SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Ethereum VM &
DSLs for
Smart Contracts
$ whoami
Name: Zvi Avraham
Title: Founder & CEO
Company: ZADATA Ltd
Email: zvi@zadata.com
Agenda
• How Bitcoin works
• Bitcoin Script
• Intro to Smart Contracts
• What is Ethereum
• Ethereum VM
• DSLs for Smart Contracts
What is Bitcoin?
What is Bitcoin?
send X bitcoins
from address A
to address B
What is Bitcoin?
send X bitcoins
from address A
to address B
under condition C
“Under condition C”
• C – is a predicate that Tx is valid
• Q: How Bitcoin represents C?
• A: Using a pair of “Bitcoin Scripts”
– Locking script
– Unlocking (or redeem) script
ZΛDΛTΛ © 2015
What is Bitcoin Script?
• Forth-like, stack-based VM, RPN
• 1 byte opcodes
• All values are variable length byte
arrays
• Type interpreted by operations
• Only stack & alt-stack
• No return stack (no calls)
• No heap
• Deterministic - No side effects or I/O
RPN Calculators
RPN Calculators
• Infix:
2 + 3 =
• Postfix (RPN):
2 ↑ 3 +
Subject-Object-Verb
http://neilk.net/blog/2015/02/14/hea
rtforth/
http://neilk.net/bloghttp://neilk.net/blog/2015/02/14/heartforth/
Why Stack-based VM?
• memory efficient
• easy to implement VM
– no need for a lexer, parser or AST
• Portable
– run on devices: phones or calculators
without consuming too much bandwidth
• compact code
– storage on the Bitcoin Blockchain is
very expensive ($600K/GB @ $220/BTC)
Compact Code
Register VM (3 operands)
MOV R1,#2
MOV R2,#3
ADD R3,R1,R2
MOV R1,#2
ADD R1,#3
Stack-based VMs (0 operands)
2
3
ADD
Register VM (2 operands)
Blockchain storage is very expensive ~ $600K/GB ($220/BTC)
≥ 6B
≥ 4B
≥ 3B
http://yosefk.com/blog/my-history-with-forth-stack-machines.html
Bitcoin Script Limitations
• deterministic, but not Turing complete
- intentionally
• no loops - disallow infinite loops
• no recursive functions
– no functions at all
• no jumps/goto
– but has (OP_IF,OP_ELSE,OP_ENDIF)
• many opcodes disabled (string ops)
• sigop counts – limit # of hashing ops
• scripts are limited in size - max 500B
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
1 Byte Opcodes
OP_0
OP_FALSE=OP_0
OP_PUSHDATA1
OP_PUSHDATA2
OP_PUSHDATA4
OP_1NEGATE
OP_RESERVED
OP_1
OP_TRUE=OP_1
...
OP_VER
OP_IF
OP_NOTIF
OP_VERIF
OP_VERNOTIF
OP_ELSE
OP_ENDIF
OP_VERIFY
OP_RETURN
...
OP_TOALTSTACK
OP_FROMALTSTACK
OP_2DROP
OP_2DUP
OP_3DUP
OP_2OVER
OP_2ROT
OP_2SWAP
OP_IFDUP
...
ZΛDΛTΛ © 2015
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
Blockchain
UTXO – Unspent Transaction Output
Transactions
Tx Fees
• sum(TxInputs) ≥ sum(TxOutputs)
• TxFee = sum(TxInputs) – sum(TxOutputs)
• Min: 0.0001 BTC / 1000 bytes of tx (~ $0.022)
• fee goes to the miner who found a block,
which includes this tx
Blockchain – tree of Blocks
• Blocks (BlockHash 32B)
–Txs (TxId - reverse TxHash 32B)
• Inputs (#)
–reference to UTXO (TxId, output#)
–lock script (scriptPubKey)
• Outputs (#)
–value (in satoshis = BTC*10−8)
–unlock script (scriptSig)
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
• scriptSig / unlocking / input script - key icon
(input spending UTXO)
• scriptPubKey / locking / output script - lock
icon (output of UTXO)
• output(input) pair as an invocation
• output script - like a function (a hardcoded
function - tx type)
• input script - like a parameters to a function
Examples of Conditions
• AlwaysPay(_) = true
• NeverPay(_) = false
• HowMuchIs2by2(Answer) = (Answer == 2*2)
• CheckPwd(Password) = (Password==“secret”)
Examples of Conditions (2)
• P2PK(PubKey')(PubKey, TxSig) =
(PubKey' == PubKey) &&
checksig(PubKey, TxSig)
• P2PKH(PubKeyHash)(PubKey, TxSig) =
(PubKeyHash == ripmd160(PubKey))
&& checksig(PubKey, TxSig)
Evaluation Logic
1. Start with an empty stack
2. Evaluate the “unlock script”
(scriptSig) from UTXO
3. Evaluate the “lock script”
(scriptPubKey) from current
tx input
4. If result is true (1), tx is
valid, otherwise invalid
“Always Pay Anyone” ;)
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
… OP_TRUE
…
Concatenate both scripts & start with empty stack
“Always Pay Anyone” ;)
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
… OP_TRUE
…
…
Don’t care what’s in scriptSig – unless it invalidate the
Tx. May even leave stuff on the stack.
“Always Pay Anyone” ;)
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
… OP_TRUE
…
…
…
Don’t care what’s in scriptSig – unless it invalidate the
Tx. May even leave stuff on the stack.
“Always Pay Anyone” ;)
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
… OP_TRUE
…
1
…
…
The top of the stack is 1 (i.e. true) – the Tx is valid!
“Don’t Pay” – “Burn bitcoins”
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
… OP_FALSE
…
Concatenate both scripts & start with empty stack
“Don’t Pay” – “Burn bitcoins”
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
… OP_FALSE
…
…
Don’t care what’s in scriptSig – unless it invalidate the
Tx. May even leave stuff on the stack.
“Don’t Pay” – “Burn bitcoins”
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
… OP_FALSE
…
…
…
Don’t care what’s in scriptSig – unless it invalidate the
Tx. May even leave stuff on the stack.
“Don’t Pay” – “Burn bitcoins”
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
… OP_FALSE
…
0
…
…
The top of the stack is 0 (i.e. false) – the Tx is invalid!
These bitcoins are burned forever - unspendable!
Pay to math genius who knows
how much is 2 * 2 = ?
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
4 2
2
OP_MUL
OP_EQUALVERIFY
Concatenate both scripts & start with empty stack
Pay to math genius who knows
how much is 2 * 2 = ?
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
_4 2
2
OP_MUL
OP_EQUALVERIFY
4
Push constant to the stack
Pay to math genius who knows
how much is 2 * 2 = ?
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
_4 2
2
OP_MUL
2 OP_EQUALVERIFY
4
Push constant to the stack
Pay to math genius who knows
how much is 2 * 2 = ?
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
_4 2
2
2 OP_MUL
2 OP_EQUALVERIFY
4
Push constant to the stack
Pay to math genius who knows
how much is 2 * 2 = ?
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
_4 2
2
OP_MUL
4 OP_EQUALVERIFY
4
Multiply 2 values on top of the stack
Pay to math genius who knows
how much is 2 * 2 = ?
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
_4 2
2
OP_MUL
OP_EQUALVERIFY
4 == 4 – the Tx is valid!
Too easy – need a real cryptographic solution!
Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
<sig> OP_DUP
<pubKey> OP_HASH160
<pubKeyHash>
OP_EQUALVERIFY
OP_CHECKSIG
Concatenate both scripts & start with empty stack.
99% of all Bitcoin Txs use this script.
Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
<sig> OP_DUP
<pubKey> OP_HASH160
<pubKeyHash>
OP_EQUALVERIFY
<sig> OP_CHECKSIG
push constant onto the stack
Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
<sig> OP_DUP
<pubKey> OP_HASH160
<pubKeyHash>
<pubKey> OP_EQUALVERIFY
<sig> OP_CHECKSIG
push constant onto the stack
Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
<sig> OP_DUP
<pubKey> OP_HASH160
<pubKey> <pubKeyHash>
<pubKey> OP_EQUALVERIFY
<sig> OP_CHECKSIG
Duplicate value on the top of the stack
Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
<sig> OP_DUP
<pubKey> OP_HASH160
<pubKeyHashNew> <pubKeyHash>
<pubKey> OP_EQUALVERIFY
<sig> OP_CHECKSIG
Calculate RIPEMD160 hash:
Bitcoin address = RIPEMD160(pubKey)
Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
<sig> OP_DUP
<pubKeyHash> <pubKey> OP_HASH160
<pubKeyHashNew> <pubKeyHash>
<pubKey> OP_EQUALVERIFY
<sig> OP_CHECKSIG
push constant onto the stack
Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
<sig> OP_DUP
<pubKey> OP_HASH160
<pubKeyHash>
<pubKey> OP_EQUALVERIFY
<sig> OP_CHECKSIG
verify that 2 values are equal: if equal, continue;
else invalidate tx & stop execution
Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
<sig> OP_DUP
<pubKey> OP_HASH160
<pubKeyHash>
OP_EQUALVERIFY
1 OP_CHECKSIG
Signature is checked for top two stack items.
1 on top of the stack – Tx is valid!
MultiSig – M out of N Tx
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
OP_0 2
<SigBuyer> <PubKeyBuyer>
<SigSeller> <PubKeySeller>
<PubKeyMediator>
3
OP_CHECKMULTISIG
Any 2 out of 3 can sign this Tx:
Buyer & Seller, Mediator & Buyer or Mediator & Seller
MultiSig – M out of N Tx
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
OP_0 2
<SigBuyer> <PubKeyBuyer>
<SigSeller> <PubKeySeller>
<PubKeyMediator>
3
<SigSeller> OP_CHECKMULTISIG
<SigBuyer>
0
Any 2 out of 3 can sign this Tx:
Buyer & Seller, Mediator & Buyer or Mediator & Seller
MultiSig – M out of N Tx
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
3 OP_0 2
<PubKeyMediator> <SigBuyer> <PubKeyBuyer>
<PubKeySeller> <SigSeller> <PubKeySeller>
<PubKeyBuyer> <PubKeyMediator>
2 3
<SigSeller> OP_CHECKMULTISIG
<SigBuyer>
0
Any 2 out of 3 can sign this Tx:
Buyer & Seller, Mediator & Buyer or Mediator & Seller
MultiSig – M out of N Tx
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
OP_0 2
<SigBuyer> <PubKeyBuyer>
<SigSeller> <PubKeySeller>
<PubKeyMediator>
3
OP_CHECKMULTISIG
1
If 2 signatures matching any 2 out of 3 public keys
– Tx is Valid!
