Since the advent of distributed ledger technologies, they have provided diverse opportunities in a wide range of application domains. This article brings a comprehensive review of the fundamentals of distributed ledger and its variants. Analyzing 185 publications, ranging from academic journals to industry websites, it provides a comparative analysis of 130 consensus algorithms using a novel architectural classification. The distribution of the reviewed algorithms is analyzed in terms of the proposed classification and different application domains, along with the applicability of each class among the top 10 platforms in the most prominent blockchain application domains. Additional conclusions are drawn from the evolution of consensus mechanisms, and the analysis concludes envisaging future prospects for consensus as an important part of distributed ledger technology.
As blockchain technology advances, so has the deployment of smart contracts on blockchain platforms, making it exceedingly challenging for users to explicitly identify application services. Unlike traditional contracts, smart contracts are not written in a natural language, making it difficult to determine their provenance. Automatic classification of smart contracts offers blockchain users keyword-based contract queries and a streamlined effective management of smart contracts. In addition, the advancement in smart contracts is accompanied by security challenges, which are generally caused by domain-specific security breaches in smart contract implementation. The development of secure and reliable smart contracts can be extremely challenging due to domain-specific vulnerabilities and constraints associated with various business logics. Accordingly, contract classification based on the application domain and the transaction context offers greater insight into the syntactic and semantic properties of that class. However, despite initial attempts at classifying Ethereum smart contracts, there has been no research on the identification of smart contracts deployed in transactive energy systems for energy exchange purposes. In this article, in response to the widely recognized prospects of blockchain-enabled smart contracts towards an economical and transparent energy sector, we propose a methodology for the detection and analysis of energy smart contracts. First, smart contracts are parsed by transforming code elements into vectors that encapsulate the semantic and syntactic characteristics of each term. This generates a corpus of annotated text as a balanced, representative collection of terms in energy contracts. The use of a domain corpus builder as an embedding layer to annotate energy smart contracts in conjunction with machine learning models results in a classification accuracy of 98.34%. Subsequently, a source code analysis scheme is applied to identified energy contracts to uncover patterns in code segment distribution, predominant adoption of certain functions, and recurring contracts across the Ethereum network.
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