fip | title | author | discussions-to | status | type | category | created | spec-sections | requires | replaces | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0037 |
Gas model adjustment for for user programmability |
Raúl Kripalani (@raulk), Steven Allen (@stebalien) |
Withdrawn |
Technical |
Core |
2022-03-09 |
|
|
N/A |
This FIP expands on FIP-0032 (Gas model adjustment for non-programmable FVM). It introduces new gas fees to cover the costs of functionalities and system tasks related to the deployment and execution of user-deployed on-chain actors. It also prices syscalls that were previously free for built-in actors.
This FIP introduces gas fees for actor deployment, actor loading, and actor memory expansion. It modifies existing fees, such as the hashing fee, which is now made dynamic. Finally, it prices syscalls that are currently unpriced, and adjusts the permissions on syscalls that are now considered privileged.
The ability to deploy user-defined actors results in new workloads and tasks for the network to execute. These introduce new resource consumption pressures in terms of compute, memory, chain bandwidth, state footprint, and other axes. User transactions triggering these workloads need to be subjected to gas fees in order to compensate the network for this new work, as well as to size blocks appropriate to sustain the 30s epoch time.
Here’s an overview of proposed changes to the existing gas model. We explain each one in detail in the following sections.
- Introduce a fee for actor installation, the act of deploying of new actor code to the chain.
- Introduce a fee for actor loading, the act of loading an actor’s Wasm module to handle a call.
- Introduce memory expansion gas.
- Adjust the hashing fee to vary depending on digest function and length of plaintext.
- Price currently unpriced syscalls.
- Restrict the charge_gas syscall.
We specify an actor installation fee. This fee covers the cost of accepting Wasm bytecode submitted by a user, persisting it, and preparing it for execution.
This includes:
- Storing the Wasm bytecode in the state tree.
- Validating the Wasm bytecode: includes the cost of performing static code analysis to validate its structure, integrity, and conformance with system policies (e.g. number of functions, maximum stack length, usage of Wasm extensions, etc.)
- Potentially optimizing the Wasm bytecode.
- Weaving in the gas metering logic.
- Compiling the Wasm bytecode into machine code.
- Potentially progressively optimizing the machine code.
Pricing formula
<<TODO>>
We introduce an actor loading fee. In the FVM, all Wasm bytecode is compiled and cached as machine code on disk (notwithstanding that clients may apply caching policies to retain the hottest actors in memory).
For every non-value transfer message1, the actor’s precompiled module must be loaded and the actor’s entrypoint must be invoked. The actor loading fee covers that cost, and is computed over the length of the original Wasm bytecode2 and complexity factors. These factors are determined at deployment time through static code analysis, and include:
- number of imported syscalls
- number of globals
- number of exported entrypoints3
The loading fee is additive to the extant call fee: loading bytecode and invoking the loaded bytecode are two separate acts. In fact, an actor loaded once can be invoked multiple times during a single call stack. This FIP proposes no fee discount/exemption on deduplicated actor loading (such as on recursion/reentrancy), but we may consider it in the future.
Pricing formula
<<TODO>>
FVM actors are allowed to allocate memory within predefined bounds. Wasm memory is measured and allocated in pages. A page equates to 64KiB of memory. Page usage is metered and limited per call; reentrant or recursive calls are independent of one another for purposes of memory consumption.
Starting with this FIP, actor invocations are granted 1 page for free (64KiB), and the cost of that page is accounted for in the call fee. This avoids an immediate memory expansion operation on every invocation, as most actors need some memory to do useful work.
An actor can use any number of pages, but the total page count for the entire
call stack cannot exceed 8192 pages, i.e. 512MiB. The next allocation must fail
with an SysErrOutOfMemory
.
We introduce a memory expansion fee. Today, we charge a fee for the memory expansion operation, dependent on the number of pages requested at a time. This is to account for the memory zeroing cost on allocation.
This fee does not aim to model the cost of memory usage, because the presence of a hard limit in a sequential execution environment means that all implementations must preallocate and reserve the maximum amount of allocatable memory (512MiB) anyway. So, in this context, memory is not a shared or scarce resource to tax4.
<<TODO: consider moving the memory policy to a FIP of its own>>
Pricing formula
<<TODO>>
Today’s syscall for hashing assumes a Blake2b-256 digest function. This syscall will be generalized, so it can hash over a predetermined set of multihash digest functions. Because the computational effort varies per digest function, so does the updated hashing fee.
<<TODO: specify the syscall generalization in a FIP of its own, or bundle with memory policy>>
Pricing formula
<<TODO>>
In Filecoin network version 15 and below, these syscalls (or equivalent operations) are unpriced. With this FIP, they will acquire a price:
network::epoch, network::version
,network::base_fee
,message::caller
,message::receiver
,message::method_number
,message::value_received
,debug::debug_enabled
- These syscalls retrieve static, contextual information. They are charged a flat syscall fee of <<TODO: value>>.
actor::get_actor_code_cid
,actor::new_actor_address
,self::current_balance()
- These syscalls query the actor’s node in the state tree. They are charged a flat syscall fee of <<TODO: value>>.
rand::get_randomness_from_tickets
,rand::get_randomness_from_beacon
:- These syscalls access randomness. They do so traversing the FVM<>node boundary. The cost of these syscalls is proportional to the length of their input, but not to the lookback because nodes are expected to cache randomness up to the maximum lookback in a ring buffer like data structure.
<<TODO: limit the lookback>>
- The cost of these syscalls is: <<TODO: formula>>.
This syscall is available to all actors, but it will be restricted such that
only built-in actors can effectively make use of it. User-deployed actors will
have their transactions aborted with exit code SysErrForbidden
when attempting
to invoke this syscall.
<<TODO>>
<<TODO>>
<<TODO>>
<<TODO>>
<<TODO>>
<<TODO>>
For clients relying on the reference FVM implementation (filecoin-project/ref-fvm), the implementation of this FIP will be transparent, as it is self-contained inside the FVM.
Copyright and related rights waived via CC0.
Footnotes
-
Ideally, it would depend on the length of the compiled machine code (as this is what’s effectively loaded at invocation time). But because machine code is compiler- and platform-dependent, that approach is not feasible. ↩
-
Today, value transfers are handled entirely inside the VM. In the future, we may want to delegate to the actor. This could be achieved by introducing the notion of a value transfer entrypoint: a publicly exported function invoked to handle messages with no payload. At deployment time, the FVM would need to memorize if a value transfer entrypoint exists, to determine when actor code should be loaded and when not. ↩
-
Currently, actors only support one entrypoint: the
invoke
function. Support for multiple entrypoints may be added in the future to handle value transfers, code upgrades, and lazy state migrations. ↩ -
This will change once Filecoin switches to parallel execution, and memory becomes a shared resource that determines scheduling decisions and task bin-packing. But even under that model, it is unlikely for memory usage costs to be folded into gas. ↩