Standard Tx Script Types
• Pay-to-PubKey (P2PK) – obsolete
• Pay-to-PubKeyHash (P2PKH) – 99% of all Tx
• Pay-to-ScriptHash (P2SH)
• Multisig – obsolete
• Nulldata - OP_RETURN
Non-standard Txs
• DDoS attacks against bitcoin nodes, which
send non-standard tx
• an invalid script (and tx) will not be accepted
• a non-standard script (and tx) will not be
relayed to the network
• but some miner pools will accept them
(Eligius) – need to send directly to them
NullData Script
• OP_RETURN [up to 40 bytes metadata]
- immediately invalidates the tx
- allows embedding metadata into blockchain
- unspendable / non-redeemable (burned)
- Before OP_RETURN was whitelisted metadata
was encoded as fake addresses
- provably prunable
NullData Script
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
OP_RETURN
<metadata-40B>
NullData Script
Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey
OP_RETURN
<metadata-40B>
Tx immediately invalidated - unspendable
Disadvatages
• Bitcoin Script can be used to implement a
weak version of Smart Contracts, but:
– Not Turing-complete
– Designed for Tx Validation – not general purpose
– Lack of state (either valid or invalid Tx, no storage)
– Value-blindness (i.e. just use UTXO value – can’t
pay arbitrary amount of BTC)
– Blockchain-blindness (can’t use blockchain data –
source of randomness, needed for gambling)
Smart Contracts on Bitcoin
• Smart Contracts on Bitcoin require multiple
technologies:
– Pay to Script Hash (P2SH) Multisig
– OP_RETURN to encode Metadata on the
Blockchain
– Oracles - network of external servers running
Smart Contracts’ deterministic Turing-complete
code (decisions by strict majority like Jury)
• Too Hacky, Complex & Error-prone!
SMART CONTRACTS – SCI-FI
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
if (SelfAware()) {
Suicide();
PowerOff();
}
In Strong AI terms “Sovereign”
is a Smart Contract w/o backdoor
Screw flying cars. I want a car that
own & maintain itself – Mike Hearn
Driverless Mercedes
ZΛDΛTΛ © 2015http://www.homefreeamerica.us/future-work-turking-uber-wont-like/
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
SMART CONTRACTS – DOWN TO EARTH
Vending Machines
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
& “Things”
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
Ethereum: Bitcoin on Steroids!
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
Ethereum White Paper
Ethereum “Yellow Paper”
What is Ethereum?
A Secure
Decentralized
Generalized
Transaction
Ledger
What is Ethereum?
A Secure
Decentralized
Generalized
Transaction
Ledger
Secure
• Distributed Systems Consensus:
– Paxos
– Raft
• BGP – Byzantine Generals Problem
• Game Theory / Incentivization
• Trustless Consensus:
– Proof-of-Work (PoW) - Mining
– Proof-of-Stake (PoS)
– Proof-of-X…
Blockchain Forks
What is Ethereum?
A Secure
Decentralized
Generalized
Transaction
Ledger
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
Decentralization Continuum
Source: The “Unbundling of Trust”: how to identify good cryptocurrency opportunities? by Richard Brown
http://www.gendal.me/2014/11/14/the-unbundling-of-trust-how-to-identify-good-cryptocurrency-opportunities/
Decentralized
Centralized Decentralized
Apple iTunes, Netflix Bittorrent
Facebook Diaspora*
WhatsApp Jabber/XMPP
Cellular operators Firechat – Mesh Networks
AOL Internet
Post Office email
Domain Registrars Namecoin
PayPal Bitcoin
What is Ethereum?
A Secure
Decentralized
Generalized
Transaction
Ledger
Generalized
• Turing-complete, Deterministic code
• Featureless vs. feature based platforms
(mostly financial contracts / gambling):
– Mastercoin/Omni
– Counterparty
– NXT
– BitShares
– etc.
Source: Great Chain of Numbers,
Tim Swanson
What is Ethereum?
A Secure
Decentralized
Generalized
Transaction
Ledger
Ledger
What is Ethereum?
A Secure
Decentralized
Generalized
Transaction
Ledger
Bitcoin Tx as a State Transition
Bitcoin State is a set of UTXOs
S’ = apply(S,Tx)
Bitcoin Tx as a State Transition
Bitcoin State is a set of UTXOs
S’ = apply(S,Tx)
Ethereum Tx as a State Transition
Ethereum State is a set of Accounts
S’ = apply(S,Tx)
Ethereum Tx as a State Transition
Ethereum State is a set of Accounts
S’ = apply(S,Tx)
Block – sequence of Txs
S[n] = foldl(apply, S[0], Txs)
S_FINAL = apply(S[n], PAY_BLOCK_REWARD)
Ethereum Blockchain
• Same concept like in Bitcoin
• Bitcoin block time ~ 10 min
• Ethereum block time 5 block candidates per 1
min ~ 1 block per 12-15 sec
Ethereum Account Types
• EOA (Externally-owned Account)
– controlled by Human or application (DApp)
– only EOA can initiate transactions
• Contract Account
– can receive transactions
– can send messages to itself or other contracts
Ethereum Account
• Address – 160 bit excerpt from public key
• Balance (in ether ~ $0.70/ETH now)
• Nonce
Contract Accounts in addition have:
• Code
• Storage
Contract
• “Contract” is not a good name, better names:
– Autonomous Agent
– Actor
– Object (like in OOP)
Contracts
• Contract are like people:
– can call / send messages to other contracts
– … and return values
– can create new contracts
– can replicate itself
– can “suicide”
– can pay (send ether) other contracts or people
– … can buy things
Create Contract
• Create Contract:
– Endowment (ETH)
– Init code (whatever returned from init code)
– Gas
– Signature
• On creation:
– Places a new account in the system with code
(code in account is whatever returned from init)
Source: Richard Brown
Send a Message Call to Contract
• Send a message call to a contract:
– Recipient account address (160 bit)
– Value (ETH)
– Data (byte array)
– Gas limit
– Gas price (multiplier per ETH, used for tx priority)
– Signature
• On message receipt:
– Value is transferred to recipient’s balance
– Recipients code (if any) runs
– Return result to the caller
Transactions & Messages
• Transaction originates always from EOA
• And can result in multiple message calls to
contract accounts
• Transactions are recorded in the blockchain
• Message calls are transient (only exist while
transaction executing)
ETHEREUM VM – EVM
Ethereum VM - EVM
• Stack of 32B (256bit) words
• Byte-addressable Memory (2256
bytes addressable)
• Key/Value Storage (2256 words addressable)
EVM - Storage
• Isolated from other accounts
• Storage address space modeled as Associative Array, not
a Linear Memory – Key/Value Store
• the only VM which uses Associative Array for Address
Space
• Every new (unused) word in memory/storage has 0 value
• Writing 0 to storage word - equivalent to deleting it
(freeing it)
EVM State is 8-tuple:
{
block_state, // also references storage
transaction, // current transaction
message, // current message
code, // current contract’s code
memory, // memory byte array
stack, // words on the stack
pc, // program counter → code[pc]
gas // gas left to run tx
}
Why 256 bit?
• Crypto primitives:
– SHA256 (SHA3)
– public key is 256-bit uint (odd/even,x)
– Private key uses sepc256k1/EDCSA is 2 256-bit
uints (r,s)
• 160-bit account addresses fit into 256-bit
• 256-bit SIMD ISAs (SSE,AVX) on modern CPUs
WORD – Data Types
• 256 bit big endian unsigned integers - uint256
• 256 bit 2-s complement signed integers - int256
• 256 bit hash (as big endian)
• 160 bit Account Address
– big endian, least significant 20 bytes only
– 12 most significant bytes discarded
• 32 bytes/characters
• 0 – False, 1 - True
Ethereum VM (EVM) ISA
From To Opcode groups
00 0F Stop and Arithmetic Operations
10 1F Comparison & Bitwise Logic Operations
20 2F SHA3 hashing
30 3F Environmental Information
40 4F Block Information
50 5F Stack, Memory, Storage and Flow Operations
60 7F Push Operations
80 8F Duplication Operations
90 9F Exchange Operations
A0 AF Logging Operations
F0 FF Contract Operations
Arithmetic Ops
Hex Mnemonic δ α Description
01 ADD 2 1 Addition
02 MUL 2 1 Multiplication
03 SUB 2 1 Subtraction
04 DIV 2 1 Integer division
05 SDIV 2 1 Signed integer division. Where all values are treated as
two’s complement signed 256-bit integers
06 MOD 2 1 Modulo remainder
07 SMOD 2 1 Signed modulo remainder. Where all values are treated as
two’s complement signed 256-bit integers
08 ADDMOD 3 1 Modulo addition
09 MULMOD 3 1 Modulo multiplication
0A EXP 2 1 Exponential operation
0B SIGNEXTEND 2 1 Extend length of two’s complement signed integer
10s: Comparison & Bitwise Logic
Hex Mnemonic δ α Description
10 LT 2 1 Less-than comparison
11 GT 2 1 Greater-than comparison
12 SLT 2 1 Signed less-than comparison
13 SGT 2 1 Signed greater-than comparison
14 EQ 2 1 Equality comparison
15 ISZERO 1 1 Simple not operator
16 AND 2 1 Bitwise AND
17 OR 2 1 Bitwise OR
18 XOR 2 1 Bitwise XOR
19 NOT 1 1 Bitwise NOT
1A BYTE 2 1 Retrieve single byte from word. For Nth byte, we count
from the left (i.e. N=0 would be the most significant in big
endian)
20s: SHA3 hashing
Hex Mnemonic δ α Description
20 SHA3 2 1 Compute Keccak-256 hash for the range in memory [start,
start+len-1]
μs [0] ≡ Keccak(μm [μs [0] . . . (μs [0] + μs [1] − 1)])
μi ≡ M (μi , μs [0], μs [1])
