Why Nostr? What is Njump?
2023-06-07 17:49:17
in reply to

Anthony Towns [ARCHIVE] on Nostr: 📅 Original date posted:2016-02-26 📝 Original message:On Fri, Feb 26, 2016 at ...

📅 Original date posted:2016-02-26
📝 Original message:On Fri, Feb 26, 2016 at 01:32:34AM +0000, Gregory Maxwell via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 26, 2016 at 1:07 AM, Joseph Poon via bitcoin-dev
> <bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
> > I'm interested in input and in the level of receptiveness to this. If
> > there is interest, I'll write up a draft BIP in the next couple days.
> .. I think this should probably be constructed as a new segwit script type,
> and not a base feature.

+1 to both

> The exact construction you're thinking of there isn't clear to me...

I think the idea is that you have three transactions:

anchor:
input: whatever
output:
- single output, spendable by 2-of-2 multisig
- [possibly others as well, whatever]

commitment:
input: anchor
outputs:
1. payment to A
2. payment to B
3. HTLC to A on R1, timeout T1
4. HTLC to A on R2, timeout T2
5. HTLC to B on R3, timeout T3
...

penalty:
inputs:
all the outputs from the commitment tx
outputs:
1. 99% as payment to me
2. 1% as outsourcing fee

As long as the key I use for spending each of commitment transactions
outputs is "single use" -- ie, I don't use it for other channels or
anywhere else on the blockchain, then as long as the signature commits
to the outputs it's safe afaics.

(You still have to send a lot of data to the place you're outsourcing
chain-monitoring to; all the R1,R2,R3 and T1,T2,T3 values are needed in
order to reconstruct the redeem scripts)

> one thing that comes to mind is that I think it is imperative that we
> do not deploy a without-inputs SIGHASH flag without also deploying at
> least a fee-committing sighash-all.

If the fee for commitment transactions changes regularly (eg, a new
commitment transaction is generated every few seconds/minutes, and the fee
is chosen based on whatever estimatefee returns), I think this would cause
problems -- you couldn't use a single signature to cover every revoked
commitment, you'd need one for each different fee level that you'd used
for the lifetime of the channel. Actually, the size of the commitment
transaction will differ anyway depending on how many HTLCs are open,
so even if estimatefee didn't change, the fee would still differ. So I
think commiting to a fee isn't workable for the lightning use case...

> When you do write a BIP for this its imperative that the vulnerability
> to replay is called out in bold blinking flaming text, along with the
> necessary description of how to use it safely. The fact that without
> input commitments transactions are replayable is highly surprising to
> many developers... Personally, I'd even go so far as to name the flag
> SIGHASH_REPLAY_VULNERABLE. :)

+1, though I'm not sure it's so much "vulnerable" to replay as it is
"explicitly designed" to be replayable...

Cheers,
aj
Author Public Key
npub17rld56k4365lfphyd8u8kwuejey5xcazdxptserx03wc4jc9g24stx9l2h