# 8.2: Scripting a Multisig > **NOTE:** This is a draft in progress, so that I can get some feedback from early reviewers. It is not yet ready for learning. Ever since [§6.1: Sending a Transaction to a Multisig](6_1_Sending_a_Transaction_to_a_Multisig.md), we've been casually noting that the `bitcoin-cli` interface wraps its multisig transaction in a P2SH transaction. In fact, this is the standard methodology for creating multisigs on the Blockchain. This section explains it all in depth. ## Understand the Multisig Code Multisig transactions are created in Bitcoin using the `OP_CHECKMULTISIG` code. `OP_CHECKMULTISIG` expects a long string of arguments that looks like this: `0 ... sigs ... ... addresses ... OP_CHECKMULTISIG`. When it's run, it does the following: 1. Pop the first value from the stack (``). 2. Pop "n" values from the stack as Bitcoin addresses (hashed public keys). 3. Pop the next value from the stack (``). 4. Pop "m" values from the stack as potential signatures. 5. Pop a `0` from the stack due to a mistake in the original coding. 6. Compare the signatures to the Bitcoin adddresses. 7. Push a `TRUE` or `FALSE` depending on the result. The operands of `OP_MULTISIG` are typically divided, with the `0` and signatures coming from the unlocking script and everything else being laid out in the locking script. _What is a consensus rule?_ These are the rules that the Bitcoin nodes follow to work together. In large part they're defined by the Bitcoin Core code. These rules include lots of obvious mandates, such as the limit to how many Bitcoins are created for each block and the rules for how transactions may be respent. However, they also include fixes for bugs that have appeared over the years, because once a bug has been introduced into the Bitcoin codebase, it must be continually supported, lest old Bitcoins become unspendable. The extra-pop bug in `OP_CHECKMULTISIG` is a consensus rule. Because the original version of `OP_CHECKMULTISIG` accidentally popped an extra item off the stack, Bitcoin must forever follow that rule, lest complex redemption scripts accidentally be broken, rendering old funds unredeemable. Recent versions of Bitcoin core require that leading constant be a "0", as is described here. ## Create a Raw Multisig As discussed in [§8.1: Building a Bitcoin Script with P2SH](8_1_Building_a_Bitcoin_Script_with_P2SH.md), multisigs are one of the standard Bitcoin transaction types. A transaction can be created with a locking script that uses the raw `OP_CHECKMULTISIG` command, and it will be accepted into a block. This is the classic methodology for using multisigs in Bitcoin. As an example, we can zoom in on the multisig created in [§6.1](6_1_Sending_a_Transaction_to_a_Multisig.md) and examine how to build a locking script for it using this methodology. As you may recall, that was a 1-of-2 multisig built from `$address1` and `$address2`. A locking script simply needs to list that "m", that "n", and the public key addresses. The resultant `scriptPubKey` would be: ``` 1 $address1 $address2 2 OP_CHECKMULTISIG ``` > **WARNING:** For classic `OP_CHECKMULTISIG` signatures, "n" must be ≤ 3 for the transaction to be standard. The `scriptSig` for a standard multisig address must then submit the missing operands for `OP_CHECKMULTISIG`: a "0" followed by "m" signatures. Either of the following would work for our example: ``` 0 $signature1 ``` Or: ``` 0 $signature2 ``` ### Run a Raw Multisig Script When the multisig UTXO was reused, the `scriptSig` and `scriptPubKey` would be run as follows: ``` Script: 0 $signature1 1 $address1 $address2 2 OP_CHECKMULTISIG Stack: [ ] ``` All the constants are put on the stack: ``` Script: OP_CHECKMULTISIG Stack: [ 0 $signature1 1 $address1 $address2 2 ] ``` Then, the `OP_CHECKMULTISIG` begins to run. First, the "2" is popped: ``` Script: OP_CHECKMULTISIG Stack: [ 0 $signature1 1 $address1 $address2 ] ``` Then, the "2" tells `OP_CHECKMULTISIG `to pop two addresses: ``` Script: OP_CHECKMULTISIG Stack: [ 0 $signature1 1 ] ``` Then, the "1" is popped: ``` Script: OP_CHECKMULTISIG Stack: [ 0 $signature1 ] ``` Then, the "1" tells `OP_CHECKMULTISIG` to pop one signature: ``` Script: OP_CHECKMULTISIG Stack: [ 0 ] ``` Then, one more item is mistakenly popped: ``` Script: OP_CHECKMULTISIG Stack: [ ] ``` Then, `OP_CHECKMULTISIG` completes its operation by comparing the "m" signatures to the "n" addresses: ``` Script: Stack: [ True ] ``` ### Understand the Limitations of Raw Multisig Scripts Unfortunately, the technique of embedding the raw multisig into a transaction has some notable drawbacks: 1. Because there's no standard address format for multisigs, each sender has to: enter a long and cumbersome multisig script; have software that allows this; and be trusted not to mess it up. 2. Because multisigs can be much longer than typical locking scripts, the blockchain incurs more costs. This requires higher transaction fees from the sender and creates more nuisance for every node. These were generally problems with any sort of complex Bitcoin script, but they quickly became very real problems when applied to multisigs, which were some of the first complex scripts to be widely used on the Bitcoin network. P2SH transactions were created to solve the very real problems of complex Bitcoin Scripts. The idea was introduced in 2012 and quickly applied to multisigs, resulting in "P2SH multisigs", which simply package up a standard multisig transaction into a standard P2SH transaction. This allows for address standardization; reduced data storage; and increased "m" and "n" counts. ## Create a P2SH Multisig P2SH multisigs are the modern methodology for creating multisigs on the Blockchains. What follows is a new example that uses the same 1-of-2 multisig, but now packages it in a P2SH using the technique described in [§8.1](8_1_Building_a_Bitcoin_Script_with_P2SH.md). This offers a practical first example of how P2SHes really work. ### Create the Lock for the P2SH Multisig To create the P2SH multisig, follow the standard steps for creating a P2SH locking script: 1. Serialize `1 $address1 $address2 2 OP_CHECKMULTISIG` (``) then SHA-256 and RIPEMD-160 hash it (``). 2. Save `` for future reference as the `redeemScript`. 3. Produce a P2SH Multisig locking script that includes the hashed script (`OP_HASH160 OP_EQUAL`). 4. Create a transaction using that `scriptPubKey`. ### Run the First Round of P2SH Validation Unlocking the P2SH multisig first requires the confirmation of the script: 1. Validate `0 $signature1 OP_HASH160 OP_EQUAL` or `0 $signature2 OP_HASH160 OP_EQUAL`. ### Run the Second Round of P2SH Validation Then, the multisig script itself must be run: 1. Deserialize ``. 2. Validate `0 $signature1 1 $address1 $address2 2 OP_CHECKMULTISIG` or `0 $signature2 1 $address1 $address2 2 OP_CHECKMULTISIG`. Now you know how the multisig transaction in [§6.1](6_1_Sending_a_Transaction_to_a_Multisig.md) was actually created, how it was validated for spending, and why that `redeemScript` was so important. ## Summary: Creating Multisig Scripts Multisigs are a standard transaction type, but they're a bit cumbersome to use, so they're regularly incorporated in P2SH transactions, as they were in [§6.1](6_1_Sending_a_Transaction_to_a_Multisig.md), when we created our first multisigs. The result is cleaner, smaller, and more standardized — but more importantly, it's also a great real-world example of how P2SH scripts really work.