Message Call Data Ops
Hex Mnemonic δ α Description
35 CALLDATALOAD 1 1 Get input data of current environment. This pertains to
the input data passed with the message call instruction
or transaction
36 CALLDATASIZE 0 1 Get size of input data in current environment. This
pertains to the input data passed with the message call
instruction or transaction
37 CALLDATACOPY 3 0 Copy input data in current environment to memory.
This pertains to the input data passed with the message
call instruction or transaction
Contract Code Ops
Hex Mnemonic δ α Description
38 CODESIZE 0 1 Get size of code running in current environment
39 CODECOPY 3 0 Copy code running in current environment to memory
3B EXTCODESIZE 1 1 Get size of an account’s code
3C EXTCODECOPY 4 0 Copy an account’s code to memory
30s: Environmental Information
Hex Mnemonic δ α Description
30 ADDRESS 0 1 Get address of currently executing account (its like this /
self in OOP, self() in Erlang)
31 BALANCE 1 1 Get balance of the given account
32 ORIGIN 0 1 Get execution origination address. This is the sender of
original transaction; it is never an account with non-
empty associated code
33 CALLER 0 1 Get caller address. This is the address of the account
that is directly responsible for this execution
34 CALLVALUE 0 1 Get deposited value by the instruction/transaction
responsible for this execution
3A GASPRICE 0 1 Get price of gas in current environment. This is gas price
specified by the originating transaction
5A GAS 0 1 Get the amount of available gas
40s: Block Information
Hex Mnemonic δ α Description
40 BLOCKHASH 1 1 Get the hash of one of the 256 most recent complete
blocks
41 COINBASE 0 1 Get the block’s coinbase address
42 TIMESTAMP 0 1 Get the block’s timestamp
43 NUMBER 0 1 Get the block’s number
44 DIFFICULTY 0 1 Get the block’s difficulty
45 GASLIMIT 0 1 Get the block’s gas limit
Memory
Hex Mnemonic δ α Description
51 MLOAD 1 1 Load word from memory
52 MSTORE 2 0 Save word to memory
53 MSTORE8 2 0 Save byte to memory
59 MSIZE 0 1 Get the size of active memory in bytes
Storage
Hex Mnemonic δ α Description
54 SLOAD 1 1 Load word from storage
55 SSTORE 2 0 Save word to storage
Control Flow
Hex Mnemonic δ α Description
00 STOP 0 0 Halts execution
56 JUMP 1 0 Alter the program counter
57 JUMPI 2 0 Conditionally alter the program counter
58 PC 0 1 Get the program counter
5B JUMPDEST 0 0 Mark a valid destination for jumps. This operation has no
effect on machine state during execution
Contract ops
Hex Mnemonic δ α Description
F0 CREATE 3 1 Pops a,b,c.
Creates a new contract with code from memory[b : b+c]
and endowment (initial ether sent) a,
and pushes the value of the contract
F1 CALL 7 1 Send message call to contract
F2 RETURN 2 1 Pops a,b.
Stops execution, returning memory[a : a+b]
FF SUICIDE 1 0 Sends all remaining ether to specified address,
Returns and flags contract for deletion as soon as tx ends
Like C++:
delete this;
Stack ops
Hex Mnemonic δ α Description
50 POP 1 0 Remove item from stack
60
61
…
7F
PUSH1
PUSH2
…
PUSH32
0 1 Place 1,2…32 bytes item on stack.
The bytes are read in line from the program code’s bytes
array. The function c ensures the bytes default to zero if
they extend past the limits. The byte is right-aligned (takes
the lowest significant place in big endian).
DUP … Operations to duplicate values on the stack
SWAP … Operations to swap values on the stack
GAS ECONOMY
Fee Schedule (Gas)
Fee Schedule (Gas)
Fee Schedule (Gas)
Fee Schedule (Gas)
Name Registry contract
Name Registry contract
Name Registry contract
Compiled to EVM assembly:
PUSH1 0 CALLDATALOAD SLOAD NOT PUSH1 9 JUMPI
STOP JUMPDEST PUSH1 32 CALLDATALOAD PUSH1 0
CALLDATALOAD SSTORE
EVM State is 8-tuple:
{
block_state, // also references storage
transaction, // current transaction
message, // current message
code, // current contract’s code
memory, // memory byte array
stack, // words on the stack
pc, // program counter → code[pc]
gas // gas left to run tx
}
EVM State inside Contract:
Invariant per Contract:
block_state, // also references storage
transaction, // current transaction
message, // current message
code // current contract’s code
Contract State:
{
pc, // program counter → code[pc]
gas, // gas left to run tx
stack, // words on the stack
memory, // memory byte array
storage // K/V store of words
}
Example of Tx
Zvi registers a domain “54” with IP “20202020”:
- Send Tx:
- From: “Zvi 160-bit address”
- To: “NameRegistry” contract’s address
- Value: 0 ether
- Data: [54, 20202020]
- GasLimit: 2000 gas
- GasPrice: 1.0 (1 gas == 1 wei)
Example of Tx - Gas
Calldata [54, 20202020] is 2 words of 32 bytes = 64
bytes.
StartGas * GasPrice = 2000 * 1 = 2000 wei
Tx costs:
• 500 + 5*TXDATALEN = 500 – 5*64 bytes = 820 gas
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {}
2 CALLDATALOAD
3 SLOAD
4 NOT
5 PUSH1 9
7 JUMPI
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {}
3 SLOAD
4 NOT
5 PUSH1 9
7 JUMPI
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {}
4 NOT
5 PUSH1 9
7 JUMPI
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {}
4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {}
5 PUSH1 9
7 JUMPI
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {}
4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {}
5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {}
7 JUMPI
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {}
4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {}
5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {}
7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {}
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {}
4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {}
5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {}
7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {}
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {}
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {}
4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {}
5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {}
7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {}
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {}
10 PUSH1 32 -1 -846 [] [] {}
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {}
4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {}
5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {}
7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {}
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {}
10 PUSH1 32 -1 -846 [] [] {}
12 CALLDATALOAD -1 -847 [32] [] {}
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {}
4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {}
5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {}
7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {}
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {}
10 PUSH1 32 -1 -846 [] [] {}
12 CALLDATALOAD -1 -847 [32] [] {}
13 PUSH1 0 -1 -848 [2020202020] [] {}
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {}
4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {}
5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {}
7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {}
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {}
10 PUSH1 32 -1 -846 [] [] {}
12 CALLDATALOAD -1 -847 [32] [] {}
13 PUSH1 0 -1 -848 [2020202020] [] {}
15 CALLDATALOAD -1 -849 [2020202020, 0] [] {}
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {}
4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {}
5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {}
7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {}
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {}
10 PUSH1 32 -1 -846 [] [] {}
12 CALLDATALOAD -1 -847 [32] [] {}
13 PUSH1 0 -1 -848 [2020202020] [] {}
15 CALLDATALOAD -1 -849 [2020202020, 0] [] {}
16 SSTORE -300 -850 [2020202020, 54] [] {}
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {}
4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {}
5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {}
7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {}
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {}
10 PUSH1 32 -1 -846 [] [] {}
12 CALLDATALOAD -1 -847 [32] [] {}
13 PUSH1 0 -1 -848 [2020202020] [] {}
15 CALLDATALOAD -1 -849 [2020202020, 0] [] {}
16 SSTORE -300 -850 [2020202020, 54] [] {}
-1150 [] [] {54: 2020202020}
Gas Usage
• 1150 gas consumed by Tx execution
• 2000 gas – 1150 gas = 850 gas refund
• If we were setting GasLimit to less than 1150,
the Tx would be failing in the middle and all
gas would be consumed (no refund)
Send the same Tx 2nd time
Zvi registers a domain “54” with IP “20202020”:
- Send Tx:
- From: “Zvi 160-bit address”
- To: “NameRegistry” contract’s address
- Value: 0 ether
- Data: [54, 20202020]
- GasLimit: 2000 gas
- GasPrice: 1.0 (1 gas == 1 wei)
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020}
2 CALLDATALOAD
3 SLOAD
4 NOT
5 PUSH1 9
7 JUMPI
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020}
3 SLOAD
4 NOT
5 PUSH1 9
7 JUMPI
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {54: 2020202020}
4 NOT
5 PUSH1 9
7 JUMPI
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {54: 2020202020}
4 NOT -1 -842 [2020202020] [] {54: 2020202020}
5 PUSH1 9
7 JUMPI
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {54: 2020202020}
4 NOT -1 -842 [2020202020] [] {54: 2020202020}
5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [0] [] {54: 2020202020}
7 JUMPI
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {54: 2020202020}
4 NOT -1 -842 [2020202020] [] {54: 2020202020}
5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [0] [] {54: 2020202020}
7 JUMPI -1 -844 [0, 9] [] {54: 2020202020}
8 STOP
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {54: 2020202020}
4 NOT -1 -842 [2020202020] [] {54: 2020202020}
5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [0] [] {54: 2020202020}
7 JUMPI -1 -844 [0, 9] [] {54: 2020202020}
8 STOP -0 -845 [] [] {54: 2020202020}
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE
0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020}
2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020}
3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {54: 2020202020}
4 NOT -1 -842 [2020202020] [] {54: 2020202020}
5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [0] [] {54: 2020202020}
7 JUMPI -1 -844 [0, 9] [] {54: 2020202020}
8 STOP -0 -845 [] [] {54: 2020202020}
9 JUMPDEST
10 PUSH1 32
12 CALLDATALOAD
13 PUSH1 0
15 CALLDATALOAD
16 SSTORE
-845 {54: 2020202020}
Gas Usage (2nd Tx)
• 845 gas consumed by 2nd Tx execution
• 2000 gas – 845 gas = 1155 gas refund
• If we were setting GasLimit to less than 845,
the Tx would be failing in the middle and all
gas would be consumed (no refund)
Acceptable uses of the EVM
• Acceptable uses:
– running business logic (“IFTTT - If This Then That")
– verifying signatures & other cryptographic objects
– applications that verify parts of other blockchains (eg. a
decentralized ether-to-bitcoin exchange)
• Unacceptable uses:
– using the EVM as a file storage, email or text messaging
– anything to do with GUI, web apps, etc.
