A Two-Layer Blockchain Sharding Protocol Leveraging Safety and Liveness for Enhanced Performance
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Article in proceedings › Research › peer-review
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A Two-Layer Blockchain Sharding Protocol Leveraging Safety and Liveness for Enhanced Performance. / Xu, Yibin; Zheng, Jingyi; Duedder, Boris; Slaats, Tijs; Zhou, Yongluan.
Network and Distributed System Security (NDSS) Symposium 2024. NDSS, 2024.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Article in proceedings › Research › peer-review
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TY - GEN
T1 - A Two-Layer Blockchain Sharding Protocol Leveraging Safety and Liveness for Enhanced Performance
AU - Xu, Yibin
AU - Zheng, Jingyi
AU - Duedder, Boris
AU - Slaats, Tijs
AU - Zhou, Yongluan
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Sharding is a critical technique that enhances the scalability of blockchain technology. However, existing protocols often assume adversarial nodes in a general term without considering the different types of attacks, which limits transaction throughput at runtime because attacks on liveness could be mitigated. There have been attempts to increase transaction throughput by separately handling the attacks; however, they have security vulnerabilities. This paper introduces Reticulum, a novel sharding protocol that overcomes these limitations and achieves enhanced scalability in a blockchain network without security vulnerabilities.Reticulum employs a two-phase design that dynamically adjusts transaction throughput based on runtime adversarial attacks on either or both liveness and safety. It consists of `control' and `process' shards in two layers corresponding to the two phases. Process shards are subsets of control shards, with each process shard expected to contain at least one honest node with high confidence. Conversely, control shards are expected to have a majority of honest nodes with high confidence. Reticulum leverages unanimous voting in the first phase to involve fewer nodes in accepting/rejecting a block, allowing more parallel process shards. The control shard finalizes the decision made in the first phase and serves as a lifeline to resolve disputes when they surface.Experiments demonstrate that the unique design of Reticulum empowers high transaction throughput and robustness in the face of different types of attacks in the network, making it superior to existing sharding protocols for blockchain networks.
AB - Sharding is a critical technique that enhances the scalability of blockchain technology. However, existing protocols often assume adversarial nodes in a general term without considering the different types of attacks, which limits transaction throughput at runtime because attacks on liveness could be mitigated. There have been attempts to increase transaction throughput by separately handling the attacks; however, they have security vulnerabilities. This paper introduces Reticulum, a novel sharding protocol that overcomes these limitations and achieves enhanced scalability in a blockchain network without security vulnerabilities.Reticulum employs a two-phase design that dynamically adjusts transaction throughput based on runtime adversarial attacks on either or both liveness and safety. It consists of `control' and `process' shards in two layers corresponding to the two phases. Process shards are subsets of control shards, with each process shard expected to contain at least one honest node with high confidence. Conversely, control shards are expected to have a majority of honest nodes with high confidence. Reticulum leverages unanimous voting in the first phase to involve fewer nodes in accepting/rejecting a block, allowing more parallel process shards. The control shard finalizes the decision made in the first phase and serves as a lifeline to resolve disputes when they surface.Experiments demonstrate that the unique design of Reticulum empowers high transaction throughput and robustness in the face of different types of attacks in the network, making it superior to existing sharding protocols for blockchain networks.
U2 - 10.14722/ndss.2024.24006
DO - 10.14722/ndss.2024.24006
M3 - Article in proceedings
SN - 1-891562-93-2
BT - Network and Distributed System Security (NDSS) Symposium 2024
PB - NDSS
ER -
ID: 380737922