How smart contract transactions work?Smart Contracts and symmetric encryptionHow to track token transactionsCreate broadcastable TX offline on WindowsBlockCypher Send TransactionWhat is the gas cost for verifying signature, run AES and conditional transaction?How to send transaction/call function from server-side?Different Values for v, r, s? What am I doing wrong?How can Contracts sign transactions, when they dont have a private key?0x0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 address behaviour

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How smart contract transactions work?


Smart Contracts and symmetric encryptionHow to track token transactionsCreate broadcastable TX offline on WindowsBlockCypher Send TransactionWhat is the gas cost for verifying signature, run AES and conditional transaction?How to send transaction/call function from server-side?Different Values for v, r, s? What am I doing wrong?How can Contracts sign transactions, when they dont have a private key?0x0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 address behaviour






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1















I read that smart contracts don’t have a private key, so they can’t sign a transaction. My question is: when a smart contract starts a transaction to an EOA, how are we sure that the smart contract made the transaction if it doesn’t sign anything?
I’m new in this world and I'm still studying English, so please forgive the mistakes.
Thanks you










share|improve this question









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    1















    I read that smart contracts don’t have a private key, so they can’t sign a transaction. My question is: when a smart contract starts a transaction to an EOA, how are we sure that the smart contract made the transaction if it doesn’t sign anything?
    I’m new in this world and I'm still studying English, so please forgive the mistakes.
    Thanks you










    share|improve this question









    New contributor



    GBis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.























      1












      1








      1








      I read that smart contracts don’t have a private key, so they can’t sign a transaction. My question is: when a smart contract starts a transaction to an EOA, how are we sure that the smart contract made the transaction if it doesn’t sign anything?
      I’m new in this world and I'm still studying English, so please forgive the mistakes.
      Thanks you










      share|improve this question









      New contributor



      GBis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      I read that smart contracts don’t have a private key, so they can’t sign a transaction. My question is: when a smart contract starts a transaction to an EOA, how are we sure that the smart contract made the transaction if it doesn’t sign anything?
      I’m new in this world and I'm still studying English, so please forgive the mistakes.
      Thanks you







      contract-development transactions blockchain addresses accounts






      share|improve this question









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      GBis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.










      share|improve this question









      New contributor



      GBis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.








      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 8 hours ago









      shane

      3,4324 gold badges11 silver badges32 bronze badges




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      asked 8 hours ago









      GBisGBis

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          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          1















          The smart contract can only send a transaction to an EOA if the transaction was initiated by an EOA. Smart contracts cannot initiate a transaction because they do not have a private key and cannot sign a transaction, as you said.



          When value is being sent from a smart contract to an EOA, what is really happening is an EOA sending a transaction to the network that tells the smart contract to send value to the other EOA.






          share|improve this answer




















          • 1





            Thank you for the corrections and for the answer, I have a further doubt, you say: “an EOA sending a transaction to the network that tells the smart contract to send value to the other EOA“, so when the smart contract send value it mades a transaction, right? If true, how miners verify that the transaction is made by the smart contract?

            – GBis
            8 hours ago











          • Yes, every value transfer on Ethereum is through a transaction. For example, here is a transaction from an EOA (0x134...) to a contract (0x0d8...) that initiated a transfer of 31.71388712 BAT from the original EOA (0x134...) to a new EOA (0xdda...). Note: the second EOA (0xdda) could have also been a contract as well—it does not matter where the value gets sent to.

            – shane
            8 hours ago







          • 1





            So, like in your example, the smart contract “modifies” the original transaction?

            – GBis
            8 hours ago











          • No it does not. The sending EOA creates a transaction and signs it with his private key. This transaction tells the contract how to behave and what to do (it does this in the data field of the transaction). The transaction is never "modified". When the transaction is sent to the network, Ethereum processes what the transaction instructed it to do, which, in this case, was to send tokens to another address.

