Vote Extensions
This section describes how the application can define and use vote extensions defined in ABCI++.
Extend Vote​
ABCI2.0 (colloquially called ABCI++) allows an application to extend a pre-commit vote with arbitrary data. This process does NOT have to be deterministic, and the data returned can be unique to the
validator process. The Cosmos SDK defines baseapp.ExtendVoteHandler
:
type ExtendVoteHandler func(Context, *abci.ExtendVoteRequest) (*abci.ExtendVoteResponse, error)
An application can set this handler in app.go
via the baseapp.SetExtendVoteHandler
BaseApp
option function. The sdk.ExtendVoteHandler
, if defined, is called during
the ExtendVote
ABCI method. Note, if an application decides to implement
baseapp.ExtendVoteHandler
, it MUST return a non-nil VoteExtension
. However, the vote
extension can be empty. See here
for more details.
There are many decentralized censorship-resistant use cases for vote extensions. For example, a validator may want to submit prices for a price oracle or encryption shares for an encrypted transaction mempool. Note, an application should be careful to consider the size of the vote extensions as they could increase latency in block production. See here for more details.
Click here if you would like a walkthrough of how to implement vote extensions.
Verify Vote Extension​
Similar to extending a vote, an application can also verify vote extensions from
other validators when validating their pre-commits. For a given vote extension,
this process MUST be deterministic. The Cosmos SDK defines sdk.VerifyVoteExtensionHandler
:
type VerifyVoteExtensionHandler func(Context, *abci.VerifyVoteExtensionRequest) (*abci.VerifyVoteExtensionResponse, error)
An application can set this handler in app.go
via the baseapp.SetVerifyVoteExtensionHandler
BaseApp
option function. The sdk.VerifyVoteExtensionHandler
, if defined, is called
during the VerifyVoteExtension
ABCI method. If an application defines a vote
extension handler, it should also define a verification handler. Note, not all
validators will share the same view of what vote extensions they verify depending
on how votes are propagated. See here
for more details.
Additionally, please keep in mind that performance can be degraded if vote extensions are too big (see vote extension testbed), so we highly recommend a size validation in VerifyVoteExtensions
.
Vote Extension Propagation​
The agreed upon vote extensions at height H
are provided to the proposing validator
at height H+1
during PrepareProposal
. As a result, the vote extensions are
not natively provided or exposed to the remaining validators during ProcessProposal
.
As a result, if an application requires that the agreed upon vote extensions from
height H
are available to all validators at H+1
, the application must propagate
these vote extensions manually in the block proposal itself. This can be done by
"injecting" them into the block proposal, since the Txs
field in PrepareProposal
is just a slice of byte slices.
FinalizeBlock
will ignore any byte slice that doesn't implement an sdk.Tx
, so
any injected vote extensions will safely be ignored in FinalizeBlock
. For more
details on propagation, see the ABCI++ 2.0 ADR.
Recovery of injected Vote Extensions​
As stated before, vote extensions can be injected into a block proposal (along with
other transactions in the Txs
field). The Cosmos SDK provides a pre-FinalizeBlock
hook to allow applications to recover vote extensions, perform any necessary
computation on them, and then store the results in the cached store. These results
will be available to the application during the subsequent FinalizeBlock
call.
An example of how a pre-FinalizeBlock hook could look like is shown below:
app.SetPreBlocker(func(ctx sdk.Context, req *abci.RequestFinalizeBlock) error {
allVEs := []VE{} // store all parsed vote extensions here
for _, tx := range req.Txs {
// define a custom function that tries to parse the tx as a vote extension
ve, ok := parseVoteExtension(tx)
if !ok {
continue
}
allVEs = append(allVEs, ve)
}
// perform any necessary computation on the vote extensions and store the result
// in the cached store
result := compute(allVEs)
err := storeVEResult(ctx, result)
if err != nil {
return err
}
return nil
})
Then, in an app's module, the application can retrieve the result of the computation of vote extensions from the cached store:
func (k Keeper) BeginBlocker(ctx context.Context) error {
// retrieve the result of the computation of vote extensions from the cached store
result, err := k.GetVEResult(ctx)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// use the result of the computation of vote extensions
k.setSomething(result)
return nil
}