import { BinaryReader, BinaryWriter } from "../../../../binary";
import { DeepPartial } from "../../../../helpers";
/**
 * MerklePath is the path used to verify commitment proofs, which can be an
 * arbitrary structured object (defined by a commitment type).
 * ICS-23 verification supports membership proofs for nested merkle trees.
 * The ICS-24 standard provable keys MUST be stored in the lowest level tree with an optional prefix.
 * The IC24 provable tree may then be stored in a higher level tree(s) that hash up to the root hash
 * stored in the consensus state of the client.
 * Each element of the path represents the key of a merkle tree from the root to the leaf.
 * The elements of the path before the final element must be the path to the tree that contains
 * the ICS24 provable store. Thus, it should remain constant for all ICS24 proofs.
 * The final element of the path is the key of the leaf in the ICS24 provable store,
 * Thus IBC core will append the ICS24 path to the final element of the MerklePath
 * stored in the counterparty to create the full path to the leaf for proof verification.
 * Examples:
 * Cosmos SDK:
 * The Cosmos SDK commits to a multi-tree where each store is an IAVL tree and all store hashes
 * are hashed in a simple merkle tree to get the final root hash. Thus, the MerklePath in the counterparty
 * MerklePrefix has the following structure: ["ibc", ""]
 * The core IBC handler will append the ICS24 path to the final element of the MerklePath
 * like so: ["ibc", "{packetCommitmentPath}"] which will then be used for final verification.
 * Ethereum:
 * The Ethereum client commits to a single Patricia merkle trie. The ICS24 provable store is managed
 * by the smart contract state. Each smart contract has a specific prefix reserved within the global trie.
 * Thus the MerklePath in the counterparty is the prefix to the smart contract state in the global trie.
 * Since there is only one tree in the commitment structure of ethereum the MerklePath in the counterparty
 * MerklePrefix has the following structure: ["IBCCoreContractAddressStoragePrefix"]
 * The core IBC handler will append the ICS24 path to the final element of the MerklePath
 * like so: ["IBCCoreContractAddressStoragePrefix{packetCommitmentPath}"] which will then be used for final
 * verification. Thus the MerklePath in the counterparty MerklePrefix is the nested key path from the root hash of the
 * consensus state down to the ICS24 provable store. The IBC handler retrieves the counterparty key path to the ICS24
 * provable store from the MerklePath and appends the ICS24 path to get the final key path to the value being verified
 * by the client against the root hash in the client's consensus state.
 * @name MerklePath
 * @package ibc.core.commitment.v2
 * @see proto type: ibc.core.commitment.v2.MerklePath
 */
export interface MerklePath {
    keyPath: Uint8Array[];
}
export interface MerklePathProtoMsg {
    typeUrl: "/ibc.core.commitment.v2.MerklePath";
    value: Uint8Array;
}
/**
 * MerklePath is the path used to verify commitment proofs, which can be an
 * arbitrary structured object (defined by a commitment type).
 * ICS-23 verification supports membership proofs for nested merkle trees.
 * The ICS-24 standard provable keys MUST be stored in the lowest level tree with an optional prefix.
 * The IC24 provable tree may then be stored in a higher level tree(s) that hash up to the root hash
 * stored in the consensus state of the client.
 * Each element of the path represents the key of a merkle tree from the root to the leaf.
 * The elements of the path before the final element must be the path to the tree that contains
 * the ICS24 provable store. Thus, it should remain constant for all ICS24 proofs.
 * The final element of the path is the key of the leaf in the ICS24 provable store,
 * Thus IBC core will append the ICS24 path to the final element of the MerklePath
 * stored in the counterparty to create the full path to the leaf for proof verification.
 * Examples:
 * Cosmos SDK:
 * The Cosmos SDK commits to a multi-tree where each store is an IAVL tree and all store hashes
 * are hashed in a simple merkle tree to get the final root hash. Thus, the MerklePath in the counterparty
 * MerklePrefix has the following structure: ["ibc", ""]
 * The core IBC handler will append the ICS24 path to the final element of the MerklePath
 * like so: ["ibc", "{packetCommitmentPath}"] which will then be used for final verification.
 * Ethereum:
 * The Ethereum client commits to a single Patricia merkle trie. The ICS24 provable store is managed
 * by the smart contract state. Each smart contract has a specific prefix reserved within the global trie.
 * Thus the MerklePath in the counterparty is the prefix to the smart contract state in the global trie.
