Add 'lighthouse.md'; Update structure; Move info into relevant files.

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README.md
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@ -31,33 +31,6 @@ to existing clients, such as
[Parity-Ethereum](https://github.com/paritytech/parity-ethereum), via RPC to enable
present-Ethereum functionality.
### Goals
The purpose of this project is to work alongside the Ethereum community to
implement a secure, trustworthy, open-source Ethereum Serenity client in Rust.
* **Security**: Lighthouse's main goal is to implement everything with a
security-first mindset. The goal is to ensure that all components of lighthouse
are thoroughly tested, checked and secure.
* **Trust** : As Ethereum Serenity is a Proof-of-Stake system, which
involves the interaction of the Ethereum protocol and user funds. Thus, a goal
of Lighthouse is to provide a client that is trustworthy.
All code can be tested and verified the goal of Lighthouse is to provide code
that is trusted.
* **Transparency**: Lighthouse aims at being as transparent as possible. This goal is for
Lighthouse to embrace the open-source community and allow for all to understand
the decisions, direction and changes in all aspects.
* **Error Resilience**: As Lighthouse embraces the "never `panic`" mindset, the
goal is to be resilient to errors that may occur. Providing a client that has
tolerance against errors provides further properties for a secure, trustworthy
client that Lighthouse aims to provide.
In addition to implementing a new client, the project seeks to maintain and
improve the Ethereum protocol wherever possible.
### Components
@ -109,6 +82,16 @@ In addition to these components we are also working on database schemas, RPC
frameworks, specification development, database optimizations (e.g.,
bloom-filters), and tons of other interesting stuff (at least we think so).
### Directory Structure
Here we provide an overview of the directory structure:
- `/beacon_chain`: contains logic derived directly from the specification.
E.g., shuffling algorithms, state transition logic and structs, block
validation, BLS crypto, etc.
- `/lighthouse`: contains logic specific to this client implementation. E.g.,
CLI parsing, RPC end-points, databases, etc.
### Running
**NOTE: The cryptography libraries used in this implementation are
@ -141,16 +124,10 @@ A few basic steps are needed to get set up:
Lighthouse presently runs on Rust `stable`, however, benchmarks currently require the
`nightly` version.
### Contributing
**Lighthouse welcomes contributors with open-arms.**
Layer-1 infrastructure is a critical component for the ecosystem and relies
heavily on contributions from the community. Building Ethereum Serenity is a huge
task and we refuse to conduct an inappropriate ICO or charge licensing fees.
Instead, we fund development through grants and support from Sigma Prime.
If you would like to learn more about Ethereum Serenity and/or
[Rust](https://www.rust-lang.org/), we are more than happy to on-board you
and assign you some tasks. We aim to be as accepting and understanding as
@ -161,6 +138,9 @@ Alternatively, if you are an ETH/Rust veteran, we'd love your input. We're
always looking for the best way to implement things and welcome all
respectful criticisms.
If you are looking to contribute, please head to our
[onboarding documentation](https://github.com/sigp/lighthouse/blob/master/docs/onboarding.md).
If you'd like to contribute, try having a look through the [open
issues](https://github.com/sigp/lighthouse/issues) (tip: look for the [good
first
@ -168,123 +148,11 @@ issue](https://github.com/sigp/lighthouse/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3A
tag) and ping us on the [gitter](https://gitter.im/sigp/lighthouse) channel. We need
your support!
### Engineering Ethos
Lighthouse aims to produce many small easily-tested components, each separated
into individual crates wherever possible.
Generally, tests can be kept in the same file, as is typical in Rust.
Integration tests should be placed in the `tests` directory in the crate's
root. Particularity large (line-count) tests should be placed into a separate
file.
A function is not considered complete until a test exists for it. We produce
tests to protect against regression (accidentally breaking things) and to
provide examples that help readers of the code base understand how functions
should (or should not) be used.
Each pull request is to be reviewed by at least one "core developer" (i.e.,
someone with write-access to the repository). This helps to ensure bugs are
detected, consistency is maintained, and responsibility of errors is dispersed.
Discussion must be respectful and intellectual. Have fun and make jokes, but
always respect the limits of other people.
### Directory Structure
Here we provide an overview of the directory structure:
- `/beacon_chain`: contains logic derived directly from the specification.
E.g., shuffling algorithms, state transition logic and structs, block
validation, BLS crypto, etc.
- `/lighthouse`: contains logic specific to this client implementation. E.g.,
CLI parsing, RPC end-points, databases, etc.
