BIP: 155
Layer: Peer Services
Title: addrv2 message
Author: Wladimir J. van der Laan
Comments-Summary: No comments yet.
Comments-URI: https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/wiki/Comments:BIP-0155
Status: Draft
Type: Standards Track
Created: 2019-02-27
License: BSD-2-Clause
==Introduction==
===Abstract===
This document proposes a new P2P message to gossip longer node addresses over the P2P network.
This is required to support new-generation Onion addresses, I2P, and potentially other networks
that have longer endpoint addresses than fit in the 128 bits of the current addr
message.
===Copyright===
This BIP is licensed under the 2-clause BSD license.
===Motivation===
Tor v3 hidden services are part of the stable release of Tor since version 0.3.2.9. They have
various advantages compared to the old hidden services, among which better encryption and privacy
[[https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/tree/rend-spec-v3.txt Tor Rendezvous Specification - Version 3]].
These services have 256 bit addresses and thus do not fit in the existing addr
message, which encapsulates onion addresses in OnionCat IPv6 addresses.
Other transport-layer protocols such as I2P have always used longer
addresses. This change would make it possible to gossip such addresses over the
P2P network, so that other peers can connect to them.
==Specification==
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD",
"SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be
interpreted as described in RFC 2119[[https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2119 RFC 2119]].
The addrv2
message is defined as a message where pchCommand == "addrv2"
.
It is serialized in the standard encoding for P2P messages.
Its format is similar to the current addr
message format
[[https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#addr Bitcoin Developer Reference: addr message]], with the difference that the
fixed 16-byte IP address is replaced by a network ID and a variable-length address, and the time and services format has been changed to VARINT.
This means that the message contains a serialized std::vector
of the following structure:
{| class="wikitable" style="width: auto; text-align: center; font-size: smaller; table-layout: fixed;"
!Type
!Name
!Description
|-
| VARINT
(unsigned)
| time
| Time that this node was last seen as connected to the network. A time in Unix epoch time format, up to 64 bits wide.
|-
| VARINT
(unsigned)
| services
| Service bits. A 64-wide bit field.
|-
| uint8_t
| networkID
| Network identifier. An 8-bit value that specifies which network is addressed.
|-
| std::vector
| addr
| Network address. The interpretation depends on networkID.
|-
| uint16_t
| port
| Network port. If not relevant for the network this MUST be 0.
|}
One message can contain up to 1,000 addresses. Clients SHOULD reject messages with more addresses.
Field addr
has a variable length, with a maximum of 512 bytes (4096 bits).
Clients SHOULD reject messages with longer addresses, irrespective of the network ID.
The list of reserved network IDs is as follows:
{| class="wikitable" style="width: auto; text-align: center; font-size: smaller; table-layout: fixed;"
!Network ID
!Enumeration
!Address length (bytes)
!Description
|-
| 0x01
| IPV4
| 4
| IPv4 address (globally routed internet)
|-
| 0x02
| IPV6
| 16
| IPv6 address (globally routed internet)
|-
| 0x03
| TORV2
| 10
| Tor v2 hidden service address
|-
| 0x04
| TORV3
| 32
| Tor v3 hidden service address
|-
| 0x05
| I2P
| 32
| I2P overlay network address
|-
| 0x06
| CJDNS
| 16
| Cjdns overlay network address
|}
Clients are RECOMMENDED to gossip addresses from all known networks even if they are currently not connected to some of them. That could help multi-homed nodes and make it more difficult for an observer to tell which networks a node is connected to.
Clients SHOULD NOT gossip addresses from unknown networks because they have no means to validate those addresses and so can be tricked to gossip invalid addresses.
Further network ID numbers MUST be reserved in a new BIP document.
Clients SHOULD reject messages that contain addresses that have a different length than specified in this table for a specific network ID, as these are meaningless.
See the appendices for the address encodings to be used for the various networks.
==Signaling support and compatibility==
Introduce a new message type sendaddrv2
. Sending such a message indicates that a node can understand and prefers to receive addrv2
messages instead of addr
messages. I.e. "Send me addrv2".
sendaddrv2
SHOULD be sent after receiving the verack
message from the peer.
For older peers, that did not emit sendaddrv2
, keep sending the legacy addr
message, ignoring addresses with the newly introduced address types.
==Reference implementation==
The reference implementation is available at (to be done)
==Acknowledgements==
- Jonas Schnelli: change services
field to VARINT, to make the message more compact in the likely case instead of always using 8 bytes.
- Luke-Jr: change time
field to VARINT, for post-2038 compatibility.
- Gregory Maxwell: various suggestions regarding extensibility
==Appendix A: Tor v2 address encoding==
The new message introduces a separate network ID for TORV2
.
Clients MUST send Tor hidden service addresses with this network ID, with the 80-bit hidden service ID in the address field. This is the same as the representation in the legacy addr
message, minus the 6 byte prefix of the OnionCat wrapping.
Clients SHOULD ignore OnionCat (fd87:d87e:eb43::/48
) addresses on receive if they come with the IPV6
network ID.
==Appendix B: Tor v3 address encoding==
According to the spec [[https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/tree/rend-spec-v3.txt Tor Rendezvous Specification - Version 3: Encoding onion addresses]], next-gen .onion
addresses are encoded as follows:
onion_address = base32(PUBKEY | CHECKSUM | VERSION) + ".onion"
CHECKSUM = H(".onion checksum" | PUBKEY | VERSION)[:2]
where:
- PUBKEY is the 32 bytes ed25519 master pubkey of the hidden service.
- VERSION is an one byte version field (default value '\x03')
- ".onion checksum" is a constant string
- CHECKSUM is truncated to two bytes before inserting it in onion_address
Tor v3 addresses MUST be sent with the TORV3
network ID, with the 32-byte PUBKEY part in the address field. As VERSION will always be '\x03' in the case of v3 addresses, this is enough to reconstruct the onion address.
==Appendix C: I2P address encoding==
Like Tor, I2P naming uses a base32-encoded address format[[https://geti2p.net/en/docs/naming#base32 I2P: Naming and address book]].
I2P uses 52 characters (256 bits) to represent the full SHA-256 hash, followed by .b32.i2p
.
I2P addresses MUST be sent with the I2P
network ID, with the decoded SHA-256 hash as address field.
==Appendix D: Cjdns address encoding==
Cjdns addresses are simply IPv6 addresses in the fc00::/8
range[[https://github.com/cjdelisle/cjdns/blob/6e46fa41f5647d6b414612d9d63626b0b952746b/doc/Whitepaper.md#pulling-it-all-together Cjdns whitepaper: Pulling It All Together]]. They MUST be sent with the CJDNS
network ID.
==References==