Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
144 lines (108 loc) · 13.5 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

144 lines (108 loc) · 13.5 KB

Miden Virtual Machine

A STARK-based virtual machine.

WARNING: This project is in an alpha stage. It has not been audited and may contain bugs and security flaws. This implementation is NOT ready for production use.

Overview

Miden VM is a zero-knowledge virtual machine written in Rust. For any program executed on Miden VM, a STARK-based proof of execution is automatically generated. This proof can then be used by anyone to verify that the program was executed correctly without the need for re-executing the program or even knowing the contents of the program.

  • If you'd like to learn more about how Miden VM works, check out the documentation.
  • If you'd like to start using Miden VM, check out the miden crate.
  • If you'd like to learn more about STARKs, check out the references section.

Status and features

Miden VM is currently on release v0.5. In this release, most of the core features of the VM have been stabilized, and most of the STARK proof generation has been implemented. While we expect to keep making changes to the VM internals, the external interfaces should remain relatively stable, and we will do our best to minimize the amount of breaking changes going forward.

The next version of the VM is being developed in the next branch. There is also a documentation for the latest features and changes in the next branch documentation next branch.

Feature highlights

Miden VM is a fully-featured virtual machine. Despite being optimized for zero-knowledge proof generation, it provides all the features one would expect from a regular VM. To highlight a few:

  • Flow control. Miden VM is Turing-complete and supports familiar flow control structures such as conditional statements and counter/condition-controlled loops. There are no restrictions on the maximum number of loop iterations or the depth of control flow logic.
  • Procedures. Miden assembly programs can be broken into subroutines called procedures. This improves code modularity and helps reduce the size of Miden VM programs.
  • Execution contexts. Miden VM program execution can span multiple isolated contexts, each with its own dedicated memory space. The contexts are separated into the root context and user contexts. The root context can be accessed from user contexts via customizable kernel calls.
  • Memory. Miden VM supports read-write random-access memory. Procedures can reserve portions of global memory for easier management of local variables.
  • u32 operations. Miden VM supports native operations with 32-bit unsigned integers. This includes basic arithmetic, comparison, and bitwise operations.
  • Cryptographic operations. Miden assembly provides built-in instructions for computing hashes and verifying Merkle paths. These instructions use the Rescue Prime Optimized hash function (which is the native hash function of the VM).
  • External libraries. Miden VM supports compiling programs against pre-defined libraries. The VM ships with one such library: Miden stdlib which adds support for such things as 64-bit unsigned integers. Developers can build other similar libraries to extend the VM's functionality in ways which fit their use cases.
  • Nondeterminism. Unlike traditional virtual machines, Miden VM supports nondeterministic programming. This means a prover may do additional work outside of the VM and then provide execution hints to the VM. These hints can be used to dramatically speed up certain types of computations, as well as to supply secret inputs to the VM.
  • Custom advice providers. Miden VM can be instantiated with user-defined advice providers. These advice providers are used to supply external data to the VM during execution/proof generation (via nondeterministic inputs) and can connect the VM to arbitrary data sources (e.g., a database or RPC calls).

Planned features

In the coming months we plan to finalize the design of the VM and implement support for the following features:

  • Recursive proofs. Miden VM will soon be able to verify a proof of its own execution. This will enable infinitely recursive proofs, an extremely useful tool for real-world applications.
  • Better debugging. Miden VM will provide a better debugging experience including the ability to place breakpoints, better source mapping, and more complete program analysis info.
  • Faulty execution. Miden VM will support generating proofs for programs with faulty execution (a notoriously complex task in ZK context). That is, it will be possible to prove that execution of some program resulted in an error.

Compilation to WebAssembly.

Miden VM is written in pure Rust and can be compiled to WebAssembly. Rust's std standard library is enabled as feature by default for most crates. For WASM targets, one can compile with default features disabled by using --no-default-features flag.

Concurrent proof generation

When compiled with concurrent feature enabled, the prover will generate STARK proofs using multiple threads. For benefits of concurrent proof generation check out benchmarks below.

Internally, we use rayon for parallel computations. To control the number of threads used to generate a STARK proof, you can use RAYON_NUM_THREADS environment variable.