## Contact
The best place for discussion is the [sigp/lighthouse gitter](https://gitter.im/sigp/lighthouse).
Ping @paulhauner or @AgeManning to get the quickest response.
# What is Ethereum Serenity
Ethereum Serenity refers to a new blockchain system currently under development by
the Ethereum Foundation and the Ethereum community. The Serenity blockchain
consists of 1,025 proof-of-stake blockchains. This includes the "beacon chain"
and 1,024 "shard chains".
Ethereum Serenity is also known as "Ethereum 2.0" and "Shasper". We prefer
Serenity as it more accurately reflects the established Ethereum roadmap (plus
we think it's a nice name).
## Beacon Chain
The concept of a beacon chain differs from existing blockchains, such as
Bitcoin and Ethereum, in that it doesn't process transactions per se. Instead,
it maintains a set of bonded (staked) validators and coordinates these to
provide services to a static set of *sub-blockchains* (i.e. shards). Each of
these shard blockchains processes normal transactions (e.g. "Transfer 5 ETH
from A to B") in parallel whilst deferring consensus mechanisms to the beacon
chain.
Major services provided by the beacon chain to its shards include the following:
- A source of entropy, likely using a [RANDAO + VDF
scheme](https://ethresear.ch/t/minimal-vdf-randomness-beacon/3566).
- Validator management, including:
- Inducting and ejecting validators.
- Assigning randomly-shuffled subsets of validators to particular shards.
- Penalizing and rewarding validators.
- Proof-of-stake consensus for shard chain blocks.
## Shard Chains
Shards are analogous to CPU cores - they're a resource where transactions can
execute in series (one-after-another). Presently, Ethereum is single-core and
can only _fully_ process one transaction at a time. Sharding allows processing
of multiple transactions simultaneously, greatly increasing the per-second
transaction capacity of Ethereum.
Each shard uses a proof-of-stake consensus mechanism and shares its validators
(stakers) with other shards. The beacon chain rotates validators
pseudo-randomly between different shards. Shards will likely be the basis of
layer-2 transaction processing schemes, however, that is not in scope of this
discussion.
## The Proof-of-Work Chain
The present-Ethereum proof-of-work (PoW) chain will host a smart contract that
enables accounts to deposit 32 ETH, a BLS public key, and some [other
parameters](https://github.com/ethereum/eth2.0-specs/blob/master/specs/casper_sharding_v2.1.md#pow-chain-changes),
allowing them to become beacon chain validators. Each beacon chain will
reference a PoW block hash allowing PoW clients to use the beacon chain as a
source of [Casper FFG finality](https://arxiv.org/abs/1710.09437), if desired.
It is a requirement that ETH can move freely between shard chains, as well as between
Serenity and present-Ethereum blockchains. The exact mechanics of these transfers remain
an active topic of research and their details are yet to be confirmed.
## Ethereum Serenity Progress
Ethereum Serenity is not fully specified and a working implementation does not yet
exist. Some teams have demos available which indicate progress, but do not
constitute a complete product. We look forward to providing user functionality
once we are ready to provide a minimum-viable user experience.
The work-in-progress Serenity specification lives
[here](https://github.com/ethereum/eth2.0-specs/blob/master/specs/casper_sharding_v2.1.md)
in the [ethereum/eth2.0-specs](https://github.com/ethereum/eth2.0-specs)
repository. The spec is still in a draft phase, however there are several teams
basing their Serenity implementations upon it while the Ethereum Foundation research
team continue to fill in the gaps. There is active discussion about the specification in the
[ethereum/sharding](https://gitter.im/ethereum/sharding) gitter channel. A
proof-of-concept implementation in Python is available at
[ethereum/beacon_chain](https://github.com/ethereum/beacon_chain).
Presently, the specification focuses almost exclusively on the beacon chain,
as it is the focus of current development efforts. Progress on shard chain
specification will soon follow.
# Donations
If you support the cause, we could certainly use donations to help fund development:

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docs/lighthouse.md Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,83 @@
# About Lighthouse
## Goals
The purpose of this project is to work alongside the Ethereum community to
implement a secure, trustworthy, open-source Ethereum Serenity client in Rust.
* **Security**: Lighthouse's main goal is to implement everything with a
security-first mindset. The goal is to ensure that all components of lighthouse
are thoroughly tested, checked and secure.
* **Trust** : As Ethereum Serenity is a Proof-of-Stake system, which
involves the interaction of the Ethereum protocol and user funds. Thus, a goal
of Lighthouse is to provide a client that is trustworthy.
