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Nova: High-speed recursive arguments from folding schemes

Note

This repository is a fork of the original hosted at https://github.com/microsoft/nova. It's an incubator for experimenting with more advanced variants of the original software and working out the kinks in them.

Important

This fork is always maintained as up-to-date as the original repository. Occasionally, this repository backports its own contributions to the original, after an incubation time. Note that until back-ported, the changes in the present repository have not undergone the same level of review.

Nova is a high-speed recursive SNARK (a SNARK is type cryptographic proof system that enables a prover to prove a mathematical statement to a verifier with a short proof and succinct verification, and a recursive SNARK enables producing proofs that prove statements about prior proofs).

More precisely, Nova achieves incrementally verifiable computation (IVC), a powerful cryptographic primitive that allows a prover to produce a proof of correct execution of a "long running" sequential computations in an incremental fashion. For example, IVC enables the following: The prover takes as input a proof $\pi_i$ proving the first $i$ steps of its computation and then update it to produce a proof $\pi_{i+1}$ proving the correct execution of the first $i + 1$ steps. Crucially, the prover's work to update the proof does not depend on the number of steps executed thus far, and the verifier's work to verify a proof does not grow with the number of steps in the computation. IVC schemes including Nova have a wide variety of applications such as Rollups, verifiable delay functions (VDFs), succinct blockchains, incrementally verifiable versions of verifiable state machines, and, more generally, proofs of (virtual) machine executions (e.g., EVM, RISC-V).

A distinctive aspect of Nova is that it is the simplest recursive proof system in the literature, yet it provides the fastest prover. Furthermore, it achieves the smallest verifier circuit (a key metric to minimize in this context): the circuit is constant-sized and its size is about 10,000 multiplication gates. Nova is constructed from a simple primitive called a folding scheme, a cryptographic primitive that reduces the task of checking two NP statements into the task of checking a single NP statement.

Details of the library

This repository provides nova-snark, a Rust library implementation of Nova over a cycle of elliptic curves. Our code supports three curve cycles: (1) Pallas/Vesta, (2) BN254/Grumpkin, and (3) secp/secq.

At its core, Nova relies on a commitment scheme for vectors. Compressing IVC proofs using Spartan relies on interpreting commitments to vectors as commitments to multilinear polynomials and prove evaluations of committed polynomials. Our code implements two commitment schemes and evaluation arguments:

  1. Pedersen commitments with IPA-based evaluation argument (supported on all three curve cycles), and
  2. Multilinear KZG commitments and evaluation argument (supported on curves with pairings e.g., BN254).

For more details on using multilinear KZG, please see the test test_ivc_nontrivial_with_compression. The multilinear KZG instantiation requires a universal trusted setup (the so-called "powers of tau"). In the setup method in src/provider/mlkzg.rs, one can load group elements produced in an existing KZG trusted setup (that was created for other proof systems based on univariate polynomials such as Plonk or variants), but the library does not currently do so (please see this issue).

We also implement a SNARK, based on Spartan, to compress IVC proofs produced by Nova. There are two variants, one that does not use any preprocessing and another that uses preprocessing of circuits to ensure that the verifier's run time does not depend on the size of the step circuit.

Supported front-ends

A front-end is a tool to take a high-level program and turn it into an intermediate representation (e.g., a circuit) that can be used to prove executions of the program on concrete inputs. There are three supported ways to write high-level programs in a form that can be proven with Nova.

  1. bellpepper: The native APIs of Nova accept circuits expressed with bellpepper, a Rust toolkit to express circuits. See minroot.rs or sha256.rs for examples.

  2. Circom: A DSL and a compiler to transform high-level program expressed in its language into a circuit. There exist middleware to turn output of circom into a form suitable for proving with Nova. See Nova Scotia and Circom Scotia. In the future, we will add examples in the Nova repository to use these tools with Nova.

  3. Lurk: A Lisp dialect and a universal circuit to execute programs expressed in Lurk. The universal circuit can be proven with Nova.

In the future, we plan to support Noir, a Rust-like DSL and a compiler to transform those programs into an IR. See this GitHub issue for details.

Tests and examples

To run tests (we recommend the release mode to drastically shorten run times):

cargo test --release

To run example:

cargo run --release --example minroot

Specs

References

The following paper, which appeared at CRYPTO 2022, provides details of the Nova proof system and a proof of security:

Nova: Recursive Zero-Knowledge Arguments from Folding Schemes
Abhiram Kothapalli, Srinath Setty, and Ioanna Tzialla
CRYPTO 2022

For efficiency, our implementation of the Nova proof system is instantiated over a cycle of elliptic curves. The following paper specifies that instantiation and provides a proof of security:

Revisiting the Nova Proof System on a Cycle of Curves
Wilson Nguyen, Dan Boneh, and Srinath Setty
IACR ePrint 2023/969

Acknowledgments

See the contributors list here

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