            – shane
            7 hours ago






          • 1





            Ok, therefore an eoa sends a transaction to a smart contract and when the miner verifies that transaction runs the code of the contract and in case add the new transaction “made” by the contract? Thank you for your patience and can you tell me where study the implementation of the “protocol”

            – GBis
            7 hours ago


















          1















          It's not so much about whether a smart contract has a private key or not; it's more about the fact that smart contracts can't initiate a transaction. All transactions are started by an EOA to either a smart contract or to another EOA.



          If a transaction is sent to a contract the contract may include functionality to call another address within the same transaction (be it to another contract or to an EOA). We can always check msg.sender to see where the transaction came from (who was the previous relayer - the very very original sender is visible with tx.origin).






          share|improve this answer
































            0















            Only an EOA can sign and send a transaction. It can be addressed to a contract in which case the contracts functions must run.



            A contract's functions can send messages and/or value to other contracts in which case they also run, or to an EOA which just receives because it has no code.



            All of this happens approximately instantaneously (after mining) because it is all considered part of a single atomic transaction that must either complete entirely or fail.



            Hope it helps.






            share|improve this answer

























            • So, when i send a transaction to a smart contract, the miner execute the code and, if the smart contract want to send message, the miner add the message transaction?

              – GBis
              45 mins ago













            Your Answer








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            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

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            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            1















            The smart contract can only send a transaction to an EOA if the transaction was initiated by an EOA. Smart contracts cannot initiate a transaction because they do not have a private key and cannot sign a transaction, as you said.



            When value is being sent from a smart contract to an EOA, what is really happening is an EOA sending a transaction to the network that tells the smart contract to send value to the other EOA.






            share|improve this answer




















            • 1





              Thank you for the corrections and for the answer, I have a further doubt, you say: “an EOA sending a transaction to the network that tells the smart contract to send value to the other EOA“, so when the smart contract send value it mades a transaction, right? If true, how miners verify that the transaction is made by the smart contract?

              – GBis
              8 hours ago











            • Yes, every value transfer on Ethereum is through a transaction. For example, here is a transaction from an EOA (0x134...) to a contract (0x0d8...) that initiated a transfer of 31.71388712 BAT from the original EOA (0x134...) to a new EOA (0xdda...). Note: the second EOA (0xdda) could have also been a contract as well—it does not matter where the value gets sent to.

              – shane
              8 hours ago







            • 1





              So, like in your example, the smart contract “modifies” the original transaction?

              – GBis
              8 hours ago











            • No it does not. The sending EOA creates a transaction and signs it with his private key. This transaction tells the contract how to behave and what to do (it does this in the data field of the transaction). The transaction is never "modified". When the transaction is sent to the network, Ethereum processes what the transaction instructed it to do, which, in this case, was to send tokens to another address.

              – shane
              7 hours ago






            • 1





              Ok, therefore an eoa sends a transaction to a smart contract and when the miner verifies that transaction runs the code of the contract and in case add the new transaction “made” by the contract? Thank you for your patience and can you tell me where study the implementation of the “protocol”

              – GBis
              7 hours ago















            1















            The smart contract can only send a transaction to an EOA if the transaction was initiated by an EOA. Smart contracts cannot initiate a transaction because they do not have a private key and cannot sign a transaction, as you said.



            When value is being sent from a smart contract to an EOA, what is really happening is an EOA sending a transaction to the network that tells the smart contract to send value to the other EOA.






            share|improve this answer




















            • 1





              Thank you for the corrections and for the answer, I have a further doubt, you say: “an EOA sending a transaction to the network that tells the smart contract to send value to the other EOA“, so when the smart contract send value it mades a transaction, right? If true, how miners verify that the transaction is made by the smart contract?

              – GBis
              8 hours ago











            • Yes, every value transfer on Ethereum is through a transaction. For example, here is a transaction from an EOA (0x134...) to a contract (0x0d8...) that initiated a transfer of 31.71388712 BAT from the original EOA (0x134...) to a new EOA (0xdda...). Note: the second EOA (0xdda) could have also been a contract as well—it does not matter where the value gets sent to.