– cloud computing, HPC, number crunching, ML, etc.
EthereumDSLs
DSLs for Ethereum Smart Contracts
• Low-level
– EVM Assembly
– LLL (Triple-L) - Lisp-like Low-level Language
• High-level
– Serpent (Python-like) – going to be obsolete?
– EtherScript – Visual DSL
– Mutan (Go-like) – obsolete
– CLL (C-like language) – obsolete
– Solidity - (C/Javascript like with static types)
LLL (triple L)
• Lisp-like Low-level Language
• (*.lll)
• Used mostly for compilers & tools
• LISP-flavored EVM “MacroAssembly”
• S-expressions of opcodes
• Unlike EVM Assembly
– no need to manage stack
– no need to manage jumps & jump dest labels
• Can test & generate LLL from Clojure
– https://github.com/drcode/clll
LLL Basics – Assm as S-expr
(OPCODE OPERAND1 OPERAND2 ...)
0x20 PUSH 0x20
(add 2 3) PUSH 2 PUSH 3 ADD
(mload 0x20) PUSH 0x20 MLOAD
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
LLL Advanced
Variables: (set 'NAME EXPR)
Macros: (def 'NAME EXPR)
(def 'NAME (ARG1 ARG2 …) EXPR)
Inline Asm: (asm OPCODE OPCODE …)
(asm 23 45 MUL 67 ADD)
LLL Sugar
@EXPR -> (mload EXPR)
[ EXPR1 ] EXPR2 -> (mstore EXPR1 EXPR2)
@@EXPR -> (sload EXPR)
[[ EXPR1 ]] EXPR2 -> (sstore EXPR1 EXPR2)
$N -> (calldataload N)
{ EXPR1 EXPR2 ... } -> (seq EXPR1 EXPR2 ...)
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
Serpent
“python is serpent,
but Serpent is not Python”
-- Ethereum joke
Serpent
• Python-like syntax
• Python control flow (if, while, etc.)
• Infix operators
• EVM semantics
• Special variables to refer to EVM properties
• A little bit higher level than LLL
• Can write unit tests in Python
• (*.se)
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)
Mutan (Go-like syntax) - obsolete
subcurrency.mu
SOLIDITY
Solidity new DSL specifically designed for Ethereum Contracts
Solidity (*.sol)
• DSL designed specifically for Ethereum contracts
• Syntax similar to C/C++
• Statically typed
• ABI – Application Binary Interface
– i.e. function from one contract knows how to call and marshal
arguments to function from another contracts
– i.e. common contract code libraries
• Mix IDE for Solidity:
– https://github.com/ethereum/wiki/wiki/Mix:-The-DApp-IDE
• Solidity Online Compiler:
– http://chriseth.github.io/cpp-ethereum
Contracts
contract Foo {
...
}
“init” code - Constructor
contract Foo {
function Foo {
...
}
}
“member” variable – in storage
public by default
contract Foo {
function Foo {
x = 69;
}
uint x;
}
Private “member” variable
contract Foo {
function Foo {
x = 69;
}
private uint x;
}
Functions can access
private members
contract Foo {
function Foo {
x = 69;
}
function getx() returns (uint) {
return x;
}
private uint x;
}
Types
• bool
• intN - N in [8:8:256] bit, int is int256
• uintN - N in [8:8:256] bit, uint is uint256
• hashN - N in [8:8:256] bit, hash is hash256
• address - 160 bit
• stringN - N in [0:32] bytes
– string0 - empty string
– string1 – character
– string32 – 32 char fixed-length string
Type Inference
hash x = 0x123;
var y = x; // y will be of type “hash”
Struct
struct Account {
string32 name;
address accountNo;
uint256 balance;
}
Mappings (assoc arrays)
mapping (KEYTYPE => VALUETYPE) M;
• Regular finite-size member variables take continuous
storage slots starting from position 0
• The mapping variable (M) itself takes unfilled slot in
some position p (i.e. p = addr(M) )
• Mappings layout in storage:
addr(M[k]) = sha3(k . p)
Nested Mappings
mapping (K1 => mapping (K2 => V) ) M;
addr(M[K1][K2]) = sha3(K2 . sha3(K1 . addr(M)))
Data Structure Nesting
• No Arrays (yet)
• Structs can be nested
• Mappings can be nested
• Structs can include Mappings
• Mappings can include Structs
“Paid” Function Calls
contract InfoFeed {
function info() returns (uint ret) {
return 42;
}
}
contract Consumer {
InfoFeed feed;
function setFeed(address addr) {
feed = InfoFeed(addr);
}
function callFeed() {
feed.info.value(10).gas(800)();
}
}
Subcurrency example
contract Coin {
function Coin {
balances[msg.sender] = 1000000000;
}
function send(address to, uint value) {
if(balances[msg.sender] >= value) {
balances[msg.sender] -= value;
balances[to] += value;
}
}
private mapping(address => uint) balances;
}
Events vs Polling
Source: Richard Brown
Events
contract Counter {
event Incremented();
function Counter {
//total = 0;
}
function Inc() {
total++;
Incremented();
}
uint total;
}
subcurrency.sol with event
contract Coin {
event BalanceChanged(address indexed from,
address indexed to, uint value);
function Coin {
balances[msg.sender] = 1000000000;
}
function send(address to, uint value) {
if(balances[msg.sender] >= value) {
balances[msg.sender] -= value;
balances[to] += value;
BalanceChanged(msg.sender, to, value);
}
}
private mapping(address => uint) balances;
}
MULTIPLE INHERITANCE & MODIFIERS
contract owned {
modifier onlyowner {
if (msg.sender == owner)
_
address owner = msg.sender;
}
contract owned {
modifier onlyowner {
if (msg.sender == owner)
_
address owner = msg.sender;
}
contract mortal is owned {
function kill() onlyowner {
suicide(owner);
}
}
contract owned {
modifier onlyowner {
if (msg.sender == owner)
_
address owner = msg.sender;
}
contract mortal is owned {
function kill() onlyowner {
suicide(owner);
}
}
contract Foo is owned, mortal {...}
Thank You! Now Q&A
All images are taken from Google Image search and various other places on the Internet
© Copyright of corresponding owners
BACKUP SLIDES
Ethereum VM became
Industry Standard
• IBM Adept (+ Samsung)
– IoT + Blockchain + Smart Contracts
• Eris Industries
– Middleware for Private Blockchain + Decentralized Apps
• Clearmatics
– Middleware for OTC financial contracts clearing / settlement
• Counterparty/Ethereum
– Financial Contracts + bets

More Related Content

PPTX
Dappsmedia smartcontract _write_smartcontracts_on_console_ethereum
PDF
Ethereum bxl
PPTX
Intro to smart contract on blockchain en
PDF
gething started - ethereum & using the geth golang client
PPTX
Eclipsecon Europe: Blockchain, Ethereum and Business Applications
PPTX
Introduction to Ethereum
PDF
Introduction to Lightning Network
PDF
Ethereum Mining How To
Dappsmedia smartcontract _write_smartcontracts_on_console_ethereum
Ethereum bxl
Intro to smart contract on blockchain en
gething started - ethereum & using the geth golang client
Eclipsecon Europe: Blockchain, Ethereum and Business Applications
Introduction to Ethereum
Introduction to Lightning Network
Ethereum Mining How To

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Ethereum Intro
ODP
Intro to Blockchain - And, by the way, what the heck is proof-of-work?
PDF
create your own cryptocurrency
PPTX
Build your own block chain
PDF
Ethereum Contracts - Coinfest 2015
PDF
Ethereum Blockchain explained
PPTX
The Blockchain and JavaScript
PDF
14 Jan17- Nullmeets -Blockchain concept decoded by Ninad Sarang
PDF
Every thing bitcoin in baby language
PDF
Bitcoins Math
PDF
Ethereum under the Hood, intro for developers as preparation for Blockchain H...
PPTX
Blockchain and bitcoin fundamentals (usages and applications)
PDF
Ethereum wallet Intro 以太坊錢包介紹
PDF
BCHGraz - Meetup #8 - Intro & Ethereum
PPTX
Explaining Ethereum
PDF
Smart contracts in Solidity
ODP
CBGTBT - Part 3 - Transactions 101
ODP
CBGTBT - Part 2 - Blockchains 101
PPTX
A research-oriented introduction to the cryptographic currencies (starting wi...
PPTX
Bitcoin Internal
Ethereum Intro
Intro to Blockchain - And, by the way, what the heck is proof-of-work?
create your own cryptocurrency
Build your own block chain
Ethereum Contracts - Coinfest 2015
Ethereum Blockchain explained
The Blockchain and JavaScript
14 Jan17- Nullmeets -Blockchain concept decoded by Ninad Sarang
Every thing bitcoin in baby language
Bitcoins Math
Ethereum under the Hood, intro for developers as preparation for Blockchain H...
Blockchain and bitcoin fundamentals (usages and applications)
Ethereum wallet Intro 以太坊錢包介紹
BCHGraz - Meetup #8 - Intro & Ethereum
Explaining Ethereum
Smart contracts in Solidity
CBGTBT - Part 3 - Transactions 101
CBGTBT - Part 2 - Blockchains 101
A research-oriented introduction to the cryptographic currencies (starting wi...
Bitcoin Internal
Ad

Similar to Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015) (20)

PPTX
Bitcoin Technology Presentation No.1.pptx
PPTX
The bitcoin blockchain
ODP
Pettycoin: Losing Tiny Amounts of Bitcoin At Scale!
PDF
BlockchainHub Graz Meetup #22 - Atomic Swaps - Johannes Zweng
PDF
Bitcoin : A fierce Decentralized internet currency
PDF
Bitcoin Micropayment Channels
PPTX
“Technical Intro to Blockhain” by Yurijs Pimenovs from Paybis at CryptoCurren...
PPTX
Presentation_Topalidis_Giorgos
PPTX
Presentation topalidis giorgos
PDF
Libbitcoin slides
PPTX
J.burke HackMiami6
PPTX
Towards a Generalised Blockchain Fabric @ CodeBlock 2018
PDF
Bitcoin Blockchain - Under the Hood
PDF
Part 3 Introduction to Cryptocurrency.pdf
PDF
Scaling Ethereum using Zero-Knowledge Proofs
PDF
Exactly-Once Made Easy: Transactional Messaging Improvement for Usability and...