All code can be tested and verified the goal of Lighthouse is to provide code
that is trusted.
* **Transparency**: Lighthouse aims at being as transparent as possible. This
goal is for Lighthouse to embrace the open-source community and allow for all
to understand the decisions, direction and changes in all aspects.
* **Error Resilience**: As Lighthouse embraces the "never `panic`" mindset, the
goal is to be resilient to errors that may occur. Providing a client that has
tolerance against errors provides further properties for a secure, trustworthy
client that Lighthouse aims to provide.
In addition to implementing a new client, the project seeks to maintain and
improve the Ethereum protocol wherever possible.
## Ideology
### Never Panic
Lighthouse will be the gateway interacting with the Proof-of-Stake system
employed by Ethereum. This requires the validation and proposal of blocks
and extremely timely responses. As part of this, Lighthouse aims to ensure
the most uptime as possible, meaning minimising the amount of
exceptions and gracefully handling any issues.
Rust's `panic` provides the ability to throw an exception and exit, this
will terminate the running processes. Thus, Lighthouse aims to use `panic`
as little as possible to minimise the possible termination cases.
### Security First Mindset
Lighthouse aims to provide a safe, secure Serenity client for the Ethereum
ecosystem. At each step of development, the aim is to have a security-first
mindset and always ensure you are following the safe, secure mindset. When
contributing to any part of the Lighthouse client, through any development,
always ensure you understand each aspect thoroughly and cover all potential
security considerations of your code.
### Functions aren't completed until they are tested
As part of the Security First mindset, we want to aim to cover as many distinct
cases. A function being developed is not considered "completed" until tests
exist for that function. The tests not only help show the correctness of the
function, but also provide a way for new developers to understand how the
function is to be called and how it works.
## Engineering Ethos
Lighthouse aims to produce many small easily-tested components, each separated
into individual crates wherever possible.
Generally, tests can be kept in the same file, as is typical in Rust.
Integration tests should be placed in the `tests` directory in the crate's
root. Particularity large (line-count) tests should be placed into a separate
file.
A function is not considered complete until a test exists for it. We produce
tests to protect against regression (accidentally breaking things) and to
provide examples that help readers of the code base understand how functions
should (or should not) be used.
Each pull request is to be reviewed by at least one "core developer" (i.e.,
someone with write-access to the repository). This helps to ensure bugs are
detected, consistency is maintained, and responsibility of errors is dispersed.
Discussion must be respectful and intellectual. Have fun and make jokes, but
always respect the limits of other people.

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@ -1,5 +1,7 @@
# Contributing to Lighthouse
[![Gitter](https://badges.gitter.im/Join%20Chat.svg)](https://gitter.im/sigp/lighthouse?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge)
Lighthouse is an open-source Ethereum Serenity client built in
[Rust](https://www.rust-lang.org/).
@ -13,40 +15,15 @@ documentation, writing extra tests or developing components, all help is
appreciated and your contributions will help not only the community but all
the contributors.
Layer-1 infrastructure is a critical component for the ecosystem and relies
heavily on contributions from the community. Building Ethereum Serenity is a
huge task and we refuse to conduct an inappropriate ICO or charge licensing
fees. Instead, we fund development through grants and support from Sigma
Prime.
If you have any additional questions, please feel free to jump on the
[gitter](https://gitter.im/sigp/lighthouse) and have a chat with all of us.
## Ideology
### Never Panic
Lighthouse will be the gateway interacting with the Proof-of-Stake system
employed by Ethereum. This requires the validation and proposal of blocks
and extremely timely responses. As part of this, Lighthouse aims to ensure
the most uptime as possible, meaning minimising the amount of
exceptions and gracefully handling any issues.
Rust's `panic` provides the ability to throw an exception and exit, this
will terminate the running processes. Thus, Lighthouse aims to use `panic`
as little as possible to minimise the possible termination cases.
### Security First Mindset
Lighthouse aims to provide a safe, secure Serenity client for the Ethereum
ecosystem. At each step of development, the aim is to have a security-first
mindset and always ensure you are following the safe, secure mindset. When
contributing to any part of the Lighthouse client, through any development,
always ensure you understand each aspect thoroughly and cover all potential
security considerations of your code.
### Functions aren't completed until they are tested
As part of the Security First mindset, we want to aim to cover as many distinct
cases. A function being developed is not considered "completed" until tests
exist for that function. The tests not only help show the correctness of the
function, but also provide a way for new developers to understand how the
function is to be called and how it works.