              – shane
              8 hours ago







            • 1





              So, like in your example, the smart contract “modifies” the original transaction?

              – GBis
              8 hours ago











            • No it does not. The sending EOA creates a transaction and signs it with his private key. This transaction tells the contract how to behave and what to do (it does this in the data field of the transaction). The transaction is never "modified". When the transaction is sent to the network, Ethereum processes what the transaction instructed it to do, which, in this case, was to send tokens to another address.

              – shane
              7 hours ago






            • 1





              Ok, therefore an eoa sends a transaction to a smart contract and when the miner verifies that transaction runs the code of the contract and in case add the new transaction “made” by the contract? Thank you for your patience and can you tell me where study the implementation of the “protocol”

              – GBis
              7 hours ago













            1














            1










            1









            The smart contract can only send a transaction to an EOA if the transaction was initiated by an EOA. Smart contracts cannot initiate a transaction because they do not have a private key and cannot sign a transaction, as you said.



            When value is being sent from a smart contract to an EOA, what is really happening is an EOA sending a transaction to the network that tells the smart contract to send value to the other EOA.






            share|improve this answer













            The smart contract can only send a transaction to an EOA if the transaction was initiated by an EOA. Smart contracts cannot initiate a transaction because they do not have a private key and cannot sign a transaction, as you said.



            When value is being sent from a smart contract to an EOA, what is really happening is an EOA sending a transaction to the network that tells the smart contract to send value to the other EOA.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 8 hours ago









            shaneshane

            3,4324 gold badges11 silver badges32 bronze badges




            3,4324 gold badges11 silver badges32 bronze badges










            • 1





              Thank you for the corrections and for the answer, I have a further doubt, you say: “an EOA sending a transaction to the network that tells the smart contract to send value to the other EOA“, so when the smart contract send value it mades a transaction, right? If true, how miners verify that the transaction is made by the smart contract?

              – GBis
              8 hours ago











            • Yes, every value transfer on Ethereum is through a transaction. For example, here is a transaction from an EOA (0x134...) to a contract (0x0d8...) that initiated a transfer of 31.71388712 BAT from the original EOA (0x134...) to a new EOA (0xdda...). Note: the second EOA (0xdda) could have also been a contract as well—it does not matter where the value gets sent to.

              – shane
              8 hours ago







            • 1





              So, like in your example, the smart contract “modifies” the original transaction?

              – GBis
              8 hours ago











            • No it does not. The sending EOA creates a transaction and signs it with his private key. This transaction tells the contract how to behave and what to do (it does this in the data field of the transaction). The transaction is never "modified". When the transaction is sent to the network, Ethereum processes what the transaction instructed it to do, which, in this case, was to send tokens to another address.

              – shane
              7 hours ago






            • 1





              Ok, therefore an eoa sends a transaction to a smart contract and when the miner verifies that transaction runs the code of the contract and in case add the new transaction “made” by the contract? Thank you for your patience and can you tell me where study the implementation of the “protocol”

              – GBis
              7 hours ago












            • 1





              Thank you for the corrections and for the answer, I have a further doubt, you say: “an EOA sending a transaction to the network that tells the smart contract to send value to the other EOA“, so when the smart contract send value it mades a transaction, right? If true, how miners verify that the transaction is made by the smart contract?

              – GBis
              8 hours ago











            • Yes, every value transfer on Ethereum is through a transaction. For example, here is a transaction from an EOA (0x134...) to a contract (0x0d8...) that initiated a transfer of 31.71388712 BAT from the original EOA (0x134...) to a new EOA (0xdda...). Note: the second EOA (0xdda) could have also been a contract as well—it does not matter where the value gets sent to.

              – shane
              8 hours ago







            • 1





              So, like in your example, the smart contract “modifies” the original transaction?

              – GBis
              8 hours ago











            • No it does not. The sending EOA creates a transaction and signs it with his private key. This transaction tells the contract how to behave and what to do (it does this in the data field of the transaction). The transaction is never "modified". When the transaction is sent to the network, Ethereum processes what the transaction instructed it to do, which, in this case, was to send tokens to another address.

