> How will the code distinguish between the old scheme: > [one-byte-version][20-byte-hash][4-byte-checksum] > and the new? > > 1 in 256 old addresses will have a first-byte-of-checksum that matches the > new address class; I guess the code would do something like: > > a) If the 4-byte checksum matches, then assume it is a singlesig address (1 > in 2^32 multisig addresses will incorrectly match) > b) If the one-byte-address-class and 3-byte checksum match, then it is a > valid p2sh > c) Otherwise, invalid address
Exactly! > > The 1 in 2^32 multisig addresses also being valid singlesig addresses makes > me think this scheme won't work-- an attacker willing to generate 8 billion > or so ECDSA keys could generate a single/multisig collision. I'm not sure > how that could be leveraged to their advantage, but I bet they'd find a way. Nope - its almost like calling the version:0+5 possible collision with new evil, say "ponzicoin" with version=5 a possible flaw that could be exploited... And you can already create non-existing addresses with a matching checksum... > I'd also encourage you to actually implement your idea between steps 3 and 4. > But in this particular case, I think an attacker being able to create > singlesig/p2sh address collisions counts as a major flaw. I will rest my case, not due to the "flaw", but I got some info on the bitfields of the "version" (thanks Luke!) - this makes the +5 less arbitrary, however, I don't think the bitfield interpretation is that well known, so there might already be "version"-collisions...: Network class: 00xxxxxx - main network 01xxxxxx - reserved 10xxxxxx - reserved 11xxxxxx - test network Network: xx00xxxx - bitcoin xx01xxxx - reserved xx10xxxx - OTHER (next octet) xx11xxxx - Namecoin Network specific: xxxx000y - PubKeyHash xxxx001y - reserved xxxx010y - p2sh xxxx011y - public key (raw) xxxx100y - signature xxxx101y - reserved xxxx110y - private key (raw) xxxx111y - OTHER (next octet) y = 0/1 depending on aesthetics (I guess to force the address to be either 1 or 3). This also opens up for extensions - (if xx10xxxx or xxxx111x) the next byte will be part of the version. /M > > -- > -- > Gavin Andresen ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Try before you buy = See our experts in action! The most comprehensive online learning library for Microsoft developers is just $99.99! Visual Studio, SharePoint, SQL - plus HTML5, CSS3, MVC3, Metro Style Apps, more. Free future releases when you subscribe now! http://p.sf.net/sfu/learndevnow-dev2 _______________________________________________ Bitcoin-development mailing list Bitcoin-development@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bitcoin-development