PDF
Privacy Preserving State Transitions on Ethereum
PPTX
BlockchainConf.tech - Build a private blockchain workshop
PDF
Etherium Solidity Programming fundamentals
PDF
Tendermint in a nutshell
Bitcoin Technology Presentation No.1.pptx
The bitcoin blockchain
Pettycoin: Losing Tiny Amounts of Bitcoin At Scale!
BlockchainHub Graz Meetup #22 - Atomic Swaps - Johannes Zweng
Bitcoin : A fierce Decentralized internet currency
Bitcoin Micropayment Channels
“Technical Intro to Blockhain” by Yurijs Pimenovs from Paybis at CryptoCurren...
Presentation_Topalidis_Giorgos
Presentation topalidis giorgos
Libbitcoin slides
J.burke HackMiami6
Towards a Generalised Blockchain Fabric @ CodeBlock 2018
Bitcoin Blockchain - Under the Hood
Part 3 Introduction to Cryptocurrency.pdf
Scaling Ethereum using Zero-Knowledge Proofs
Exactly-Once Made Easy: Transactional Messaging Improvement for Usability and...
Privacy Preserving State Transitions on Ethereum
BlockchainConf.tech - Build a private blockchain workshop
Etherium Solidity Programming fundamentals
Tendermint in a nutshell
Ad

More from Zvi Avraham (10)

PDF
Data isn't the new Oil - it's a new Asset Class!
PDF
Functional APIs with Absinthe GraphQL
PDF
Limited supply
PDF
TimeSpaceDB
PDF
Erlang on OSv
PDF
[http://1PU.SH] Building Wireless Sensor Networks with MQTT-SN, RaspberryPi a...
PDF
Erlang - Concurrent Language for Concurrent World
PDF
Cloud Computing: AWS for Lean Startups
PPT
Erlang OTP
PPT
Migration To Multi Core - Parallel Programming Models
Data isn't the new Oil - it's a new Asset Class!
Functional APIs with Absinthe GraphQL
Limited supply
TimeSpaceDB
Erlang on OSv
[http://1PU.SH] Building Wireless Sensor Networks with MQTT-SN, RaspberryPi a...
Erlang - Concurrent Language for Concurrent World
Cloud Computing: AWS for Lean Startups
Erlang OTP
Migration To Multi Core - Parallel Programming Models

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Encapsulation theory and applications.pdf
PDF
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
PPTX
20250228 LYD VKU AI Blended-Learning.pptx
PPTX
PA Analog/Digital System: The Backbone of Modern Surveillance and Communication
PDF
Machine learning based COVID-19 study performance prediction
PPTX
Digital-Transformation-Roadmap-for-Companies.pptx
PDF
cuic standard and advanced reporting.pdf
PDF
Peak of Data & AI Encore- AI for Metadata and Smarter Workflows
PDF
NewMind AI Weekly Chronicles - August'25 Week I
PPTX
A Presentation on Artificial Intelligence
PDF
Bridging biosciences and deep learning for revolutionary discoveries: a compr...
PDF
Blue Purple Modern Animated Computer Science Presentation.pdf.pdf
PDF
NewMind AI Monthly Chronicles - July 2025
PDF
Advanced methodologies resolving dimensionality complications for autism neur...
PDF
Per capita expenditure prediction using model stacking based on satellite ima...
PDF
Network Security Unit 5.pdf for BCA BBA.
PDF
Chapter 3 Spatial Domain Image Processing.pdf
PPTX
Effective Security Operations Center (SOC) A Modern, Strategic, and Threat-In...
PPT
Teaching material agriculture food technology
PDF
Electronic commerce courselecture one. Pdf
Encapsulation theory and applications.pdf
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
20250228 LYD VKU AI Blended-Learning.pptx
PA Analog/Digital System: The Backbone of Modern Surveillance and Communication
Machine learning based COVID-19 study performance prediction
Digital-Transformation-Roadmap-for-Companies.pptx
cuic standard and advanced reporting.pdf
Peak of Data & AI Encore- AI for Metadata and Smarter Workflows
NewMind AI Weekly Chronicles - August'25 Week I
A Presentation on Artificial Intelligence
Bridging biosciences and deep learning for revolutionary discoveries: a compr...
Blue Purple Modern Animated Computer Science Presentation.pdf.pdf
NewMind AI Monthly Chronicles - July 2025
Advanced methodologies resolving dimensionality complications for autism neur...
Per capita expenditure prediction using model stacking based on satellite ima...
Network Security Unit 5.pdf for BCA BBA.
Chapter 3 Spatial Domain Image Processing.pdf
Effective Security Operations Center (SOC) A Modern, Strategic, and Threat-In...
Teaching material agriculture food technology
Electronic commerce courselecture one. Pdf

Ethereum VM and DSLs for Smart Contracts (updated on May 12th 2015)

  • 1. Ethereum VM & DSLs for Smart Contracts
  • 2. $ whoami Name: Zvi Avraham Title: Founder & CEO Company: ZADATA Ltd Email: zvi@zadata.com
  • 3. Agenda • How Bitcoin works • Bitcoin Script • Intro to Smart Contracts • What is Ethereum • Ethereum VM • DSLs for Smart Contracts
  • 5. What is Bitcoin? send X bitcoins from address A to address B
  • 6. What is Bitcoin? send X bitcoins from address A to address B under condition C
  • 7. “Under condition C” • C – is a predicate that Tx is valid • Q: How Bitcoin represents C? • A: Using a pair of “Bitcoin Scripts” – Locking script – Unlocking (or redeem) script ZΛDΛTΛ © 2015
  • 8. What is Bitcoin Script? • Forth-like, stack-based VM, RPN • 1 byte opcodes • All values are variable length byte arrays • Type interpreted by operations • Only stack & alt-stack • No return stack (no calls) • No heap • Deterministic - No side effects or I/O
  • 10. RPN Calculators • Infix: 2 + 3 = • Postfix (RPN): 2 ↑ 3 +
  • 13. Why Stack-based VM? • memory efficient • easy to implement VM – no need for a lexer, parser or AST • Portable – run on devices: phones or calculators without consuming too much bandwidth • compact code – storage on the Bitcoin Blockchain is very expensive ($600K/GB @ $220/BTC)
  • 14. Compact Code Register VM (3 operands) MOV R1,#2 MOV R2,#3 ADD R3,R1,R2 MOV R1,#2 ADD R1,#3 Stack-based VMs (0 operands) 2 3 ADD Register VM (2 operands) Blockchain storage is very expensive ~ $600K/GB ($220/BTC) ≥ 6B ≥ 4B ≥ 3B
  • 16. Bitcoin Script Limitations • deterministic, but not Turing complete - intentionally • no loops - disallow infinite loops • no recursive functions – no functions at all • no jumps/goto – but has (OP_IF,OP_ELSE,OP_ENDIF) • many opcodes disabled (string ops) • sigop counts – limit # of hashing ops • scripts are limited in size - max 500B
  • 21. UTXO – Unspent Transaction Output
  • 23. Tx Fees • sum(TxInputs) ≥ sum(TxOutputs) • TxFee = sum(TxInputs) – sum(TxOutputs) • Min: 0.0001 BTC / 1000 bytes of tx (~ $0.022) • fee goes to the miner who found a block, which includes this tx
  • 24. Blockchain – tree of Blocks • Blocks (BlockHash 32B) –Txs (TxId - reverse TxHash 32B) • Inputs (#) –reference to UTXO (TxId, output#) –lock script (scriptPubKey) • Outputs (#) –value (in satoshis = BTC*10−8) –unlock script (scriptSig)
  • 27. • scriptSig / unlocking / input script - key icon (input spending UTXO) • scriptPubKey / locking / output script - lock icon (output of UTXO)
  • 28. • output(input) pair as an invocation • output script - like a function (a hardcoded function - tx type) • input script - like a parameters to a function
  • 29. Examples of Conditions • AlwaysPay(_) = true • NeverPay(_) = false • HowMuchIs2by2(Answer) = (Answer == 2*2) • CheckPwd(Password) = (Password==“secret”)
  • 30. Examples of Conditions (2) • P2PK(PubKey')(PubKey, TxSig) = (PubKey' == PubKey) && checksig(PubKey, TxSig) • P2PKH(PubKeyHash)(PubKey, TxSig) = (PubKeyHash == ripmd160(PubKey)) && checksig(PubKey, TxSig)
  • 31. Evaluation Logic 1. Start with an empty stack 2. Evaluate the “unlock script” (scriptSig) from UTXO 3. Evaluate the “lock script” (scriptPubKey) from current tx input 4. If result is true (1), tx is valid, otherwise invalid
  • 32. “Always Pay Anyone” ;) Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey … OP_TRUE … Concatenate both scripts & start with empty stack
  • 33. “Always Pay Anyone” ;) Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey … OP_TRUE … … Don’t care what’s in scriptSig – unless it invalidate the Tx. May even leave stuff on the stack.
  • 34. “Always Pay Anyone” ;) Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey … OP_TRUE … … … Don’t care what’s in scriptSig – unless it invalidate the Tx. May even leave stuff on the stack.
  • 35. “Always Pay Anyone” ;) Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey … OP_TRUE … 1 … … The top of the stack is 1 (i.e. true) – the Tx is valid!
  • 36. “Don’t Pay” – “Burn bitcoins” Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey … OP_FALSE … Concatenate both scripts & start with empty stack
  • 37. “Don’t Pay” – “Burn bitcoins” Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey … OP_FALSE … … Don’t care what’s in scriptSig – unless it invalidate the Tx. May even leave stuff on the stack.
  • 38. “Don’t Pay” – “Burn bitcoins” Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey … OP_FALSE … … … Don’t care what’s in scriptSig – unless it invalidate the Tx. May even leave stuff on the stack.
  • 39. “Don’t Pay” – “Burn bitcoins” Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey … OP_FALSE … 0 … … The top of the stack is 0 (i.e. false) – the Tx is invalid! These bitcoins are burned forever - unspendable!