Project structure

The project is organized into several crates like so:

Crate Description
core Contains components defining Miden VM instruction set, program structure, and a set of utility functions used by other crates.
assembly Contains Miden assembler. The assembler is used to compile Miden assembly source code into Miden VM programs.
processor Contains Miden VM processor. The processor is used to execute Miden programs and to generate program execution traces. These traces are then used by the Miden prover to generate proofs of correct program execution.
air Contains algebraic intermediate representation (AIR) of Miden VM processor logic. This AIR is used by the VM during proof generation and verification processes.
prover Contains Miden VM prover. The prover is used to generate STARK proofs attesting to correct execution of Miden VM programs. Internally, the prover uses Miden processor to execute programs.
verifier Contains a light-weight verifier which can be used to verify proofs of program execution generated by Miden VM.
miden Aggregates functionality exposed by Miden VM processor, prover, and verifier in a single place, and also provide a CLI interface for Miden VM.
stdlib Contains Miden standard library. The goal of Miden standard library is to provide highly-optimized and battle-tested implementations of commonly-used primitives.

Performance

The benchmarks below should be viewed only as a rough guide for expected future performance. The reasons for this are twofold:

  1. Not all constraints have been implemented yet, and we expect that there will be some slowdown once constraint evaluation is completed.
  2. Many optimizations have not been applied yet, and we expect that there will be some speedup once we dedicate some time to performance optimizations.

Overall, we don't expect the benchmarks to change significantly, but there will definitely be some deviation from the below numbers in the future.

A few general notes on performance:

  • Execution time is dominated by proof generation time. In fact, the time needed to run the program is usually under 1% of the time needed to generate the proof.
  • Proof verification time is really fast. In most cases it is under 1 ms, but sometimes gets as high as 2 ms or 3 ms.
  • Proof generation process is dynamically adjustable. In general, there is a trade-off between execution time, proof size, and security level (i.e. for a given security level, we can reduce proof size by increasing execution time, up to a point).
  • Both proof generation and proof verification times are greatly influenced by the hash function used in the STARK protocol. In the benchmarks below, we use BLAKE3, which is a really fast hash function.

Single-core prover performance

When executed on a single CPU core, the current version of Miden VM operates at around 10 - 15 KHz. In the benchmarks below, the VM executes a Fibonacci calculator program on Apple M1 Pro CPU in a single thread. The generated proofs have a target security level of 96 bits.

VM cycles Execution time Proving time RAM consumed Proof size
210 1 ms 80 ms 20 MB 47 KB
212 2 ms 260 ms 52 MB 57 KB
214 8 ms 0.9 sec 240 MB 66 KB
216 28 ms 4.6 sec 950 MB 77 KB
218 85 ms 15.5 sec 3.7 GB 89 KB
220 310 ms 67 sec 14 GB 100 KB

As can be seen from the above, proving time roughly doubles with every doubling in the number of cycles, but proof size grows much slower.

We can also generate proofs at a higher security level. The cost of doing so is roughly doubling of proving time and roughly 40% increase in proof size. In the benchmarks below, the same Fibonacci calculator program was executed on Apple M1 Pro CPU at 128-bit target security level:

VM cycles Execution time Proving time RAM consumed Proof size
210 1 ms 300 ms 30 MB 61 KB
212 2 ms 590 ms 106 MB 78 KB
214 8 ms 1.7 sec 500 MB 91 KB
216 28 ms 6.7 sec 2.0 GB 106 KB
218 85 ms 27.5 sec 8.0 GB 122 KB
220 310 ms 126 sec 24.0 GB 138 KB

Multi-core prover performance

STARK proof generation is massively parallelizable. Thus, by taking advantage of multiple CPU cores we can dramatically reduce proof generation time. For example, when executed on an 8-core CPU (Apple M1 Pro), the current version of Miden VM operates at around 100 KHz. And when executed on a 64-core CPU (Amazon Graviton 3), the VM operates at around 250 KHz.

In the benchmarks below, the VM executes the same Fibonacci calculator program for 220 cycles at 96-bit target security level:

Machine Execution time Proving time Execution %
Apple M1 Pro (8 threads) 310 ms 9.8 sec 3.1%
Apple M2 Max (16 threads) 290 ms 7.7 sec 3.6%
AMD Ryzen 9 5950X (16 threads) 270 ms 10.7 sec 2.6%
Amazon Graviton 3 (64 threads) 330 ms 3.7 sec 9.0%

References

Proofs of execution generated by Miden VM are based on STARKs. A STARK is a novel proof-of-computation scheme that allows you to create an efficiently verifiable proof that a computation was executed correctly. The scheme was developed by Eli Ben-Sasson, Michael Riabzev et al. at Technion - Israel Institute of Technology. STARKs do not require an initial trusted setup, and rely on very few cryptographic assumptions.

Here are some resources to learn more about STARKs:

Vitalik Buterin's blog series on zk-STARKs:

Alan Szepieniec's STARK tutorials:

StarkWare's STARK Math blog series:

StarkWare's STARK tutorial:

License

This project is MIT licensed.