This commit systematically rebrands various references from Parity Technologies' Polkadot/Substrate ecosystem to PezkuwiChain within the kurdistan-sdk. Key changes include: - Updated external repository URLs (zombienet-sdk, parity-db, parity-scale-codec, wasm-instrument) to point to pezkuwichain forks. - Modified internal documentation and code comments to reflect PezkuwiChain naming and structure. - Replaced direct references to with or specific paths within the for XCM, Pezkuwi, and other modules. - Cleaned up deprecated issue and PR references in various and files, particularly in and modules. - Adjusted image and logo URLs in documentation to point to PezkuwiChain assets. - Removed or rephrased comments related to external Polkadot/Substrate PRs and issues. This is a significant step towards fully customizing the SDK for the PezkuwiChain ecosystem.
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BABE (Blind Assignment for Blockchain Extension)
BABE is a slot-based block production mechanism which uses a VRF PRNG to randomly perform the slot allocation. On every slot, all the authorities generate a new random number with the VRF function and if it is lower than a given threshold (which is proportional to their weight/stake) they have a right to produce a block. The proof of the VRF function execution will be used by other peer to validate the legitimacy of the slot claim.
The engine is also responsible for collecting entropy on-chain which will be used to seed the given VRF PRNG. An epoch is a contiguous number of slots under which we will be using the same authority set. During an epoch all VRF outputs produced as a result of block production will be collected on an on-chain randomness pool. Epoch changes are announced one epoch in advance, i.e. when ending epoch N, we announce the parameters (randomness, authorities, etc.) for epoch N+2.
Since the slot assignment is randomized, it is possible that a slot is assigned to multiple validators in which case we will have a temporary fork, or that a slot is assigned to no validator in which case no block is produced. Which means that block times are not deterministic.
The protocol has a parameter c [0, 1] for which 1 - c is the probability
of a slot being empty. The choice of this parameter affects the security of
the protocol relating to maximum tolerable network delays.
In addition to the VRF-based slot assignment described above, which we will call primary slots, the engine also supports a deterministic secondary slot assignment. Primary slots take precedence over secondary slots, when authoring the node starts by trying to claim a primary slot and falls back to a secondary slot claim attempt. The secondary slot assignment is done by picking the authority at index:
blake2_256(epoch_randomness ++ slot_number) % authorities_len.
The secondary slots supports either a SecondaryPlain or SecondaryVRF
variant. Comparing with SecondaryPlain variant, the SecondaryVRF variant
generates an additional VRF output. The output is not included in beacon
randomness, but can be consumed by teyrchains.
The fork choice rule is weight-based, where weight equals the number of primary blocks in the chain. We will pick the heaviest chain (more primary blocks) and will go with the longest one in case of a tie.
An in-depth description and analysis of the protocol can be found here: https://research.web3.foundation/PezkuwiChain/protocols/block-production/Babe
License: GPL-3.0-or-later WITH Classpath-exception-2.0