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Data Contract

Data Contract Overview

Data contracts define the schema (structure) of data an application will store on Dash Platform. Contracts are described using JSON Schema which allows the platform to validate the contract-related data submitted to it.

The following sections provide details that developers need to construct valid contracts: documents and definitions. All data contracts must define one or more documents, whereas definitions are optional and may not be used for simple contracts.

General Constraints

Note: There are a variety of constraints currently defined for performance and security reasons. The following constraints are applicable to all aspects of data contracts. Unless otherwise noted, these constraints are defined in the platform's JSON Schema rules (e.g. js-dpp data contract meta schema).

Keyword

📘

Dash Platform Protocol 0.20

Updating to the JSON Schema 2012-12 specification replaced the definitions keyword with the defs keyword.

🚧

The $ref keyword is temporarily disabled for Platform v0.22.

KeywordConstraint
defaultRestricted - cannot be used (defined in DPP logic)
propertyNamesRestricted - cannot be used (defined in DPP logic)
uniqueItems: truemaxItems must be defined (maximum: 100000)
pattern: <something>maxLength must be defined (maximum: 50000)
format: <something>maxLength must be defined (maximum: 50000)
$ref: <something>Temporarily disabled
$ref can only reference $defs -
remote references not supported
if, then, else, allOf, anyOf, oneOf, notDisabled for data contracts
dependenciesNot supported. Use dependentRequired and dependentSchema instead
additionalItemsNot supported. Use items: false and prefixItems instead
patternPropertiesRestricted - cannot be used for data contracts
patternAccept only RE2 compatible regular expressions (defined in DPP logic)

Data Size

Note: These constraints are defined in the Dash Platform Protocol logic (not in JSON Schema).

All serialized data (including state transitions) is limited to a maximum size of 16 KB.

Additional Properties

Although JSON Schema allows additional, undefined properties by default, they are not allowed in Dash Platform data contracts. Data contract validation will fail if they are not explicitly forbidden using the additionalProperties keyword anywhere properties are defined (including within document properties of type object).

Include the following at the same level as the properties keyword to ensure proper validation:

"additionalProperties": false

Data Contract Object

The data contract object consists of the following fields as defined in the JavaScript reference client (js-dpp):

PropertyTypeRequiredDescription
protocolVersionintegerYesThe platform protocol version (currently 1)
$schemastringYesA valid URL (default: https://schema.dash.org/dpp-0-4-0/meta/data-contract)
$idarray of bytesYesContract ID generated from ownerId and entropy (32 bytes; content media type: application/x.dash.dpp.identifier)
versionintegerYesThe data contract version
ownerIdarray of bytesYesIdentity that registered the data contract defining the document (32 bytes; content media type: application/x.dash.dpp.identifier
documentsobjectYesDocument definitions (see Documents for details)
$defsobjectNoDefinitions for $ref references used in the documents object (if present, must be a non-empty object with <= 100 valid properties)

Data Contract Schema

Details regarding the data contract object may be found in the js-dpp data contract meta schema. A truncated version is shown below for reference:

{
  "$schema": "https://json-schema.org/draft/2020-12/schema",
  "$id": "https://schema.dash.org/dpp-0-4-0/meta/data-contract",
  "type": "object",
  "$defs": {
    // Truncated ...
  },
  "properties": {
    "protocolVersion": {
      "type": "integer",
      "$comment": "Maximum is the latest protocol version"
    },
    "$schema": {
      "type": "string",
      "const": "https://schema.dash.org/dpp-0-4-0/meta/data-contract"
    },
    "$id":{
      "type": "array",
      "byteArray": true,
      "minItems": 32,
      "maxItems": 32,
      "contentMediaType": "application/x.dash.dpp.identifier"
    },
    "version": {
      "type": "integer",
      "minimum": 1
    },
    "ownerId":{
      "type": "array",
      "byteArray": true,
      "minItems": 32,
      "maxItems": 32,
      "contentMediaType": "application/x.dash.dpp.identifier"
    },
    "documents": {
      "type": "object",
      "propertyNames": {
        "pattern": "^[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9-_]{1,62}[a-zA-Z0-9]$"
      },
      "additionalProperties": {
        "type": "object",
        "allOf": [
          {
            "properties": {
              "indices": {
                "type": "array",
                "items": {
                  "type": "object",
                  "properties": {
                    "name": {
                      "type": "string",
                      "minLength": 1,
                      "maxLength": 32
                    },
                    "properties": {
                      "type": "array",
                      "items": {
                        "type": "object",
                        "propertyNames": {
                          "pattern": "^[a-zA-Z$][a-zA-Z0-9-_.]{1,62}[a-zA-Z0-9]$"
                        },
                        "additionalProperties": {
                          "type": "string",
                          "enum": ["asc", "desc"]
                        },
                        "minProperties": 1,
                        "maxProperties": 1
                      },
                      "minItems": 1,
                      "maxItems": 10
                    },
                    "unique": {
                      "type": "boolean"
                    }
                  },
                  "required": ["properties", "name"],
                  "additionalProperties": false
                },
                "minItems": 1,
                "maxItems": 10
              },
              "type": {
                "const": "object"
              },
              "signatureSecurityLevelRequirement": {
                "type": "integer",
                "enum": [
                  0,
                  1,
                  2,
                  3
                ],
                "description": "Public key security level. 0 - Master, 1 - Critical, 2 - High, 3 - Medium. If none specified, High level is used"
              }
            }
          },
          {
            "$ref": "#/$defs/documentSchema"
          }
        ],
        "unevaluatedProperties": false
      },
      "minProperties": 1,
      "maxProperties": 100
    },
    "$defs": {
      "$ref": "#/$defs/documentProperties"
    }
  },
  "required": [
    "protocolVersion",
    "$schema",
    "$id",
    "version",
    "ownerId",
    "documents"
  ],
  "additionalProperties": false
}