## Understanding Serenity
Ethereum's Serenity is based on a Proof-of-Stake based sharded beacon chain.
@ -54,59 +31,12 @@ Ethereum's Serenity is based on a Proof-of-Stake based sharded beacon chain.
(*If you don't know what that is, don't `panic`, that's what this documentation
is for!* :smile:)
### Ethereum
Read through our [Understanding
Serenity](https://github.com/sigp/lighthouse/blob/master/docs/serenity.md) docs
to learn more! :smile:
Ethereum is an open blockchain protocol, allowing for the building and use of
decentralized applications that run on blockchain technology. The blockchain can
be seen as a decentralized, distributed ledger of transactions.
General Ethereum Introduction:
* [What is Ethereum](http://ethdocs.org/en/latest/introduction/what-is-ethereum.html)
* [Ethereum Introduction](https://github.com/ethereum/wiki/wiki/Ethereum-introduction)
### Proof-of-Work and the current state of Ethereum.
Currently, Ethereum is based on the Proof-of-Work model, a Sybil resilient
mechanism to allow nodes to propose blocks to the network. Although it provides
properties that allow the blockchain to operate in an open, public
(permissionless) network, it faces it's challenges and as a result impacts
the operation of the blockchain.
The main goals to advance Ethereum is to (1) increase the scalability and
overall transaction processing power of the Ethereum world computer and (2)
find a suitable replacement for Proof-of-Work that still provides the necessary
properties that we need.
* [Proof-of-Work in Cryptocurrencies: an accessible introduction](https://blog.sigmaprime.io/what-is-proof-of-work.html)
### Serenity
As part of the original Ethereum roadmap
[\[1\]](https://blog.ethereum.org/2015/03/03/ethereum-launch-process/)
[\[2\]](http://ethdocs.org/en/latest/introduction/the-homestead-release.html),
the Proof-of-Stake integration falls under **Release Step 4:*Serenity***. With
this, a number of changes are to be made to the current Ethereum protocol to
incorporate some of the new Proof-of-Stake mechanisms as well as improve on
some of the hindrances faced by the current Proof-of-Work chain.
To now advance the current Ethereum, the decision is made to move to a sharded
Beacon chain structure where multiple shard-chains will be operating and
interacting with a central beacon chain.
(Be mindful, the specifications change occasionally, so check these to keep up
to date)
* Current Specifications:
* [Danny Ryan's "State of the Spec"](https://notes.ethereum.org/s/BJEZWNoyE) (A nice summary of the current specifications)
* [Ethereum Serenity - Phase 0: Beacon Chain Spec](https://github.com/ethereum/eth2.0-specs/blob/master/specs/core/0_beacon-chain.md)
* [Ethereum Serenity - Phase 1: Sharded Data Chains](https://github.com/ethereum/eth2.0-specs/blob/master/specs/core/1_shard-data-chains.md)
* [Beacon Chain - Vitalik Buterin and Justin Drake explain](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GAywmwGToUI)
* Understanding Sharding:
* [Prysmatic Labs: Sharding Explained](https://medium.com/prysmatic-labs/how-to-scale-ethereum-sharding-explained-ba2e283b7fce)
* Other relevant resources
* [Proof of Stake - Casper FFG](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uQ3IqLDf-oo)
The document explains the necessary fundamentals for understanding Ethereum,
Proof-of-Stake and the Serenity we are working towards.
## Development Onboarding
@ -142,8 +72,7 @@ allows you to easily install versions of rust.
$ curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh
```
**Windows (You need a bit more):**
**Windows (You need a bit more):**J
* Install the Visual Studio 2015 with C++ support
* Install Rustup using: https://static.rust-lang.org/rustup/dist/x86_64-pc-windows-msvc/rustup-init.exe
* You can then use the ``VS2015 x64 Native Tools Command Prompt`` and run:
@ -161,7 +90,6 @@ handy for handling dependencies and helping to modularise your project better.
*Note: If you've installed rust through rustup, you should have ``cargo``
installed.*
#### Rust Terminology
When developing rust, you'll come across some terminology that differs to
@ -217,6 +145,8 @@ and intellectual. Have fun, but always respect the limits of other people.
**Testing**
*"A function is not considered complete until tests exist for it."*
Generally, tests can be self-contained in the same file. Integration tests
should be added into the ``tests/`` directory in the crate's **root**.