ZEXE (pronounced /zeksē/) is a Rust library for decentralized private computation.
This library was initially developed as part of the paper "ZEXE: Enabling Decentralized Private Computation", and it is released under the MIT License and the Apache v2 License (see License).
WARNING: This is an academic proof-of-concept prototype, and in particular has not received careful code review. This implementation is NOT ready for production use.
This library implements a ledger-based system that enables users to execute offline computations and subsequently produce publicly-verifiable transactions that attest to the correctness of these offline executions. The transactions contain zero-knowledge succinct arguments (zkSNARKs) attesting to the correctness of the offline computations, and provide strong notions of privacy and succinctness.
- Privacy - transactions reveal no information about the offline computation.
- Succinctness - transactions can be validated in time that is independent of the offline computation.
- Application isolation - malicious applications cannot affect the execution of honest applications.
- Application interaction - applications can safely communicate with each other.
Informally, the library provides the ability to create transactions that run arbitrary (Turing-complete) scripts on hidden data stored on the ledger. In more detail, the library implements a cryptographic primitive known as decentralized private computation (DPC) schemes, which are described in detail in the ZEXE paper.
This repository contains several Rust crates that implement the different building blocks of ZEXE. The high-level structure of the repository is as follows.
algebra
: Rust crate that provides finite fields and elliptic curvescrypto-primitives
: Rust crate that implements some useful cryptographic primitives (and constraints for them)dpc
: Rust crate that implements DPC schemes (the main cryptographic primitive in this repository)ff-fft
: Rust crate that provides efficient finite field polynomial arithmetic based on finite field FFTsr1cs-core
: Rust crate that defines core interfaces for a Rank-1 Constraint System (R1CS)r1cs-std
: Rust crate that provides various gadgets used to construct R1CSgm17
: Rust crate that implements the zkSNARK of Groth and Mallergroth16
: Rust crate that implements the zkSNARK of Groth
In addition, there is a bench-utils
crate which contains infrastructure for benchmarking. This crate includes macros for timing code segments and is used for profiling the building blocks of ZEXE.
The library compiles on the stable
toolchain of the Rust compiler. To install the latest version of Rust, first install rustup
by following the instructions here, or via your platform's package manager. Once rustup
is installed, install the Rust toolchain by invoking:
rustup install stable
After that, use cargo
, the standard Rust build tool, to build the library:
git clone https://github.com/scipr-lab/zexe.git
cd zexe/dpc
cargo build --release
This library comes with unit tests for each of the provided crates. Run the tests with:
cargo test
Lastly, this library comes with benchmarks for the following crates:
These benchmarks require the nightly Rust toolchain; to install this, run rustup install nightly
. Then, to run benchmarks, run the following command:
cargo +nightly bench
ZEXE is licensed under either of the following licenses, at your discretion.
- Apache License Version 2.0 (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution submitted for inclusion in ZEXE by you shall be dual licensed as above (as defined in the Apache v2 License), without any additional terms or conditions.
ZEXE: Enabling Decentralized Private Computation
Sean Bowe, Alessandro Chiesa, Matthew Green, Ian Miers, Pratyush Mishra, Howard Wu
IEEE S&P 2020 (IACR ePrint Report 2018/962)
This work was supported by: a Google Faculty Award; the National Science Foundation; the UC Berkeley Center for Long-Term Cybersecurity; and donations from the Ethereum Foundation, the Interchain Foundation, and Qtum.
Some parts of the finite field arithmetic, elliptic curve arithmetic, FFTs, and multi-threading infrastructure in the algebra
crate have been adapted from code in the ff
, pairing
, and bellman
crates, developed by Sean Bowe and others from Zcash.