              – shane
              7 hours ago






            • 1





              Ok, therefore an eoa sends a transaction to a smart contract and when the miner verifies that transaction runs the code of the contract and in case add the new transaction “made” by the contract? Thank you for your patience and can you tell me where study the implementation of the “protocol”

              – GBis
              7 hours ago







            1




            1





            Thank you for the corrections and for the answer, I have a further doubt, you say: “an EOA sending a transaction to the network that tells the smart contract to send value to the other EOA“, so when the smart contract send value it mades a transaction, right? If true, how miners verify that the transaction is made by the smart contract?

            – GBis
            8 hours ago





            Thank you for the corrections and for the answer, I have a further doubt, you say: “an EOA sending a transaction to the network that tells the smart contract to send value to the other EOA“, so when the smart contract send value it mades a transaction, right? If true, how miners verify that the transaction is made by the smart contract?

            – GBis
            8 hours ago













            Yes, every value transfer on Ethereum is through a transaction. For example, here is a transaction from an EOA (0x134...) to a contract (0x0d8...) that initiated a transfer of 31.71388712 BAT from the original EOA (0x134...) to a new EOA (0xdda...). Note: the second EOA (0xdda) could have also been a contract as well—it does not matter where the value gets sent to.

            – shane
            8 hours ago






            Yes, every value transfer on Ethereum is through a transaction. For example, here is a transaction from an EOA (0x134...) to a contract (0x0d8...) that initiated a transfer of 31.71388712 BAT from the original EOA (0x134...) to a new EOA (0xdda...). Note: the second EOA (0xdda) could have also been a contract as well—it does not matter where the value gets sent to.

            – shane
            8 hours ago





            1




            1





            So, like in your example, the smart contract “modifies” the original transaction?

            – GBis
            8 hours ago





            So, like in your example, the smart contract “modifies” the original transaction?

            – GBis
            8 hours ago













            No it does not. The sending EOA creates a transaction and signs it with his private key. This transaction tells the contract how to behave and what to do (it does this in the data field of the transaction). The transaction is never "modified". When the transaction is sent to the network, Ethereum processes what the transaction instructed it to do, which, in this case, was to send tokens to another address.

            – shane
            7 hours ago





            No it does not. The sending EOA creates a transaction and signs it with his private key. This transaction tells the contract how to behave and what to do (it does this in the data field of the transaction). The transaction is never "modified". When the transaction is sent to the network, Ethereum processes what the transaction instructed it to do, which, in this case, was to send tokens to another address.

            – shane
            7 hours ago




            1




            1





            Ok, therefore an eoa sends a transaction to a smart contract and when the miner verifies that transaction runs the code of the contract and in case add the new transaction “made” by the contract? Thank you for your patience and can you tell me where study the implementation of the “protocol”

            – GBis
            7 hours ago





            Ok, therefore an eoa sends a transaction to a smart contract and when the miner verifies that transaction runs the code of the contract and in case add the new transaction “made” by the contract? Thank you for your patience and can you tell me where study the implementation of the “protocol”

            – GBis
            7 hours ago













            1















            It's not so much about whether a smart contract has a private key or not; it's more about the fact that smart contracts can't initiate a transaction. All transactions are started by an EOA to either a smart contract or to another EOA.



            If a transaction is sent to a contract the contract may include functionality to call another address within the same transaction (be it to another contract or to an EOA). We can always check msg.sender to see where the transaction came from (who was the previous relayer - the very very original sender is visible with tx.origin).






            share|improve this answer





























              1















              It's not so much about whether a smart contract has a private key or not; it's more about the fact that smart contracts can't initiate a transaction. All transactions are started by an EOA to either a smart contract or to another EOA.



