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Why doesn’t Bitcoin use UDP to do Blockpropagation?

Bitcoin Stack Exchange

Bitcoin News / Bitcoin Stack Exchange 177 Views

The Bitcoin system doesn't have just one network protocol: Any way of obtaining the blocks is equally valid-- blocks over freenet, over satellite broadcast, over the P2P network, all work just as well and are used in practice. UDP is used with bitcoin too, by the Fibre protocol.

As far the common Bitcoin P2P protocol goes UDP is not an especially good fit for most operations that it performs. Bitcoin needs to reliably send messages far larger than an IP packet, like transactions and blocks. Although the internet is "reliable" packet loss rates of 1-3% are common. This means that any application needing to communicate large messages with UDP must implement packetization, retransmission, reordering, etc-- the same things that TCP already implements for us. Many applications that have 'rolled their own TCP' in userspace have ended up with exploitable bugs in them, so it isn't something that should be done without good cause.

UDP also has the issue of NAT traversal: Getting bidirectional communication across a NAT with UDP is not a simple matter. Crossing anything more complicated than a full cone nat requires considerable amounts of special code but without it there will be a many hosts that just can't talk to other peers with UDP.

You mention connectionlessness allowing you relay to a random host in the network, but in Bitcoin P2P we make use of the consistent relationship between nodes to make the network more reliable and efficient. Nodes have an idea what their peers already know and can avoid sending them redundant data. Nodes also know which peers have been fastest in sending them blocks in the past and handle them specially. Likewise, even if the protocol is connectionless there are costs to processing messages from peers by prioritizing handling messages from existing peers, Bitcoin reduces the impact of some kinds of DOS attack. Handling larger than one-packet messages, retransmissions, etc. also mean that even with a connectionless transport there still needs to be some kind of persistent state.

But an if implementation did want to randomly connect to send a message it could, at an extra cost is a couple round trips for the handshake. Or not even that: there are only about 10,000 reachable nodes in the P2P network, there wouldn't be much of a challenge in holding open a mostly idle TCP connection to each and ever one of them if all the state retained were just the TCP state. So for that point the use of UDP would at best just be an optimization for something that could already be done but isn't done. I think it would be more interesting to demonstrate the usefulness of having all those connections first, before worrying about optimizing it.

So why might UDP transport be useful to the Bitcoin P2P protocol?

  • To get lowest latency block transfer possible there must be no round trips even in the face of packet loss which precludes TCP and which is why Fibre uses UDP. But to get no round trips the protocol must be able to handle loss without retransmission and to get low latency a block must be decodable with a minimum amount of data received. This requires very sophisticated error correction techniques which are an evolving area and haven't become mature enough yet to consider mainstreaming them. The latency benefits of fibre also exist so long as a small number of hosts are using it, since it does the heavy lifting of taking blocks all around the world. Round trips don't cause much harm on low latency links. And this latency concern only applies to block relay.

  • Unlike TCP, UDP requires some amount of NAT traversal handling to simply get bidirectional communication working. But combined with full nat traversal handling UDP is often able to establish communication between hosts which are both behind different NATs. This could be helpful for the Bitcoin P2P network since most hosts are unreachable behind a nat. So, ironically, one of UDP's challenges is also one of its uses. However, to connect hosts which are both behind a net the assistance of a third party non-natted host is required along with even more NAT traversal code. Considering the complexity of traversal improving Bitcoin's support for TCP port mapping (e.g. implementing NAT-PMP) would probably be a better return on investment right now.

  • Use of UDP would allow for "worst than best effort" traffic handling. For low priority "bulk traffic" like syncing the blockchain it would be nice if the traffic carefully shaped itself to avoid interfering with other traffic on the network. Alternative congestion control algorithims like LEDBAT make it possible to transfer low priority data with minimal impact. But since TCP stacks don't yet commonly support these congestion control approaches, applications that want them currently need to implement their own transports. For Bitcoin it would be ideal if we could just flip a socket option and turn LEDBAT on and off on existing connections (e.g. when the peer is requesting historical blocks or in the future when something like Fibre is being used by the node to relay new blocks) but that isn't an option yet.

[These last two reasons are the reasons that Bittorrent usually uses UDP]


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