The Trusted Compute Framework (TCF) enables privacy in blockchain transactions, moving intensive processing from a main blockchain to improve scalability and latency, and to support attested Oracles.
The Trusted Compute Specification was designed to help developers gain the benefits of computational trust and to mitigate its drawbacks. In the case of the Trusted Compute Framework, a blockchain is used to enforce execution policies and ensure transaction auditability, while associated off-chain trusted compute resources execute transactions. By using trusted off-chain compute resources, a developer can accelerate throughput and improve data privacy.
Preservation of the integrity of execution and the enforcement of confidentiality guarantees come through the use of a Trusted Compute (TC) option, e.g. ZKP (Zero Knowledge Proof), MPC (Multi Party Compute), or a hardware-based TEE (Trusted Execution Environment). While the approach will work with any TC option that guarantees integrity and confidentiality for code and data, our initial implementation uses Intel® Software Guard Extensions (SGX).
TCF leverages the existence of a distributed ledger to
- Maintain a registry of the trusted workers (including their attestation info)
- Provide a mechanism for submitting work orders from a client(s) to a worker
- Preserve a log of work order receipts and acknowledgments
TCF uses the Off-Chain Trusted Compute Specification defined by Enterprise Ethereum Alliance (EEA) Task Force as a starting point to apply a consistant and compatible approach to all supported blockchains.
- Manjunath A C (manju956)
- Daniel Anderson (danintel)
- Thomas J Barnes (TomBarnes)
- Srinath Duraisamy (srinathduraisamy)
- Manoj Gopalakrishnan (manojgop)
- Karthika Murthy (Karthika)
- Ramakrishna Srinivasamurthy (ram-srini)
- Yevgeniy Y. Yarmosh (EugeneYYY)
- Mic Bowman (cmickeyb) - TSC member
To build TCF, follow instructions in the build document.
See the contributing document for information on how to contribute and the guidelines for contributions.
Hyperledger Trusted Compute Framework is released under the Apache License Version 2.0 software license. See the license file for more details.
Hyperledger Trusted Compute Framework documentation is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. You may obtain a copy of the license at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
© Copyright 2019, Intel Corporation.