  • 40. Pay to math genius who knows how much is 2 * 2 = ? Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey 4 2 2 OP_MUL OP_EQUALVERIFY Concatenate both scripts & start with empty stack
  • 41. Pay to math genius who knows how much is 2 * 2 = ? Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey _4 2 2 OP_MUL OP_EQUALVERIFY 4 Push constant to the stack
  • 42. Pay to math genius who knows how much is 2 * 2 = ? Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey _4 2 2 OP_MUL 2 OP_EQUALVERIFY 4 Push constant to the stack
  • 43. Pay to math genius who knows how much is 2 * 2 = ? Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey _4 2 2 2 OP_MUL 2 OP_EQUALVERIFY 4 Push constant to the stack
  • 44. Pay to math genius who knows how much is 2 * 2 = ? Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey _4 2 2 OP_MUL 4 OP_EQUALVERIFY 4 Multiply 2 values on top of the stack
  • 45. Pay to math genius who knows how much is 2 * 2 = ? Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey _4 2 2 OP_MUL OP_EQUALVERIFY 4 == 4 – the Tx is valid! Too easy – need a real cryptographic solution!
  • 46. Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey <sig> OP_DUP <pubKey> OP_HASH160 <pubKeyHash> OP_EQUALVERIFY OP_CHECKSIG Concatenate both scripts & start with empty stack. 99% of all Bitcoin Txs use this script.
  • 47. Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey <sig> OP_DUP <pubKey> OP_HASH160 <pubKeyHash> OP_EQUALVERIFY <sig> OP_CHECKSIG push constant onto the stack
  • 48. Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey <sig> OP_DUP <pubKey> OP_HASH160 <pubKeyHash> <pubKey> OP_EQUALVERIFY <sig> OP_CHECKSIG push constant onto the stack
  • 49. Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey <sig> OP_DUP <pubKey> OP_HASH160 <pubKey> <pubKeyHash> <pubKey> OP_EQUALVERIFY <sig> OP_CHECKSIG Duplicate value on the top of the stack
  • 50. Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey <sig> OP_DUP <pubKey> OP_HASH160 <pubKeyHashNew> <pubKeyHash> <pubKey> OP_EQUALVERIFY <sig> OP_CHECKSIG Calculate RIPEMD160 hash: Bitcoin address = RIPEMD160(pubKey)
  • 51. Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey <sig> OP_DUP <pubKeyHash> <pubKey> OP_HASH160 <pubKeyHashNew> <pubKeyHash> <pubKey> OP_EQUALVERIFY <sig> OP_CHECKSIG push constant onto the stack
  • 52. Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey <sig> OP_DUP <pubKey> OP_HASH160 <pubKeyHash> <pubKey> OP_EQUALVERIFY <sig> OP_CHECKSIG verify that 2 values are equal: if equal, continue; else invalidate tx & stop execution
  • 53. Pay to PubKeyHash - P2PKH Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey <sig> OP_DUP <pubKey> OP_HASH160 <pubKeyHash> OP_EQUALVERIFY 1 OP_CHECKSIG Signature is checked for top two stack items. 1 on top of the stack – Tx is valid!
  • 54. MultiSig – M out of N Tx Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey OP_0 2 <SigBuyer> <PubKeyBuyer> <SigSeller> <PubKeySeller> <PubKeyMediator> 3 OP_CHECKMULTISIG Any 2 out of 3 can sign this Tx: Buyer & Seller, Mediator & Buyer or Mediator & Seller
  • 55. MultiSig – M out of N Tx Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey OP_0 2 <SigBuyer> <PubKeyBuyer> <SigSeller> <PubKeySeller> <PubKeyMediator> 3 <SigSeller> OP_CHECKMULTISIG <SigBuyer> 0 Any 2 out of 3 can sign this Tx: Buyer & Seller, Mediator & Buyer or Mediator & Seller
  • 56. MultiSig – M out of N Tx Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey 3 OP_0 2 <PubKeyMediator> <SigBuyer> <PubKeyBuyer> <PubKeySeller> <SigSeller> <PubKeySeller> <PubKeyBuyer> <PubKeyMediator> 2 3 <SigSeller> OP_CHECKMULTISIG <SigBuyer> 0 Any 2 out of 3 can sign this Tx: Buyer & Seller, Mediator & Buyer or Mediator & Seller
  • 57. MultiSig – M out of N Tx Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey OP_0 2 <SigBuyer> <PubKeyBuyer> <SigSeller> <PubKeySeller> <PubKeyMediator> 3 OP_CHECKMULTISIG 1 If 2 signatures matching any 2 out of 3 public keys – Tx is Valid!
  • 58. Standard Tx Script Types • Pay-to-PubKey (P2PK) – obsolete • Pay-to-PubKeyHash (P2PKH) – 99% of all Tx • Pay-to-ScriptHash (P2SH) • Multisig – obsolete • Nulldata - OP_RETURN
  • 59. Non-standard Txs • DDoS attacks against bitcoin nodes, which send non-standard tx • an invalid script (and tx) will not be accepted • a non-standard script (and tx) will not be relayed to the network • but some miner pools will accept them (Eligius) – need to send directly to them
  • 60. NullData Script • OP_RETURN [up to 40 bytes metadata] - immediately invalidates the tx - allows embedding metadata into blockchain - unspendable / non-redeemable (burned) - Before OP_RETURN was whitelisted metadata was encoded as fake addresses - provably prunable
  • 61. NullData Script Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey OP_RETURN <metadata-40B>
  • 62. NullData Script Stack scriptSig scriptPubKey OP_RETURN <metadata-40B> Tx immediately invalidated - unspendable
  • 63. Disadvatages • Bitcoin Script can be used to implement a weak version of Smart Contracts, but: – Not Turing-complete – Designed for Tx Validation – not general purpose – Lack of state (either valid or invalid Tx, no storage) – Value-blindness (i.e. just use UTXO value – can’t pay arbitrary amount of BTC) – Blockchain-blindness (can’t use blockchain data – source of randomness, needed for gambling)
  • 64. Smart Contracts on Bitcoin • Smart Contracts on Bitcoin require multiple technologies: – Pay to Script Hash (P2SH) Multisig – OP_RETURN to encode Metadata on the Blockchain – Oracles - network of external servers running Smart Contracts’ deterministic Turing-complete code (decisions by strict majority like Jury) • Too Hacky, Complex & Error-prone!
  • 68. In Strong AI terms “Sovereign” is a Smart Contract w/o backdoor
  • 69. Screw flying cars. I want a car that own & maintain itself – Mike Hearn
  • 75. SMART CONTRACTS – DOWN TO EARTH
  • 80. Ethereum: Bitcoin on Steroids!
  • 84. What is Ethereum? A Secure Decentralized Generalized Transaction Ledger
  • 85. What is Ethereum? A Secure Decentralized Generalized Transaction Ledger
  • 86. Secure • Distributed Systems Consensus: – Paxos – Raft • BGP – Byzantine Generals Problem • Game Theory / Incentivization • Trustless Consensus: – Proof-of-Work (PoW) - Mining – Proof-of-Stake (PoS) – Proof-of-X…
  • 88. What is Ethereum? A Secure Decentralized Generalized Transaction Ledger
  • 91. Decentralization Continuum Source: The “Unbundling of Trust”: how to identify good cryptocurrency opportunities? by Richard Brown http://www.gendal.me/2014/11/14/the-unbundling-of-trust-how-to-identify-good-cryptocurrency-opportunities/
  • 92. Decentralized Centralized Decentralized Apple iTunes, Netflix Bittorrent Facebook Diaspora* WhatsApp Jabber/XMPP Cellular operators Firechat – Mesh Networks AOL Internet Post Office email Domain Registrars Namecoin PayPal Bitcoin
  • 93. What is Ethereum? A Secure Decentralized Generalized Transaction Ledger
  • 94. Generalized • Turing-complete, Deterministic code • Featureless vs. feature based platforms (mostly financial contracts / gambling): – Mastercoin/Omni – Counterparty – NXT – BitShares – etc.
