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0.0.0 | Jun 20, 2023 |
#5 in #parachain
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Used in 15 crates
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Bridge Parachains Pallet
The bridge parachains pallet is a light client for one or several parachains of the bridged relay chain. It serves as a source of finalized parachain headers and is used when you need to build a bridge with a parachain.
The pallet requires bridge GRANDPA pallet to be deployed at the same chain - it is used to verify storage proofs, generated at the bridged relay chain.
A Brief Introduction into Parachains Finality
You can find detailed information on parachains finality in the Polkadot-SDK repository. This section gives a brief overview of how the parachain finality works and how to build a light client for a parachain.
The main thing there is that the parachain generates blocks on its own, but it can't achieve finality without
help of its relay chain. Instead, the parachain collators create a block and hand it over to the relay chain
validators. Validators validate the block and register the new parachain head in the
Heads
map
of the paras
pallet,
deployed at the relay chain. Keep in mind that this pallet, deployed at a relay chain, is NOT a bridge pallet,
even though the names are similar.
And what the bridge parachains pallet does, is simply verifying storage proofs of parachain heads within that
Heads
map. It does that using relay chain header, that has been previously imported by the
bridge GRANDPA pallet. Once the proof is verified, the pallet knows that the given parachain
header has been finalized by the relay chain. The parachain header fields may then be used to verify storage
proofs, coming from the parachain. This allows the pallet to be used e.g. as a source of finality for the messages
pallet.
Pallet Operations
The main entrypoint of the pallet is the submit_parachain_heads
call. It has three arguments:
-
storage proof of parachain heads from the
Heads
map; -
parachain identifiers and hashes of their heads from the storage proof;
-
the relay block, at which the storage proof has been generated.
The pallet may track multiple parachains. And the parachains may use different primitives - one may use 128-bit block
numbers, other - 32-bit. To avoid extra decode operations, the pallet is using relay chain block number to order
parachain headers. Any finalized descendant of finalized relay block RB
, which has parachain block PB
in
its Heads
map, is guaranteed to have either PB
, or its descendant. So parachain block number grows with relay
block number.
The pallet may reject parachain head if it already knows better (or the same) head. In addition, pallet rejects heads of untracked parachains.
The pallet doesn't track anything behind parachain heads. So it requires no initialization - it is ready to accept headers right after deployment.
Non-Essential Functionality
There may be a special account in every runtime where the bridge parachains module is deployed. This account, named 'module owner', is like a module-level sudo account - he's able to halt and resume all module operations without requiring runtime upgrade. Calls that are related to this account are:
-
fn set_owner()
: current module owner may call it to transfer "ownership" to another account; -
fn set_operating_mode()
: the module owner (or sudo account) may call this function to stop all module operations. After this call, all finality proofs will be rejected until furtherset_operating_mode
call'. This call may be used when something extraordinary happens with the bridge.
If pallet owner is not defined, the governance may be used to make those calls.
Signed Extension to Reject Obsolete Headers
It'd be better for anyone (for chain and for submitters) to reject all transactions that are submitting already known parachain heads to the pallet. This way, we leave block space to other useful transactions and we don't charge concurrent submitters for their honest actions.
To deal with that, we have a signed extension that may be added to the runtime. It does exactly what is required - rejects all transactions with already known heads. The submitter pays nothing for such transactions - they're simply removed from the transaction pool, when the block is built.
The signed extension, however, is a bit limited - it only works with transactions that provide single parachain head. So it won't work with multiple parachain heads transactions. This fits our needs for Kusama <> Polkadot bridge. If you need to deal with other transaction formats, you may implement similar extension for your runtime.
You may also take a look at the generate_bridge_reject_obsolete_headers_and_messages
macro that bundles several similar signed extensions in a single one.
Parachains Finality Relay
We have an offchain actor, who is watching for new parachain heads and submits them to the bridged chain. It is the parachains relay - you may look at the crate level documentation and the code.
Release
Polkadot SDK stable2409
Dependencies
~20–35MB
~594K SLoC