Newer
Older
// Copyright 2017-2019 Parity Technologies (UK) Ltd.
// This file is part of Substrate.
// Substrate is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
// it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
// the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
// (at your option) any later version.
// Substrate is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
// but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
// GNU General Public License for more details.
// You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
// along with Substrate. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
//! # Staking Module
//!
//! <!-- Original author of paragraph: @gavofyork -->
//! The staking module is the means by which a set of network maintainers (known as "authorities" in some contexts and "validators" in others)
//! are chosen based upon those who voluntarily place funds under deposit. Under deposit, those funds are rewarded under
//! normal operation but are held at pain of "slash" (expropriation) should the staked maintainer be found not to be
//! discharging their duties properly.
//! You can start using the Staking module by implementing the staking [`Trait`].
//!
//! ## Overview
//!
//! ### Terminology
//! <!-- Original author of paragraph: @gavofyork -->
//!
//! - Staking: The process of locking up funds for some time, placing them at risk of slashing (loss) in order to become a rewarded maintainer of the network.
//! - Validating: The process of running a node to actively maintain the network, either by producing blocks or guaranteeing finality of the chain.
//! - Nominating: The process of placing staked funds behind one or more validators in order to share in any reward, and punishment, they take.
//! - Stash account: The account holding an owner's funds used for staking.
//! - Controller account: The account which controls an owner's funds for staking.
//! - Era: A (whole) number of sessions, which is the period that the validator set (and each validator's active nominator set) is recalculated and where rewards are paid out.
//! - Slash: The punishment of a staker by reducing their funds ([reference](#references)).
//!
//! ### Goals
//! <!-- Original author of paragraph: @gavofyork -->
//!
//! The staking system in Substrate NPoS is designed to achieve three goals:
//! - It should be possible to stake funds that are controlled by a cold wallet.
//! - It should be possible to withdraw some, or deposit more, funds without interrupting the role of an entity.
//! - It should be possible to switch between roles (nominator, validator, idle) with minimal overhead.
//!
//! ### Scenarios
//!
//! #### Staking
//!
//! Almost any interaction with the staking module requires at least one account to become **bonded**, also known as
//! being a **staker**. For this, all that it is needed is a secondary _**stash account**_ which will hold the staked funds.
//! Henceforth, the former account that initiated the interest is called the **controller** and the latter, holding the
//! funds, is named the **stash**. Also, note that this implies that entering the staking process requires an _account
//! pair_, one to take the role of the controller and one to be the frozen stash account (any value locked in
//! stash cannot be used, hence called _frozen_). This process in the public API is mostly referred to as _bonding_ via
//! the `bond()` function.
//!
//! Any account pair successfully placed at stake can accept three possible roles, namely: `validate`, `nominate` or
//! simply `chill`. Note that during the process of accepting these roles, the _controller_ account is always responsible
//! for declaring interest and the _stash_ account stays untouched, without directly interacting in any operation.
//!
//! #### Validating
//!
//! A **validator** takes the role of either validating blocks or ensuring their finality, maintaining the veracity of
//! the network. A validator should avoid both any sort of malicious misbehavior and going offline.
//! Bonded accounts that state interest in being a validator do NOT get immediately chosen as a validator. Instead, they
//! are declared as a _candidate_ and they _might_ get elected at the _next **era**_ as a validator. The result of the
//! election is determined by nominators and their votes. An account can become a validator via the `validate()` call.
//!
//! #### Nomination
//!
//! A **nominator** does not take any _direct_ role in maintaining the network, instead, it votes on a set of validators
//! to be elected. Once interest in nomination is stated by an account, it takes effect _immediately_, meaning that its
//! votes will be taken into account at the next election round. As mentioned above, a nominator must also place some
//! funds in a stash account, essentially indicating the _weight_ of its vote. In some sense, the nominator bets on the
//! honesty of a set of validators by voting for them, with the goal of having a share of the reward granted to them.
//! Any rewards given to a validator is shared among that validator and all of the nominators that voted for it. The
//! same logic applies to the slash of a validator; if a validator misbehaves all of its nominators also get slashed.
//! This rule incentivizes the nominators to NOT vote for the misbehaving/offline validators as much as possible, simply
//! because the nominators will also lose funds if they vote poorly. An account can become a nominator via the
//! `nominate()` call.
//!
//! #### Rewards and Slash
//!
//! The **reward and slashing** procedure are the core of the staking module, attempting to _embrace valid behavior_
//! while _punishing any misbehavior or lack of availability_. Slashing can occur at any point in time, once
//! misbehavior is reported. One such misbehavior is a validator being detected as offline more than a certain number of
//! times. Once slashing is determined, a value is deducted from the balance of the validator and all the nominators who
//! voted for this validator. Same rules apply to the rewards in the sense of being shared among a validator and its
//! associated nominators.
//!