 * Since there is only one tree in the commitment structure of ethereum the MerklePath in the counterparty
 * MerklePrefix has the following structure: ["IBCCoreContractAddressStoragePrefix"]
 * The core IBC handler will append the ICS24 path to the final element of the MerklePath
 * like so: ["IBCCoreContractAddressStoragePrefix{packetCommitmentPath}"] which will then be used for final
 * verification. Thus the MerklePath in the counterparty MerklePrefix is the nested key path from the root hash of the
 * consensus state down to the ICS24 provable store. The IBC handler retrieves the counterparty key path to the ICS24
 * provable store from the MerklePath and appends the ICS24 path to get the final key path to the value being verified
 * by the client against the root hash in the client's consensus state.
 * @name MerklePathAmino
 * @package ibc.core.commitment.v2
 * @see proto type: ibc.core.commitment.v2.MerklePath
 */
export interface MerklePathAmino {
    key_path: string[];
}
export interface MerklePathAminoMsg {
    type: "cosmos-sdk/MerklePath";
    value: MerklePathAmino;
}
/**
 * MerklePath is the path used to verify commitment proofs, which can be an
 * arbitrary structured object (defined by a commitment type).
 * ICS-23 verification supports membership proofs for nested merkle trees.
 * The ICS-24 standard provable keys MUST be stored in the lowest level tree with an optional prefix.
 * The IC24 provable tree may then be stored in a higher level tree(s) that hash up to the root hash
 * stored in the consensus state of the client.
 * Each element of the path represents the key of a merkle tree from the root to the leaf.
 * The elements of the path before the final element must be the path to the tree that contains
 * the ICS24 provable store. Thus, it should remain constant for all ICS24 proofs.
 * The final element of the path is the key of the leaf in the ICS24 provable store,
 * Thus IBC core will append the ICS24 path to the final element of the MerklePath
 * stored in the counterparty to create the full path to the leaf for proof verification.
 * Examples:
 * Cosmos SDK:
 * The Cosmos SDK commits to a multi-tree where each store is an IAVL tree and all store hashes
 * are hashed in a simple merkle tree to get the final root hash. Thus, the MerklePath in the counterparty
 * MerklePrefix has the following structure: ["ibc", ""]
 * The core IBC handler will append the ICS24 path to the final element of the MerklePath
 * like so: ["ibc", "{packetCommitmentPath}"] which will then be used for final verification.
 * Ethereum:
 * The Ethereum client commits to a single Patricia merkle trie. The ICS24 provable store is managed
 * by the smart contract state. Each smart contract has a specific prefix reserved within the global trie.
 * Thus the MerklePath in the counterparty is the prefix to the smart contract state in the global trie.
 * Since there is only one tree in the commitment structure of ethereum the MerklePath in the counterparty
 * MerklePrefix has the following structure: ["IBCCoreContractAddressStoragePrefix"]
 * The core IBC handler will append the ICS24 path to the final element of the MerklePath
 * like so: ["IBCCoreContractAddressStoragePrefix{packetCommitmentPath}"] which will then be used for final
 * verification. Thus the MerklePath in the counterparty MerklePrefix is the nested key path from the root hash of the
 * consensus state down to the ICS24 provable store. The IBC handler retrieves the counterparty key path to the ICS24
 * provable store from the MerklePath and appends the ICS24 path to get the final key path to the value being verified
 * by the client against the root hash in the client's consensus state.
 * @name MerklePath
 * @package ibc.core.commitment.v2
 * @see proto type: ibc.core.commitment.v2.MerklePath
 */
export declare const MerklePath: {
    typeUrl: string;
    aminoType: string;
    is(o: any): o is MerklePath;
    isAmino(o: any): o is MerklePathAmino;
    encode(message: MerklePath, writer?: BinaryWriter): BinaryWriter;
    decode(input: BinaryReader | Uint8Array, length?: number): MerklePath;
    fromPartial(object: DeepPartial<MerklePath>): MerklePath;
    fromAmino(object: MerklePathAmino): MerklePath;
    toAmino(message: MerklePath): MerklePathAmino;
    fromAminoMsg(object: MerklePathAminoMsg): MerklePath;
    toAminoMsg(message: MerklePath): MerklePathAminoMsg;
    fromProtoMsg(message: MerklePathProtoMsg): MerklePath;
    toProto(message: MerklePath): Uint8Array;
    toProtoMsg(message: MerklePath): MerklePathProtoMsg;
    registerTypeUrl(): void;
};
