>Even still, each call to OP_CODESEPARATOR / OP_CHECKSIG pair requires recomputing a new #5. scriptCode from BIP 143, and hence computes a new transaction digest. In the existing sighash (i.e. legacy and BIP143), there are 6 canonical SIGHASH types: 1, 2, 3, 0x81, 0x82, 0x83. In consensus, however, all 256 types are valid and distinct. An adversarial miner could use non-standard sighash types to nullify any attempt to cache sighash values (i.e. you have to compute a new tx digest for every OP_CHECKSIG, even without using OP_CODESEPARATOR). The only way to prevent this is reject OP_CODESEPARATOR, FindAndDelete(), and non-standard SIGHASH with a softfork. However, this doesn’t work in the next-generation SIGHASH, as tens of standard sighash types will exist. And, more importantly, sighash cache is no longer necessary in segwit, with the legacy O(n^2) hash bug being fixed. In summary, sighash cache is not necessary nor efficient in the next-generation SIGHASH, and is not a sufficient reason to remove OP_CODESEPARATOR, especially when people find OP_CODESEPARATOR useful in some way. But just to be clear, I think OP_CODESEPARATOR should be deprecated in legacy scripts. There is a general negative sentiment against OP_CODESEPARATOR but I think we need to evaluate case by case. > On 23 Nov 2018, at 6:10 AM, Russell O'Connor wrote: > > > > On Thu, Nov 22, 2018 at 3:53 PM Johnson Lau > wrote: > Assuming a script size of 128 bytes (including SHA256 padding), 2^20 scripts is 134MB. Double it to 268MB for the merkle branch hashes. With roughly 100MB/s, this should take 2.5s (or 42min for 30 levels). However, memory use is not considered. > > >each call to this operation effectively takes O(script-size) time > I’m not sure if this is correct. Actually, CTransactionSignatureSerializer() scans every script for OP_CODESEPARATOR. Scripts with and without OP_CODESEPARATOR should take exactly the same O(script-size) time (see https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/14786 ) > Also, this is no longer a concern under segwit (BIP143), which CTransactionSignatureSerializer() is not used. Actually, OP_CODESEPARATOR under segwit is way simpler than the proposed OP_MASK. If one finds OP_MASK acceptable, there should be no reason to reject OP_CODESEPARATOR. > > Even still, each call to OP_CODESEPARATOR / OP_CHECKSIG pair requires recomputing a new #5. scriptCode from BIP 143, and hence computes a new transaction digest. I understood that this issue was the main motivation for wanting to deprecate OP_CODESEPARATOR and remove it from later versions of script. > > However, given that we are looking at a combinatorial explosion in SIGHASH flag combinations already, coupled with existing SigOp limitations, maybe the cost of recomputing scriptCode with OP_CODESEPARATOR isn't such a big deal. > > And even if we choose remove the behavior of OP_CODESEPARATOR in new versions of Script, it seems more than 30 layers of sequential OP_IFs can be MASTified, so there is no need to use OP_CODESEPARATOR within that limit. > > >One suggestion I heard (I think I heard it from Pieter) to achieve the above is to add an internal counter that increments on every control flow operator,……... > If I have to choose among OP_CODESEPARATOR and “flow operator counting”, I’d rather choose OP_CODESEPARATOR. At least we don’t need to add more lines to the consensus code, just for something that is mostly archivable with MAST. >