker reset-mocknet-standalone
Format code
make format
Build all
make all
Test

Run tests

make test
# test with NATIVE RUNE
NATIVE=true make test

To run test live when you change a file, use...

go get -u github.com/mitranim/gow
make test-watch
How to contribute
  • Create an issue or find an existing issue on https://gitlab.com/thorchain/thornode/-/issues
  • Assign the issue to yourself
  • Create a branch using the issue id, for example if the issue you are working on is 600, then create a branch call 600-issue , this way , gitlab will link your PR with the issue
  • Raise a PR , and submit it for the team to review
  • Make sure the pipeline is green
  • Once PR get approved, you can merge it to master
the semantic version and release

THORNode manage changelog entry the same way like gitlab, refer to (https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/development/changelog.html) for more detail. Once a merge request get merged into master branch, if the merge request upgrade the version, then a new release will be created automatically, and the repository will be tagged with the new version by the release tool.

How to generate a changelog entry

A scripts/changelog is available to generate the changelog entry file automatically.

Its simplest usage is to provide the value for title:

./scripts/changelog "my super amazing change"

At this point the script would ask you to select the category of the change (mapped to the type field in the entry):

>> Please specify the category of your change:
1. New feature
2. Bug fix
3. Feature change
4. New deprecation
5. Feature removal
6. Security fix
7. Performance improvement
8. Other

The entry filename is based on the name of the current Git branch. If you run the command above on a branch called feature/hey-dz, it will generate a changelogs/unreleased/feature-hey-dz.yml file.

The command will output the path of the generated file and its contents:

create changelogs/unreleased/my-feature.yml
---
title: Hey DZ, I added a feature to GitLab!
merge_request:
author:
type:
Arguments
Argument Shorthand Purpose
--amend Amend the previous commit
--force -f Overwrite an existing entry
--merge-request -m Set merge request ID
--dry-run -n Don’t actually write anything, just print
--git-username -u Use Git user.name configuration as the author
--type -t The category of the change, valid options are: added, fixed, changed, deprecated, removed, security, performance, other
--help -h Print help message
--amend

You can pass the --amend argument to automatically stage the generated file and amend it to the previous commit.

If you use --amend and don’t provide a title, it will automatically use the “subject” of the previous commit, which is the first line of the commit message:

$ git show --oneline
ab88683 Added an awesome new feature to GitLab

$ scripts/changelog --amend
create changelogs/unreleased/feature-hey-dz.yml
---
title: Added an awesome new feature to GitLab
merge_request:
author:
type:
--force or -f

Use --force or -f to overwrite an existing changelog entry if it already exists.

$ scripts/changelog 'Hey DZ, I added a feature to GitLab!'
error changelogs/unreleased/feature-hey-dz.yml already exists! Use `--force` to overwrite.

$ scripts/changelog 'Hey DZ, I added a feature to GitLab!' --force
create changelogs/unreleased/feature-hey-dz.yml
---
title: Hey DZ, I added a feature to GitLab!
merge_request: 1983
author:
type:

####--merge-request or -m Use the --merge-request or -m argument to provide the merge_request value:

$ scripts/changelog 'Hey DZ, I added a feature to GitLab!' -m 1983
create changelogs/unreleased/feature-hey-dz.yml
---
title: Hey DZ, I added a feature to GitLab!
merge_request: 1983
author:
type:
--dry-run or -n

Use the --dry-run or -n argument to prevent actually writing or committing anything:

$ scripts/changelog --amend --dry-run
create changelogs/unreleased/feature-hey-dz.yml
---
title: Added an awesome new feature to GitLab
merge_request:
author:
type:

$ ls changelogs/unreleased/
--git-username or -u

Use the --git-username or -u argument to automatically fill in the author value with your configured Git user.name value:

$ git config user.name
Jane Doe

$ scripts/changelog -u 'Hey DZ, I added a feature to GitLab!'
create changelogs/unreleased/feature-hey-dz.yml
---
title: Hey DZ, I added a feature to GitLab!
merge_request:
author: Jane Doe
type:
--type or -t

Use the --type or -t argument to provide the type value:

$ bin/changelog 'Hey DZ, I added a feature to GitLab!' -t added
create changelogs/unreleased/feature-hey-dz.yml
---
title: Hey DZ, I added a feature to GitLab!
merge_request:
author:
type: added

Documentation

Index

Constants

This section is empty.

Variables

View Source
var (
	// default home directories for the application CLI
	DefaultCLIHome = os.ExpandEnv("$HOME/.thorcli")

	// DefaultNodeHome sets the folder where the applcation data and configuration will be stored
	DefaultNodeHome = os.ExpandEnv("$HOME/.thord")

	// ModuleBasicManager is in charge of setting up basic module elemnets
	ModuleBasics = module.NewBasicManager(
		genutil.AppModuleBasic{},
		auth.AppModuleBasic{},
		bank.AppModuleBasic{},
		params.AppModuleBasic{},
		supply.AppModuleBasic{},
		thorchain.AppModule{},
	)
)

Functions

func MakeCodec

func MakeCodec() *codec.Codec

MakeCodec generates the necessary codecs for Amino

func NewThorchainApp

func NewThorchainApp(logger log.Logger, db dbm.DB, baseAppOptions ...func(*bam.BaseApp)) *thorChainApp

NewThorchainApp is a constructor function for thorChainApp

Types

type GenesisState

type GenesisState map[string]json.RawMessage

GenesisState represents chain state at the start of the chain. Any initial state (account balances) are stored here.

func NewDefaultGenesisState

func NewDefaultGenesisState() GenesisState

Directories

Path Synopsis
api module
bifrost
tss
cmd
Package constants contains all the constants used by thorchain by default all the settings in this is for mainnet
Package constants contains all the constants used by thorchain by default all the settings in this is for mainnet
test
simulation Module
tools
x
thorchain/types
Please put all the test related function to here
Please put all the test related function to here

Jump to

Keyboard shortcuts

? : This menu
/ : Search site
f or F : Jump to
y or Y : Canonical URL