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A minimal implementation of ZKPs of Ethereum block execution using Reth. Supports both Ethereum and OP Stack.

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Reth Succinct Processor (RSP)

A minimal implementation of generating zero-knowledge proofs of EVM block execution using Reth. Supports both Ethereum and OP Stack.

Caution

This repository is still an active work-in-progress and is not audited or meant for production usage.

Getting Started

To use RSP, you must first have Rust installed and SP1 installed to build the client programs. Then follow the instructions below.

Installing the CLI

In the root directory of this repository, run:

cargo install --locked --path bin/host

and the command rsp will be installed.

RPC Node Requirement

RSP fetches block and state data from a JSON-RPC node. You must use an archive node which preserves historical intermediate trie nodes needed for fetching storage proofs.

In Geth, the archive mode can be enabled with the --gcmode=archive option. You can also use an RPC provider that offers archive data access.

Tip

Don't have access to such a node but still want to try out RSP? Use rsp-tests to get quickly set up with an offline cache built for selected blocks.

Running the CLI

The host CLI automatically identifies the underlying chain type using the RPC (with the eth_chainId call). Simply suppply a block number and an RPC URL:

rsp --block-number 18884864 --rpc-url <RPC>

which outputs logs similar to:

2024-07-15T00:49:03.857638Z  INFO rsp_host_executor: fetching the current block and the previous block
2024-07-15T00:49:04.547738Z  INFO rsp_host_executor: setting up the spec for the block executor
2024-07-15T00:49:04.551198Z  INFO rsp_host_executor: setting up the database for the block executor
2024-07-15T00:49:04.551268Z  INFO rsp_host_executor: executing the block and with rpc db: block_number=18884864, transaction_count=30
2024-07-15T00:50:51.526624Z  INFO rsp_host_executor: verifying the state root
...

The host CLI executes the block while fetching additional data necessary for offline execution. The same execution and verification logic is then run inside the zkVM. No actual proof is generated from this command, but it will print out a detailed execution report and statistics on the # of cycles to a CSV file (can be specified by the --report-path argument).

You can also run the CLI directly by running the following command:

cargo run --bin rsp --release -- --block-number 18884864 --rpc-url <RPC>

or by providing the RPC URL in the .env file (or otherwise setting the relevant env vars) and specifying the chain id in the CLI command like this:

cargo run --bin rsp --release -- --block-number 18884864 --chain-id <chain-id>

Using cached client input

The client input (witness) generated by executing against RPC can be cached to speed up iteration of the client program by supplying the --cache-dir option:

cargo run --bin rsp --release -- --block-number 18884864 --chain-id <chain-id> --cache-dir /path/to/cache

Note that even when utilizing a cached input, the host still needs access to the chain ID to identify the network type, either through --rpc-url or --chain-id. To run the host completely offline, use --chain-id for this.

Running Tests

End-to-end integration tests are available. To run these tests, utilize the .env file (see example) or manually set these environment variables:

export RPC_1="YOUR_ETHEREUM_MAINNET_RPC_URL"
export RPC_10="YOUR_OP_MAINNET_RPC_URL"
export RPC_59144="YOUR_LINEA_MAINNET_RPC_URL"

Note that these JSON-RPC nodes must fulfill the RPC node requirement.

Then execute:

RUST_LOG=info cargo test -p rsp-host-executor --release e2e -- --nocapture

Generating Proofs

If you want to actually generate proofs, you can run the CLI using the --prove argument, like this:

cargo run --bin rsp --release -- --block-number 18884864 --chain-id <chain-id> --prove

This will generate proofs locally on your machine. Given how large these programs are, it might take a while for the proof to generate.

Run with prover network

If you want to run proofs using Succinct's prover network, follow the sign-up instructions, and run the command with the following environment variables prefixed:

SP1_PROVER=network SP1_PRIVATE_KEY=

To specify a custom prover network RPC, you can use the PROVER_NETWORK_RPC environment variable.

Run with GPU

To generate proofs locally on a GPU, you can enable the cuda feature in the CLI, which will enable it in the SDK. Make sure to read the instructions here to make sure you have all required dependencies installed. You can run it with a command like this:

cargo run --bin rsp --release --features cuda -- --block-number 18884864 --chain-id <chain-id> --prove

FAQ

Building the client programs manually

By default, the build.rs in the bin/host crate will rebuild the client programs every time they are modified. To manually build the client programs, you can run these commands (ake sure you have the SP1 toolchain installed):

cd ./bin/client-eth
cargo prove build --ignore-rust-version

To build the Optimism client ELF program:

cd ./bin/client-op
cargo prove build --ignore-rust-version

What are good testing blocks

A good small block to test on for Ethereum mainnet is: 20526624.

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A minimal implementation of ZKPs of Ethereum block execution using Reth. Supports both Ethereum and OP Stack.

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