Transactions

  • A transaction is a proposal to update the ledger. It is only committed to the ledger if it:
    • Doesn’t contain double-spends.
    • Is contractually valid.
    • Is signed by the required parties.

You can’t edit the Corda ledger—the only way to change it is to add new transactions to it. A transaction updates the ledger by consuming existing input states and outputting new states. The states the transaction consumes are marked “historic”.

Every state is immutable—it can’t be changed. This is called an UTXO (unspent transaction output) model.

Here is an example of a transaction with two inputs and two outputs:

basic tx
A transaction can contain any number of inputs, outputs and references of any type. Transactions can:

  • Include different types of states representing multiple financial instruments, such as cash or bonds.
  • Issue states, by creating a transaction without inputs. These states won’t replace any existing states because none are marked “historic”.
  • Exit states, by creating transactions without outputs. This doesn’t create any new states to replace the ones consumed.
  • Merge or split fungible assets. For example, they may combine a $2 state and a $5 state into a $7 cash state.

Transactions are atomic. Either all of the transaction’s proposed changes are accepted, or none are.

There are two basic types of transactions:

  • Notary-change transactions, to change a state’s notary.
  • General transactions, for everything else.

Transaction backchains let a node verify that each input was generated from a valid series of transactions. This is called “walking the chain.” If you need to break this chain (for example, because you want to increase performance by reducing the number of transactions the node has to check, or because you want to keep previous transactions private) you can reissue states.

Backchains are created as input state references linked together over time. Input state references let you use the outputs of previous transactions as the inputs of new transactions.

Input state references consist of:

  • The hash of the transaction that created the input.
  • The input’s index (location in the backchain) in the outputs of the previous transaction.

You can see how this works in this example transaction:

tx chain

Initially, a transaction is only a proposal to update the ledger. It represents the future state of the ledger desired by the transaction builders.

uncommitted tx
To be committed to the ledger, the transaction must receive signatures from all the required signers. Each required signer appends their signature to the transaction to approve the proposal.

tx with sigs
If the transaction gathers the required signatures, it is committed:

committed tx
This means that:

  • The transaction’s inputs are marked as historic, and cannot be used in any future transactions.
  • The transaction’s outputs become part of the current state of the ledger.

Just gathering the required signatures is not enough to commit a transaction to the ledger. It must also be:

  • Valid: The proposed transaction and every transaction the backchain of the proposed inputs must be signed by all the required parties and contractually valid.
  • Unique: No other committed transaction has consumed any of the inputs to the proposed transaction. Uniqueness is determined by a notary.

If the transaction gathers all the required signatures without meeting these conditions, the transaction’s outputs are not valid and will not be accepted as inputs to subsequent transactions.

Some states need to be referred to by the contracts of other input or output states but not updated/consumed. This is where reference states come in. When a state is added to the references list of a transaction, instead of the inputs or outputs list, it is treated as a reference state. There are two important differences between regular states and reference states:

  • The specified notary for the transaction does check whether the reference states are current. However, reference states are not consumed when the transaction containing them is committed to the ledger.
  • The contracts for reference states are not executed for the transaction containing them.

As well as input states and output states, transactions contain:

  • Commands
  • Attachments
  • Time windows
  • A notary

For example, suppose Alice uses $5 cash to pay off $5 of an IOU with Bob. This transaction contains a settlement command which reduces the amount outstanding on the IOU, and a payment command which changes the ownership of $5 from Alice to Bob. It also has two supporting attachments, and is notarized by NotaryClusterA if the notary pool receives it within the specified time window:

full tx

If you had a transaction with a cash state and a bond state as inputs, and a cash state and a bond state as outputs, it could represent either a bond purchase or a coupon payment on a bond.

You would need to impose different rules for what constitutes a valid transaction depending on whether it is a purchase or a coupon payment. For example, in the case of a purchase, you would require a change in the bond’s current owner, but not for a coupon payment.

You can make these adjustments to the rules using commands. Including a command in a transaction lets you indicate the transaction’s intent, affecting how you check the validity of the transaction.

Each command is associated with a list of signers. By taking the union of all the public keys listed in the commands, you get the list of the transaction’s required signers. In this example:

  • In a coupon payment on a bond, only the owner of the bond needs to sign.
  • In a cash payment, only the owner of the cash needs to sign.

This situation would look like this:

commands

You might have a large piece of data that can be reused for several transactions, such as:

  • A calendar of public holidays.
  • Supporting legal documentation.
  • A table of currency codes.

You can achieve this with attachments. Transactions can refer to attachments by the attachment’s hash. These attachments are .zip or JAR files with content that the node can use when verifying a smart contract.

You may only want a proposed transaction to be approved during a certain period of time. For example:

  • An option that can only be exercised after a certain date.
  • A bond that may only be redeemed before its expiry date.

You can enforce this by adding a time window to the transaction, which specifies when the transaction can be committed. The notary enforces time window validity.

Notaries provide uniqueness consensus by attesting that, for a given transaction, it has not already signed other transactions that consume any of the proposed transaction’s input states. This is the final check before a transaction is committed to the ledger.

You may not need to include a notary if you are creating an issuance transaction, because they do not consume any other states and cannot double-spend.

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