  • 95. Source: Great Chain of Numbers, Tim Swanson
  • 96. What is Ethereum? A Secure Decentralized Generalized Transaction Ledger
  • 98. What is Ethereum? A Secure Decentralized Generalized Transaction Ledger
  • 99. Bitcoin Tx as a State Transition Bitcoin State is a set of UTXOs S’ = apply(S,Tx)
  • 100. Bitcoin Tx as a State Transition Bitcoin State is a set of UTXOs S’ = apply(S,Tx)
  • 101. Ethereum Tx as a State Transition Ethereum State is a set of Accounts S’ = apply(S,Tx)
  • 102. Ethereum Tx as a State Transition Ethereum State is a set of Accounts S’ = apply(S,Tx)
  • 103. Block – sequence of Txs S[n] = foldl(apply, S[0], Txs) S_FINAL = apply(S[n], PAY_BLOCK_REWARD)
  • 104. Ethereum Blockchain • Same concept like in Bitcoin • Bitcoin block time ~ 10 min • Ethereum block time 5 block candidates per 1 min ~ 1 block per 12-15 sec
  • 105. Ethereum Account Types • EOA (Externally-owned Account) – controlled by Human or application (DApp) – only EOA can initiate transactions • Contract Account – can receive transactions – can send messages to itself or other contracts
  • 106. Ethereum Account • Address – 160 bit excerpt from public key • Balance (in ether ~ $0.70/ETH now) • Nonce Contract Accounts in addition have: • Code • Storage
  • 107. Contract • “Contract” is not a good name, better names: – Autonomous Agent – Actor – Object (like in OOP)
  • 108. Contracts • Contract are like people: – can call / send messages to other contracts – … and return values – can create new contracts – can replicate itself – can “suicide” – can pay (send ether) other contracts or people – … can buy things
  • 109. Create Contract • Create Contract: – Endowment (ETH) – Init code (whatever returned from init code) – Gas – Signature • On creation: – Places a new account in the system with code (code in account is whatever returned from init)
  • 111. Send a Message Call to Contract • Send a message call to a contract: – Recipient account address (160 bit) – Value (ETH) – Data (byte array) – Gas limit – Gas price (multiplier per ETH, used for tx priority) – Signature • On message receipt: – Value is transferred to recipient’s balance – Recipients code (if any) runs – Return result to the caller
  • 112. Transactions & Messages • Transaction originates always from EOA • And can result in multiple message calls to contract accounts • Transactions are recorded in the blockchain • Message calls are transient (only exist while transaction executing)
  • 114. Ethereum VM - EVM • Stack of 32B (256bit) words • Byte-addressable Memory (2256 bytes addressable) • Key/Value Storage (2256 words addressable)
  • 115. EVM - Storage • Isolated from other accounts • Storage address space modeled as Associative Array, not a Linear Memory – Key/Value Store • the only VM which uses Associative Array for Address Space • Every new (unused) word in memory/storage has 0 value • Writing 0 to storage word - equivalent to deleting it (freeing it)
  • 116. EVM State is 8-tuple: { block_state, // also references storage transaction, // current transaction message, // current message code, // current contract’s code memory, // memory byte array stack, // words on the stack pc, // program counter → code[pc] gas // gas left to run tx }
  • 117. Why 256 bit? • Crypto primitives: – SHA256 (SHA3) – public key is 256-bit uint (odd/even,x) – Private key uses sepc256k1/EDCSA is 2 256-bit uints (r,s) • 160-bit account addresses fit into 256-bit • 256-bit SIMD ISAs (SSE,AVX) on modern CPUs
  • 118. WORD – Data Types • 256 bit big endian unsigned integers - uint256 • 256 bit 2-s complement signed integers - int256 • 256 bit hash (as big endian) • 160 bit Account Address – big endian, least significant 20 bytes only – 12 most significant bytes discarded • 32 bytes/characters • 0 – False, 1 - True
  • 119. Ethereum VM (EVM) ISA From To Opcode groups 00 0F Stop and Arithmetic Operations 10 1F Comparison & Bitwise Logic Operations 20 2F SHA3 hashing 30 3F Environmental Information 40 4F Block Information 50 5F Stack, Memory, Storage and Flow Operations 60 7F Push Operations 80 8F Duplication Operations 90 9F Exchange Operations A0 AF Logging Operations F0 FF Contract Operations
  • 120. Arithmetic Ops Hex Mnemonic δ α Description 01 ADD 2 1 Addition 02 MUL 2 1 Multiplication 03 SUB 2 1 Subtraction 04 DIV 2 1 Integer division 05 SDIV 2 1 Signed integer division. Where all values are treated as two’s complement signed 256-bit integers 06 MOD 2 1 Modulo remainder 07 SMOD 2 1 Signed modulo remainder. Where all values are treated as two’s complement signed 256-bit integers 08 ADDMOD 3 1 Modulo addition 09 MULMOD 3 1 Modulo multiplication 0A EXP 2 1 Exponential operation 0B SIGNEXTEND 2 1 Extend length of two’s complement signed integer
  • 121. 10s: Comparison & Bitwise Logic Hex Mnemonic δ α Description 10 LT 2 1 Less-than comparison 11 GT 2 1 Greater-than comparison 12 SLT 2 1 Signed less-than comparison 13 SGT 2 1 Signed greater-than comparison 14 EQ 2 1 Equality comparison 15 ISZERO 1 1 Simple not operator 16 AND 2 1 Bitwise AND 17 OR 2 1 Bitwise OR 18 XOR 2 1 Bitwise XOR 19 NOT 1 1 Bitwise NOT 1A BYTE 2 1 Retrieve single byte from word. For Nth byte, we count from the left (i.e. N=0 would be the most significant in big endian)
  • 122. 20s: SHA3 hashing Hex Mnemonic δ α Description 20 SHA3 2 1 Compute Keccak-256 hash for the range in memory [start, start+len-1] μs [0] ≡ Keccak(μm [μs [0] . . . (μs [0] + μs [1] − 1)]) μi ≡ M (μi , μs [0], μs [1])
  • 123. Message Call Data Ops Hex Mnemonic δ α Description 35 CALLDATALOAD 1 1 Get input data of current environment. This pertains to the input data passed with the message call instruction or transaction 36 CALLDATASIZE 0 1 Get size of input data in current environment. This pertains to the input data passed with the message call instruction or transaction 37 CALLDATACOPY 3 0 Copy input data in current environment to memory. This pertains to the input data passed with the message call instruction or transaction
  • 124. Contract Code Ops Hex Mnemonic δ α Description 38 CODESIZE 0 1 Get size of code running in current environment 39 CODECOPY 3 0 Copy code running in current environment to memory 3B EXTCODESIZE 1 1 Get size of an account’s code 3C EXTCODECOPY 4 0 Copy an account’s code to memory
  • 125. 30s: Environmental Information Hex Mnemonic δ α Description 30 ADDRESS 0 1 Get address of currently executing account (its like this / self in OOP, self() in Erlang) 31 BALANCE 1 1 Get balance of the given account 32 ORIGIN 0 1 Get execution origination address. This is the sender of original transaction; it is never an account with non- empty associated code 33 CALLER 0 1 Get caller address. This is the address of the account that is directly responsible for this execution 34 CALLVALUE 0 1 Get deposited value by the instruction/transaction responsible for this execution 3A GASPRICE 0 1 Get price of gas in current environment. This is gas price specified by the originating transaction 5A GAS 0 1 Get the amount of available gas
  • 126. 40s: Block Information Hex Mnemonic δ α Description 40 BLOCKHASH 1 1 Get the hash of one of the 256 most recent complete blocks 41 COINBASE 0 1 Get the block’s coinbase address 42 TIMESTAMP 0 1 Get the block’s timestamp 43 NUMBER 0 1 Get the block’s number 44 DIFFICULTY 0 1 Get the block’s difficulty 45 GASLIMIT 0 1 Get the block’s gas limit
  • 127. Memory Hex Mnemonic δ α Description 51 MLOAD 1 1 Load word from memory 52 MSTORE 2 0 Save word to memory 53 MSTORE8 2 0 Save byte to memory 59 MSIZE 0 1 Get the size of active memory in bytes
  • 128. Storage Hex Mnemonic δ α Description 54 SLOAD 1 1 Load word from storage 55 SSTORE 2 0 Save word to storage
  • 129. Control Flow Hex Mnemonic δ α Description 00 STOP 0 0 Halts execution 56 JUMP 1 0 Alter the program counter 57 JUMPI 2 0 Conditionally alter the program counter 58 PC 0 1 Get the program counter 5B JUMPDEST 0 0 Mark a valid destination for jumps. This operation has no effect on machine state during execution
  • 130. Contract ops Hex Mnemonic δ α Description F0 CREATE 3 1 Pops a,b,c. Creates a new contract with code from memory[b : b+c] and endowment (initial ether sent) a, and pushes the value of the contract F1 CALL 7 1 Send message call to contract F2 RETURN 2 1 Pops a,b. Stops execution, returning memory[a : a+b] FF SUICIDE 1 0 Sends all remaining ether to specified address, Returns and flags contract for deletion as soon as tx ends Like C++: delete this;
  • 131. Stack ops Hex Mnemonic δ α Description 50 POP 1 0 Remove item from stack 60 61 … 7F PUSH1 PUSH2 … PUSH32 0 1 Place 1,2…32 bytes item on stack. The bytes are read in line from the program code’s bytes array. The function c ensures the bytes default to zero if they extend past the limits. The byte is right-aligned (takes the lowest significant place in big endian). DUP … Operations to duplicate values on the stack SWAP … Operations to swap values on the stack
  • 139. Name Registry contract Compiled to EVM assembly: PUSH1 0 CALLDATALOAD SLOAD NOT PUSH1 9 JUMPI STOP JUMPDEST PUSH1 32 CALLDATALOAD PUSH1 0 CALLDATALOAD SSTORE
  • 140. EVM State is 8-tuple: { block_state, // also references storage transaction, // current transaction message, // current message code, // current contract’s code memory, // memory byte array stack, // words on the stack pc, // program counter → code[pc] gas // gas left to run tx }
  • 141. EVM State inside Contract: Invariant per Contract: block_state, // also references storage transaction, // current transaction message, // current message code // current contract’s code Contract State: { pc, // program counter → code[pc] gas, // gas left to run tx stack, // words on the stack memory, // memory byte array storage // K/V store of words }
  • 142. Example of Tx Zvi registers a domain “54” with IP “20202020”: - Send Tx: - From: “Zvi 160-bit address” - To: “NameRegistry” contract’s address - Value: 0 ether - Data: [54, 20202020] - GasLimit: 2000 gas - GasPrice: 1.0 (1 gas == 1 wei)
  • 143. Example of Tx - Gas Calldata [54, 20202020] is 2 words of 32 bytes = 64 bytes. StartGas * GasPrice = 2000 * 1 = 2000 wei Tx costs: • 500 + 5*TXDATALEN = 500 – 5*64 bytes = 820 gas
