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Off-Chain Features

There is often a need to query and/or process off-chain data before it can be included in the on-chain state. The conventional way of doing this is through oracles. Oracles are external services that typically listen to blockchain events and trigger tasks accordingly. When these tasks complete, their results are submitted back to the blockchain using transactions. While this approach works, it still has several flaws with respect to security, scalability, and infrastructure efficiency.

To make the off-chain data integration secure and more efficient, Substrate provides off-chain features:

  • Off-Chain Worker (OCW) subsystem allows execution of long-running and possibly non- deterministic tasks (e.g. web requests, encryption/decryption and signing of data, random number generation, CPU-intensive computations, enumeration/aggregation of on-chain data, etc.) that could otherwise require longer than the block execution time.

  • Off-Chain Storage offers storage that is local to a Substrate node that can be accessed both by off-chain workers (both read and write access) and on-chain logic (write access via off-chain indexing but not read access). This is great for different worker threads to communicate to each others and for storing user- / node-specific data that does not require consensus over the whole network.

  • Off-Chain Indexing allows the runtime, if opted-in, to write directly to the off-chain storage independently from OCWs. This serves as a local/temporary storage for on-chain logic and complement to its on-chain state.

Off-chain features run in their own Wasm execution environment outside of the Substrate runtime. This separation of concerns makes sure that block production is not impacted by long-running off-chain tasks. However, as the off-chain features are declared in the same code as the runtime, they can easily access on-chain state for their computations.

Off-chain Workers

Off-chain workers

Off-chain workers have access to extended APIs for communicating with the external world:

  • Ability to submit transactions (either signed or unsigned) to the chain to publish computation results [1].
  • A fully-featured HTTP client allowing the worker to access and fetch data from external services [2].
  • Access to the local keystore to sign and verify statements or transactions.
  • An additional, local key-value database shared between all off-chain workers [3].
  • A secure, local entropy source for random number generation.
  • Access to the node's precise local time.
  • The ability to sleep and resume work.

OCWs can be initiated from within a special function in your runtime implementation, fn offchain_worker(block: T::BlockNumber). communicate results back to the chain, off-chain workers can submit signed or unsigned transactions to be included in subsequent blocks.

Note that the results from off-chain workers are not subject to regular transaction verification. A verification mechanism (e.g. voting, averaging, checking sender signatures, or simply "trusting") should be implemented to determine what information gets into the chain.

Off-chain storage

As its name indicated, the storage is not stored on-chain. It can be accessed by off-chain worker threads (both read and write access) and on-chain logic (write only, refer to off-chain indexing below). This storage is not populated among the blockchain network and does not need to have consensus computation over it.

As an off-chain worker thread is being spawned off during each block import, there could be more than one off-chain worker thread running at any given time. So, similar to any multi-threaded programming environment, there are also utilities to mutex lock the storage when accessing them for data consistency.

Off-chain storage serves as a bridge for various off-chain worker threads to communicate to each others and between off-chain and on-chain logics. It can also be read using remote procedure calls (RPC) so it fits the use case of storing indefinitely growing data without over-consuming the on-chain storage.

Off-chain indexing

Storage in the context of blockchain is mostly about on-chain state. But it is expensive (as it is populated to each node in the network) and not recommended for historical or user-generated data which grow indefinitely over time.

We have off-chain storage for this purpose. In addition of being accessible by OCWs, Substrate also includes a feature called "off-chain indexing" allowing the runtime to write directly to the off-chain storage independently from OCWs. Nodes have to opt-in for persistency of this data via --enable-offchain-indexing flag when starting up the Substrate node.

Unlike OCWs, which are not executed during initial blockchain synchronization, off-chain indexing is populating the storage every time a block is processed, so the data is always consistent and will be exactly the same for every node with indexing enabled.

Learn more

To look at concrete examples of off-chain workers and how to use them in runtime development, refer to the following sections in Substrate Recipes:

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