Example

{
  "id": "AoDzJxWSb1gUi2dSmvFeUFpSsjZQRJaqCpn7vCLkwwJj",
  "ownerId": "7NUbPf231ixt1kVBQsBvSMMBxd7AgPad8KtdtfFGhXDP",
  "schema": "https://schema.dash.org/dpp-0-4-0/meta/data-contract",
  "documents": {
    "note": {
      "properties": {
        "message": {
          "type": "string"
        }
      },
      "additionalProperties": false
    }
  }
}

Data Contract id

The data contract $id is a hash of the ownerId and entropy as shown here.

// From the JavaScript reference implementation (js-dpp)
// generateDataContractId.js
function generateDataContractId(ownerId, entropy) {
  return hash(
    Buffer.concat([
      ownerId,
      entropy,
    ]),
  );
}

Data Contract version

The data contract version is an integer representing the current version of the contract. This
property must be incremented if the contract is updated.

Data Contract Documents

The documents object defines each type of document required by the data contract. At a minimum, a document must consist of 1 or more properties. Documents may also define indices and a list of required properties. The additionalProperties properties keyword must be included as described in the constraints section.

The following example shows a minimal documents object defining a single document (note) that has one property (message).

{
  "note": {
    "type": "object",
    "properties": {
      "message": {
        "type": "string"
      }
    },
    "additionalProperties": false
  }
}

Document Properties

The properties object defines each field that will be used by a document. Each field consists of an object that, at a minimum, must define its data type (string, number, integer, boolean, array, object). Fields may also apply a variety of optional JSON Schema constraints related to the format, range, length, etc. of the data.

Note: The object type is required to have properties defined either directly or via the data contract's $defs. For example, the body property shown below is an object containing a single string property (objectProperty):

const contractDocuments = {
  message: {
    "type": "object",
    properties: {
      body: {
        type: "object",
        properties: {
          objectProperty: {
            type: "string"
          },
        },
        additionalProperties: false,
      },
      header: {
        type: "string"
      }
    },
    additionalProperties: false
  }
};

Note: A full explanation of the capabilities of JSON Schema is beyond the scope of this document. For more information regarding its data types and the constraints that can be applied, please refer to the JSON Schema reference documentation.

Property Constraints

There are a variety of constraints currently defined for performance and security reasons.

DescriptionValue
Minimum number of properties1
Maximum number of properties100
Minimum property name length3
Maximum property name length64
Property name first/last characters** First: (A-Z, a-z); Last: Alphanumeric (A-Z, a-z, 0-9)**
Property name charactersAlphanumeric (A-Z, a-z, 0-9)
Hyphen (-)
Underscore (_)

Required Properties (Optional)

Each document may have some fields that are required for the document to be valid and other fields that are optional. Required fields are defined via the required array which consists of a list of the field names from the document that must be present. The required object should be excluded for documents without any required properties.

"required": [
  "<field name a>",
  "<field name b>"
]

Example
The following example (excerpt from the DPNS contract's domain document) demonstrates a document that has 6 required fields:

"required": [
  "label",
  "normalizedLabel",
  "normalizedParentDomainName",
  "preorderSalt",
  "records",
  "subdomainRules"
]

Document Indices

Document indices may be defined if indexing on document fields is required.