              If a transaction is sent to a contract the contract may include functionality to call another address within the same transaction (be it to another contract or to an EOA). We can always check msg.sender to see where the transaction came from (who was the previous relayer - the very very original sender is visible with tx.origin).






              share|improve this answer



























                1














                1










                1









                It's not so much about whether a smart contract has a private key or not; it's more about the fact that smart contracts can't initiate a transaction. All transactions are started by an EOA to either a smart contract or to another EOA.



                If a transaction is sent to a contract the contract may include functionality to call another address within the same transaction (be it to another contract or to an EOA). We can always check msg.sender to see where the transaction came from (who was the previous relayer - the very very original sender is visible with tx.origin).






                share|improve this answer













                It's not so much about whether a smart contract has a private key or not; it's more about the fact that smart contracts can't initiate a transaction. All transactions are started by an EOA to either a smart contract or to another EOA.



                If a transaction is sent to a contract the contract may include functionality to call another address within the same transaction (be it to another contract or to an EOA). We can always check msg.sender to see where the transaction came from (who was the previous relayer - the very very original sender is visible with tx.origin).







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered 8 hours ago









                Lauri PeltonenLauri Peltonen

                7,8912 gold badges5 silver badges28 bronze badges




                7,8912 gold badges5 silver badges28 bronze badges
























                    0















                    Only an EOA can sign and send a transaction. It can be addressed to a contract in which case the contracts functions must run.



                    A contract's functions can send messages and/or value to other contracts in which case they also run, or to an EOA which just receives because it has no code.



                    All of this happens approximately instantaneously (after mining) because it is all considered part of a single atomic transaction that must either complete entirely or fail.



                    Hope it helps.






                    share|improve this answer

























                    • So, when i send a transaction to a smart contract, the miner execute the code and, if the smart contract want to send message, the miner add the message transaction?

                      – GBis
                      45 mins ago















                    0















                    Only an EOA can sign and send a transaction. It can be addressed to a contract in which case the contracts functions must run.



                    A contract's functions can send messages and/or value to other contracts in which case they also run, or to an EOA which just receives because it has no code.



                    All of this happens approximately instantaneously (after mining) because it is all considered part of a single atomic transaction that must either complete entirely or fail.



                    Hope it helps.






                    share|improve this answer

























                    • So, when i send a transaction to a smart contract, the miner execute the code and, if the smart contract want to send message, the miner add the message transaction?

                      – GBis
                      45 mins ago













                    0














                    0










                    0









                    Only an EOA can sign and send a transaction. It can be addressed to a contract in which case the contracts functions must run.



                    A contract's functions can send messages and/or value to other contracts in which case they also run, or to an EOA which just receives because it has no code.



                    All of this happens approximately instantaneously (after mining) because it is all considered part of a single atomic transaction that must either complete entirely or fail.



                    Hope it helps.






                    share|improve this answer













                    Only an EOA can sign and send a transaction. It can be addressed to a contract in which case the contracts functions must run.



                    A contract's functions can send messages and/or value to other contracts in which case they also run, or to an EOA which just receives because it has no code.



                    All of this happens approximately instantaneously (after mining) because it is all considered part of a single atomic transaction that must either complete entirely or fail.



                    Hope it helps.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered 50 mins ago









                    Rob Hitchens - B9labRob Hitchens - B9lab

                    32.8k7 gold badges48 silver badges88 bronze badges




                    32.8k7 gold badges48 silver badges88 bronze badges















                    • So, when i send a transaction to a smart contract, the miner execute the code and, if the smart contract want to send message, the miner add the message transaction?

                      – GBis
                      45 mins ago

















                    • So, when i send a transaction to a smart contract, the miner execute the code and, if the smart contract want to send message, the miner add the message transaction?

                      – GBis
                      45 mins ago
















                    So, when i send a transaction to a smart contract, the miner execute the code and, if the smart contract want to send message, the miner add the message transaction?

                    – GBis
                    45 mins ago





                    So, when i send a transaction to a smart contract, the miner execute the code and, if the smart contract want to send message, the miner add the message transaction?

                    – GBis
                    45 mins ago










                    GBis is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









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