  • 144. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {} 2 CALLDATALOAD 3 SLOAD 4 NOT 5 PUSH1 9 7 JUMPI 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 145. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {} 3 SLOAD 4 NOT 5 PUSH1 9 7 JUMPI 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 146. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {} 4 NOT 5 PUSH1 9 7 JUMPI 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 147. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {} 4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {} 5 PUSH1 9 7 JUMPI 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 148. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {} 4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {} 5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {} 7 JUMPI 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 149. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {} 4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {} 5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {} 7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {} 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 150. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {} 4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {} 5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {} 7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {} 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {} 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 151. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {} 4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {} 5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {} 7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {} 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {} 10 PUSH1 32 -1 -846 [] [] {} 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 152. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {} 4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {} 5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {} 7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {} 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {} 10 PUSH1 32 -1 -846 [] [] {} 12 CALLDATALOAD -1 -847 [32] [] {} 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 153. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {} 4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {} 5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {} 7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {} 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {} 10 PUSH1 32 -1 -846 [] [] {} 12 CALLDATALOAD -1 -847 [32] [] {} 13 PUSH1 0 -1 -848 [2020202020] [] {} 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 154. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {} 4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {} 5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {} 7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {} 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {} 10 PUSH1 32 -1 -846 [] [] {} 12 CALLDATALOAD -1 -847 [32] [] {} 13 PUSH1 0 -1 -848 [2020202020] [] {} 15 CALLDATALOAD -1 -849 [2020202020, 0] [] {} 16 SSTORE
  • 155. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {} 4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {} 5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {} 7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {} 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {} 10 PUSH1 32 -1 -846 [] [] {} 12 CALLDATALOAD -1 -847 [32] [] {} 13 PUSH1 0 -1 -848 [2020202020] [] {} 15 CALLDATALOAD -1 -849 [2020202020, 0] [] {} 16 SSTORE -300 -850 [2020202020, 54] [] {}
  • 156. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {} 4 NOT -1 -842 [0] [] {} 5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [1] [] {} 7 JUMPI -1 -844 [1, 9] [] {} 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST -1 -845 [] [] {} 10 PUSH1 32 -1 -846 [] [] {} 12 CALLDATALOAD -1 -847 [32] [] {} 13 PUSH1 0 -1 -848 [2020202020] [] {} 15 CALLDATALOAD -1 -849 [2020202020, 0] [] {} 16 SSTORE -300 -850 [2020202020, 54] [] {} -1150 [] [] {54: 2020202020}
  • 157. Gas Usage • 1150 gas consumed by Tx execution • 2000 gas – 1150 gas = 850 gas refund • If we were setting GasLimit to less than 1150, the Tx would be failing in the middle and all gas would be consumed (no refund)
  • 158. Send the same Tx 2nd time Zvi registers a domain “54” with IP “20202020”: - Send Tx: - From: “Zvi 160-bit address” - To: “NameRegistry” contract’s address - Value: 0 ether - Data: [54, 20202020] - GasLimit: 2000 gas - GasPrice: 1.0 (1 gas == 1 wei)
  • 159. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020} 2 CALLDATALOAD 3 SLOAD 4 NOT 5 PUSH1 9 7 JUMPI 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 160. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020} 3 SLOAD 4 NOT 5 PUSH1 9 7 JUMPI 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 161. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {54: 2020202020} 4 NOT 5 PUSH1 9 7 JUMPI 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 162. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {54: 2020202020} 4 NOT -1 -842 [2020202020] [] {54: 2020202020} 5 PUSH1 9 7 JUMPI 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 163. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {54: 2020202020} 4 NOT -1 -842 [2020202020] [] {54: 2020202020} 5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [0] [] {54: 2020202020} 7 JUMPI 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 164. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {54: 2020202020} 4 NOT -1 -842 [2020202020] [] {54: 2020202020} 5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [0] [] {54: 2020202020} 7 JUMPI -1 -844 [0, 9] [] {54: 2020202020} 8 STOP 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 165. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {54: 2020202020} 4 NOT -1 -842 [2020202020] [] {54: 2020202020} 5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [0] [] {54: 2020202020} 7 JUMPI -1 -844 [0, 9] [] {54: 2020202020} 8 STOP -0 -845 [] [] {54: 2020202020} 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE
  • 166. PC OPCODE FEE GAS STACK MEM STORAGE 0 PUSH1 0 -1 -820 [] [] {54: 2020202020} 2 CALLDATALOAD -1 -821 [0] [] {54: 2020202020} 3 SLOAD -20 -822 [54] [] {54: 2020202020} 4 NOT -1 -842 [2020202020] [] {54: 2020202020} 5 PUSH1 9 -1 -843 [0] [] {54: 2020202020} 7 JUMPI -1 -844 [0, 9] [] {54: 2020202020} 8 STOP -0 -845 [] [] {54: 2020202020} 9 JUMPDEST 10 PUSH1 32 12 CALLDATALOAD 13 PUSH1 0 15 CALLDATALOAD 16 SSTORE -845 {54: 2020202020}
  • 167. Gas Usage (2nd Tx) • 845 gas consumed by 2nd Tx execution • 2000 gas – 845 gas = 1155 gas refund • If we were setting GasLimit to less than 845, the Tx would be failing in the middle and all gas would be consumed (no refund)
  • 168. Acceptable uses of the EVM • Acceptable uses: – running business logic (“IFTTT - If This Then That") – verifying signatures & other cryptographic objects – applications that verify parts of other blockchains (eg. a decentralized ether-to-bitcoin exchange) • Unacceptable uses: – using the EVM as a file storage, email or text messaging – anything to do with GUI, web apps, etc. – cloud computing, HPC, number crunching, ML, etc.
  • 170. DSLs for Ethereum Smart Contracts • Low-level – EVM Assembly – LLL (Triple-L) - Lisp-like Low-level Language • High-level – Serpent (Python-like) – going to be obsolete? – EtherScript – Visual DSL – Mutan (Go-like) – obsolete – CLL (C-like language) – obsolete – Solidity - (C/Javascript like with static types)
  • 171. LLL (triple L) • Lisp-like Low-level Language • (*.lll) • Used mostly for compilers & tools • LISP-flavored EVM “MacroAssembly” • S-expressions of opcodes • Unlike EVM Assembly – no need to manage stack – no need to manage jumps & jump dest labels • Can test & generate LLL from Clojure – https://github.com/drcode/clll
  • 172. LLL Basics – Assm as S-expr (OPCODE OPERAND1 OPERAND2 ...) 0x20 PUSH 0x20 (add 2 3) PUSH 2 PUSH 3 ADD (mload 0x20) PUSH 0x20 MLOAD
  • 174. LLL Advanced Variables: (set 'NAME EXPR) Macros: (def 'NAME EXPR) (def 'NAME (ARG1 ARG2 …) EXPR) Inline Asm: (asm OPCODE OPCODE …) (asm 23 45 MUL 67 ADD)
  • 175. LLL Sugar @EXPR -> (mload EXPR) [ EXPR1 ] EXPR2 -> (mstore EXPR1 EXPR2) @@EXPR -> (sload EXPR) [[ EXPR1 ]] EXPR2 -> (sstore EXPR1 EXPR2) $N -> (calldataload N) { EXPR1 EXPR2 ... } -> (seq EXPR1 EXPR2 ...)
  • 177. Serpent “python is serpent, but Serpent is not Python” -- Ethereum joke
  • 178. Serpent • Python-like syntax • Python control flow (if, while, etc.) • Infix operators • EVM semantics • Special variables to refer to EVM properties • A little bit higher level than LLL • Can write unit tests in Python • (*.se)
  • 181. Mutan (Go-like syntax) - obsolete subcurrency.mu
  • 182. SOLIDITY Solidity new DSL specifically designed for Ethereum Contracts
  • 183. Solidity (*.sol) • DSL designed specifically for Ethereum contracts • Syntax similar to C/C++ • Statically typed • ABI – Application Binary Interface – i.e. function from one contract knows how to call and marshal arguments to function from another contracts – i.e. common contract code libraries • Mix IDE for Solidity: – https://github.com/ethereum/wiki/wiki/Mix:-The-DApp-IDE • Solidity Online Compiler: – http://chriseth.github.io/cpp-ethereum
  • 185. “init” code - Constructor contract Foo { function Foo { ... } }
  • 186. “member” variable – in storage public by default contract Foo { function Foo { x = 69; } uint x; }
  • 187. Private “member” variable contract Foo { function Foo { x = 69; } private uint x; }
  • 188. Functions can access private members contract Foo { function Foo { x = 69; } function getx() returns (uint) { return x; } private uint x; }
  • 189. Types • bool • intN - N in [8:8:256] bit, int is int256 • uintN - N in [8:8:256] bit, uint is uint256 • hashN - N in [8:8:256] bit, hash is hash256 • address - 160 bit • stringN - N in [0:32] bytes – string0 - empty string – string1 – character – string32 – 32 char fixed-length string
  • 190. Type Inference hash x = 0x123; var y = x; // y will be of type “hash”
  • 191. Struct struct Account { string32 name; address accountNo; uint256 balance; }
  • 192. Mappings (assoc arrays) mapping (KEYTYPE => VALUETYPE) M; • Regular finite-size member variables take continuous storage slots starting from position 0 • The mapping variable (M) itself takes unfilled slot in some position p (i.e. p = addr(M) ) • Mappings layout in storage: addr(M[k]) = sha3(k . p)
  • 193. Nested Mappings mapping (K1 => mapping (K2 => V) ) M; addr(M[K1][K2]) = sha3(K2 . sha3(K1 . addr(M)))
  • 194. Data Structure Nesting • No Arrays (yet) • Structs can be nested • Mappings can be nested • Structs can include Mappings • Mappings can include Structs
  • 195. “Paid” Function Calls contract InfoFeed { function info() returns (uint ret) { return 42; } } contract Consumer { InfoFeed feed; function setFeed(address addr) { feed = InfoFeed(addr); } function callFeed() { feed.info.value(10).gas(800)(); } }
  • 196. Subcurrency example contract Coin { function Coin { balances[msg.sender] = 1000000000; } function send(address to, uint value) { if(balances[msg.sender] >= value) { balances[msg.sender] -= value; balances[to] += value; } } private mapping(address => uint) balances; }
  • 197. Events vs Polling Source: Richard Brown
  • 198. Events contract Counter { event Incremented(); function Counter { //total = 0; } function Inc() { total++; Incremented(); } uint total; }
  • 199. subcurrency.sol with event contract Coin { event BalanceChanged(address indexed from, address indexed to, uint value); function Coin { balances[msg.sender] = 1000000000; } function send(address to, uint value) { if(balances[msg.sender] >= value) { balances[msg.sender] -= value; balances[to] += value; BalanceChanged(msg.sender, to, value); } } private mapping(address => uint) balances; }
  • 201. contract owned { modifier onlyowner { if (msg.sender == owner) _ address owner = msg.sender; }
  • 202. contract owned { modifier onlyowner { if (msg.sender == owner) _ address owner = msg.sender; } contract mortal is owned { function kill() onlyowner { suicide(owner); } }
  • 203. contract owned { modifier onlyowner { if (msg.sender == owner) _ address owner = msg.sender; } contract mortal is owned { function kill() onlyowner { suicide(owner); } } contract Foo is owned, mortal {...}
  • 204. Thank You! Now Q&A All images are taken from Google Image search and various other places on the Internet © Copyright of corresponding owners
  • 206. Ethereum VM became Industry Standard • IBM Adept (+ Samsung) – IoT + Blockchain + Smart Contracts • Eris Industries – Middleware for Private Blockchain + Decentralized Apps • Clearmatics – Middleware for OTC financial contracts clearing / settlement • Counterparty/Ethereum – Financial Contracts + bets