The indices array consists of:

  • One or more objects that each contain:
    • A unique name for the index
    • A properties array composed of a <field name: sort order> object for each document field that is part of the index (sort order: asc or desc)
    • An (optional) unique element that determines if duplicate values are allowed for the document type

Note:

  • The indices object should be excluded for documents that do not require indices.
  • When defining an index with multiple properties (i.e a compound index), the order in which the properties are listed is important. Refer to the mongoDB documentation for details regarding the significance of the order as it relates to querying capabilities.
"indices": [
  {
    "name": "Index1",
    "properties": [
      { "<field name a>": "<asc"|"desc>" },
      { "<field name b>": "<asc"|"desc>" }
    ],
    "unique": true|false
  },
  {
    "name": "Index2",
    "properties": [
      { "<field name c>": "<asc"|"desc>" },
    ],
  }
]

Index Constraints

For performance and security reasons, indices have the following constraints. These constraints are subject to change over time.

DescriptionValue
Minimum/maximum length of index name1 / 32
Maximum number of indices10
Maximum number of unique indices3
Maximum number of properties in a single index10
Maximum length of indexed string property63
Note: Dash Platform v0.22. does not allow indices for arrays
Maximum length of indexed byte array property
255
Note: Dash Platform v0.22. does not allow indices for arrays
Maximum number of indexed array items
1024
Usage of $id in an index disallowedN/A

Example
The following example (excerpt from the DPNS contract's preorder document) creates an index named saltedHash on the saltedDomainHash property that also enforces uniqueness across all documents of that type:

"indices": [
  {
    "name": "saltedHash",
    "properties": [
      {
        "saltedDomainHash": "asc"
      }
    ],
    "unique": true
  }
]

Full Document Syntax

This example syntax shows the structure of a documents object that defines two documents, an index, and a required field.

{
  "<document name a>": {
    "type": "object",
    "properties": {
      "<field name b>": {
        "type": "<field data type>"
      },
      "<field name c>": {
        "type": "<field data type>"
      },
    },
    "indices": [
      {
        "name": "<index name>",
        "properties": [
          {
            "<field name c>": "<asc|desc>"
          }
        ],
        "unique": true|false
      },
    ],
    "required": [
      "<field name c>"
    ]
    "additionalProperties": false
  },
  "<document name x>": {
    "type": "object",
    "properties": {
      "<property name y>": {
        "type": "<property data type>"
      },
      "<property name z>": {
        "type": "<property data type>"
      },
    },
    "additionalProperties": false
  },    
}

Document Schema

Full document schema details may be found in this section of the js-dpp data contract meta schema.

Data Contract Definitions

The optional $defs object enables definition of aspects of a schema that are used in multiple places. This is done using the JSON Schema support for reuse. Items defined in $defs may then be referenced when defining documents through use of the $ref keyword.

Note:

  • Properties defined in the $defs object must meet the same criteria as those defined in the documents object (e.g. the additionalProperties properties keyword must be included as described in the constraints section).
  • Data contracts can only use the $ref keyword to reference their own $defs. Referencing external definitions is not supported by the platform protocol.

Example
The following example shows a definition for a message object consisting of two properties:

{
  // Preceding content truncated ...
  "$defs": {
    "message": {
      "type": "object",
      "properties": {
        "timestamp": {
          "type": "number"
        },
        "description": {
          "type": "string"
        }
      },
      "additionalProperties": false
    }
  }
}

Note: In the js-dpp reference implementation, definitions are added to a data contract via the .setDefinitions() method (e.g. myContract.setDefinitions({\"message\": { ... }})). This must be done prior to broadcasting the contract for registration.

Data Contract State Transition Details

There are two data contract-related state transitions: data contract create and data contract update. Details are provided in this section.

Data Contract Creation

Data contracts are created on the platform by submitting the data contract object in a data contract create state transition consisting of:

FieldTypeDescription
protocolVersionintegerThe platform protocol version (currently 1)
typeintegerState transition type (0 for data contract create)
dataContractdata contract objectObject containing the data contract details
entropyarray of bytesEntropy used to generate the data contract ID. Generated as shown here. (32 bytes)
signaturePublicKeyIdnumberThe id of the identity public key that signed the state transition
signaturearray of bytesSignature of state transition data (65 bytes)

Each data contract state transition must comply with this JSON-Schema definition established in js-dpp:

{
  "$schema": "https://json-schema.org/draft/2020-12/schema",
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "protocolVersion": {
      "type": "integer",
      "$comment": "Maximum is the latest protocol version"
    },
    "type": {
      "type": "integer",
      "const": 0
    },
    "dataContract": {
      "type": "object"
    },
    "entropy": {
      "type": "array",
      "byteArray": true,
      "minItems": 32,
      "maxItems": 32
    },
    "signaturePublicKeyId": {
      "type": "integer",
      "minimum": 0
    },
    "signature": {
      "type": "array",
      "byteArray": true,
      "minItems": 65,
      "maxItems": 65
    }
  },
  "additionalProperties": false,
  "required": [
    "protocolVersion",
    "type",
    "dataContract",
    "entropy",
    "signaturePublicKeyId",
    "signature"
  ]
}

Example State Transition

{
  "protocolVersion":1,
  "type":0,
  "signature":"IFmEb/OwyYG0yn33U4/kieH4JL63Ft25GAun+XqWOalkbDrpL9z+OH+Sb03xsyMNzoILC2T1Q8yV1q7kCmr0HuQ=",
  "signaturePublicKeyId":0,
  "dataContract":{
    "protocolVersion":1,
    "$id":"44dvUnSdVtvPPeVy6mS4vRzJ4zfABCt33VvqTWMM8VG6",
    "$schema":"https://schema.dash.org/dpp-0-4-0/meta/data-contract",
    "version":1,
    "ownerId":"6YfP6tT9AK8HPVXMK7CQrhpc8VMg7frjEnXinSPvUmZC",
    "documents":{
      "note":{
        "type":"object",
        "properties":{
          "message":{
            "type":"string"
          }
        },
        "additionalProperties":false
      }
    }
  },
  "entropy":"J2Sl/Ka9T1paYUv6f2ec5MzaaACs9lcUvOskBU0SMlo="
}

Data Contract Update

Existing data contracts can be updated in certain backwards-compatible ways. The following aspects
of a data contract can be updated:

  • Adding a new document
  • Adding a new optional property to an existing document
  • Adding non-unique indices for properties added in the update

Data contracts are updated on the platform by submitting the modified data contract
object
in a data contract update state transition consisting of:

FieldTypeDescription
protocolVersionintegerThe platform protocol version (currently 1)
typeintegerState transition type (4 for data contract update)
dataContractdata contract objectObject containing the updated data contract details
Note: the data contract's version property must be incremented with each update
signaturePublicKeyIdnumberThe id of the identity public key that signed the state transition
signaturearray of bytesSignature of state transition data (65 bytes)

Each data contract state transition must comply with this JSON-Schema definition established in
js-dpp:

{
  "$schema": "https://json-schema.org/draft/2020-12/schema",
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "protocolVersion": {
      "type": "integer",
      "$comment": "Maximum is the latest protocol version"
    },
    "type": {
      "type": "integer",
      "const": 4
    },
    "dataContract": {
      "type": "object"
    },
    "signaturePublicKeyId": {
      "type": "integer",
      "minimum": 0
    },
    "signature": {
      "type": "array",
      "byteArray": true,
      "minItems": 65,
      "maxItems": 65
    }
  },
  "additionalProperties": false,
  "required": [
    "protocolVersion",
    "type",
    "dataContract",
    "signaturePublicKeyId",
    "signature"
  ]
}

Example State Transition

{
  "protocolVersion":1,
  "type":4,
  "signature":"IBboAbqbGBiWzyJDyhwzs1GujR6Gb4m5Gt/QCugLV2EYcsBaQKTM/Stq7iyIm2YyqkV8VlWqOfGebW2w5Pjnfak=",
  "signaturePublicKeyId":0,
  "dataContract":{
    "protocolVersion":1,
    "$id":"44dvUnSdVtvPPeVy6mS4vRzJ4zfABCt33VvqTWMM8VG6",
    "$schema":"https://schema.dash.org/dpp-0-4-0/meta/data-contract",
    "version":2,
    "ownerId":"6YfP6tT9AK8HPVXMK7CQrhpc8VMg7frjEnXinSPvUmZC",
    "documents":{
      "note":{
        "type":"object",
        "properties":{
          "message":{
            "type":"string"
          },
          "author":{
            "type":"string"
          }
        },
        "additionalProperties":false
      }
    }
  }
}

Data Contract State Transition Signing

Data contract state transitions must be signed by a private key associated with the contract owner's identity.

The process to sign a data contract state transition consists of the following steps:

  1. Canonical CBOR encode the state transition data - this include all ST fields except the signature and signaturePublicKeyId
  2. Sign the encoded data with a private key associated with the ownerId
  3. Set the state transition signature to the value of the signature created in the previous step
  4. Set the state transitionsignaturePublicKeyId to the public key id corresponding to the key used to sign