//! Finally, any of the roles above can choose to step back temporarily and just chill for a while. This means that if
//! they are a nominator, they will not be considered as voters anymore and if they are validators, they will no longer
//! be a candidate for the next election (again, both effects apply at the beginning of the next era). An account can
//! step back via the `chill()` call.
//!
//! ## Interface
//!
//! ### Types
//!
//! - `Currency`: Used as the measurement means of staking and funds management.
//!
//! ### Dispatchable
//!
//! The Dispatchable functions of the staking module enable the steps needed for entities to accept and change their
//! role, alongside some helper functions to get/set the metadata of the module.
//!
//! Please refer to the [`Call`] enum and its associated variants for a detailed list of dispatchable functions.
//!
//! ### Public
//! The staking module contains many public storage items and (im)mutable functions. Please refer to the [struct list](#structs)
//! below and the [`Module`](https://crates.parity.io/srml_staking/struct.Module.html) struct definition for more details.
//!
//! ## Usage
//!
//!
//! ### Snippet: Bonding and Accepting Roles
//!
//! An arbitrary account pair, given that the associated stash has the required funds, can become stakers via the following call:
//!
//! ```rust,ignore
//! // bond account 3 as stash
//! // account 4 as controller
//! // with stash value 1500 units
//! // while the rewards get transferred to the controller account.
//! Staking::bond(Origin::signed(3), 4, 1500, RewardDestination::Controller);
//! ```
//!
//! To state desire to become a validator:
//!
//! ```rust,ignore
//! // controller account 4 states desire for validation with the given preferences.
//! Staking::validate(Origin::signed(4), ValidatorPrefs::default());
//! ```
//!
//! Note that, as mentioned, the stash account is transparent in such calls and only the controller initiates the function calls.
//!
//! Similarly, to state desire in nominating:
//!
//! ```rust,ignore
//! // controller account 4 nominates for account 10 and 20.
//! Staking::nominate(Origin::signed(4), vec![20, 10]);
//! ```
//!
//! Finally, account 4 can withdraw from any of the above roles via
//!
//! ```rust,ignore
//! Staking::chill(Origin::signed(4));
//! ```
//!
//! ## Implementation Details
//!
//! ### Slot Stake
//!
//! The term `slot_stake` will be used throughout this section. It refers to a value calculated at the end of each era,
//! containing the _minimum value at stake among all validators._
//!
//! ### Reward Calculation
//!
//! - Rewards are recorded **per-session** and paid **per-era**. The value of the reward for each session is calculated at
//! the end of the session based on the timeliness of the session, then accumulated to be paid later. The value of
//! the new _per-session-reward_ is calculated at the end of each era by multiplying `slot_stake` and a configuration
//! storage item named `SessionReward`.
//! - Once a new era is triggered, rewards are paid to the validators and the associated nominators.
//! - The validator can declare an amount, named `validator_payment`, that does not get shared with the nominators at
//! each reward payout through their `ValidatorPrefs`. This value gets deducted from the total reward that can be paid.
//! The remaining portion is split among the validator and all of the nominators who had a vote for this validator,
//! proportional to their staked value.
//! - All entities who receive a reward have the option to choose their reward destination, through the `Payee` storage item (see `set_payee()`), to be one of the following:
//! - Controller account.
//! - Stash account, not increasing the staked value.
//! - Stash account, also increasing the staked value.
//!
//! ### Slashing details
//!
//! - A validator can be _reported_ to be offline at any point via `on_offline_validator` public function.
//! - Each validator declares how many times it can be _reported_ before it actually gets slashed via the
//! `unstake_threshold` in `ValidatorPrefs`. On top of this, the module also introduces an `OfflineSlashGrace`,
//! which applies to all validators and prevents them from getting immediately slashed.
//! - Similar to the reward value, the slash value is updated at the end of each era by multiplying `slot_stake` and a
//! configuration storage item, `OfflineSlash`.
//! - Once a validator has been reported a sufficient number of times, the actual value that gets deducted from that
//! validator, and every single nominator that voted for it is calculated by multiplying the result of the above point
//! by `2.pow(unstake_threshold)`.
//! - If the previous overflows, then `slot_stake` is used.
//! - If the previous is more than what the validator/nominator has in stake, all of its stake is slashed (`.max(total_stake)`).
//!
//! ### Additional Fund Management Operations
//!
//! Any funds already placed into stash can be the target of the following operations:
//!
//! - The controller account can free a portion (or all) of the funds using the `unbond()` call. Note that the funds
//! are not immediately accessible, instead, a duration denoted by `BondingDuration` (in number of eras) must pass until the funds can actually be removed.
//! - To actually remove the funds, once the bonding duration is over, `withdraw_unbonded()` can be used.
//! - As opposed to the above, additional funds can be added to the stash account via the `bond_extra()` transaction call.
//!
//! ### Election algorithm details.
//!
//! The current election algorithm is implemented based on Phragmén. The reference implementation can be found [here](https://github.com/w3f/consensus/tree/master/NPoS).
Loading full blame...