Why Nostr? What is Njump?
2023-06-07 23:06:25
in reply to

darosior [ARCHIVE] on Nostr: 📅 Original date posted:2022-03-12 📝 Original message:The idea of a soft fork to ...

📅 Original date posted:2022-03-12
📝 Original message:The idea of a soft fork to fix dynamic fee bumping was recently put back on the table. It might
sound radical, as what prevents today reasonable fee bumping for contracts with presigned
transactions (pinning) has to do with nodes' relay policy. But the frustration is understandable
given the complexity of designing fee bumping with today's primitives. [0]
Recently too, there was a lot of discussions around covenants. Covenants (conceptually, not talking
about any specific proposal) seem to open lots of new use cases and to be desired by (some?) Bitcoin
application developers and users.
I think that fee bumping using covenants has attractive properties, and it requires a soft fork that
is already desirable beyond (trying) to fix fee bumping. However i could not come up with a solution
as neat for other protocols than vaults. I'd like to hear from others about 1) taking this route for
fee bumping 2) better ideas on applying this to other protocols.


In a vault construction you have a UTxO which can only be spent by an Unvaulting transaction, whose
output triggers a timelock before the expiration of which a revocation transaction may be confirmed.
The revocation transaction being signed in advance (typically before sharing the signature for the
Unvault transaction) you need fee bumping in order for the contract to actually be enforceable.

Now, with a covenant you could commit to the revocation tx instead of presigning it. And using a
Taproot tree you could commit to different versions of it with increasing feerate. Any network
monitor (the brooadcaster, a watchtower, ..) would be able to RBF the revocation transaction if it
doesn't confirm by spending using a leaf with a higher-feerate transaction being committed to.

Of course this makes for a perfect DoS: it would be trivial for a miner to infer that you are using
a specific vault standard and guess other leaves and replace the witness to use the highest-feerate
spending path. You could require a signature from any of the participants. Or, at the cost of an
additional depth, in the tree you could "salt" each leaf by pairing it with -say- an OP_RETURN leaf.
But this leaves you with a possible internal blackmail for multi-party contracts (although it's less
of an issue for vaults, and not one for single-party vaults).
What you could do instead is attaching an increasing relative timelock to each leaf (as the committed
revocation feerate increases, so does the timelock). You need to be careful to note wreck miner
incentives here (see [0], [1], [2] on "miner harvesting"), but this enables the nice property of a
feerate which "adapts" to the block space market. Another nice property of this approach is the
integrated anti fee sniping protection if the revocation transaction pays a non-trivial amount of
fees.

Paying fees from "shared" funds instead of a per-watchtower fee-bumping wallet opened up the
blackmail from the previous section, but the benefits of paying from internal funds shouldn't be
understated.
No need to decide on an amount to be refilled. No need to bother the user to refill the fee-bumping
wallet (before they can participate in more contracts, or worse before a deadline at which all
contracts are closed). No need for a potentially large amount of funds to just sit on a hot wallet
"just in case". No need to duplicate this amount as you replicate the number of network monitors
(which is critical to the security of such contracts).
In addition, note how modifying the feerate of the revocation transaction in place is less expensive
than adding a (pair of) new input (and output), let alone adding an entire new transaction to CPFP.
Aside, and less importantly, it can be made to work with today's relay rules (just use fee thresholds
adapted to the current RBF thresholds, potentially with some leeway to account for policy changes).
Paying from shared funds (in addition to paying from internal funds) also prevents pervert
incentives for contracts with more than 2 parties. In case one of the parties breaches it, all
remaining parties have an incentive to enforce the contract.. But only one would otherwise pay for
it! It would open up the door to some potential sneaky techniques to wait for another party to pay
for the fees, which is at odd with the reactive security model.

Let's examine how it could be concretely designed. Say you have a vault wallet software for a setup
with 5 participants. The revocation delay is 144 blocks. You assume revocation to be infrequent (if
one happens it's probably a misconfigured watchtower that needs be fixed before the next
unvaulting), so you can afford infrequent overpayments and larger fee thresholds. Participants
assume the vault will be spent within a year and assume a maximum possible feerate for this year of
10ksat/vb.
They create a Taproot tree of depth 7. First leaf is the spending path (open to whomever the vault
pays after the 144 blocks). Then the leaf `i` for `i` in `[1, 127]` is a covenant to the revocation
transaction with a feerate `i * 79` sats/vb and a relative timelock of `i - 1` blocks.
Assuming the covenant to the revocation transaction is 33 bytes [3], that's a witness of:
1 + 33 + 1 + 33 + 7 * 32 = 292 WU (73 vb)
^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
witscript control block
for any of the revocation paths. The revocation transaction is 1-input 1-output, so in total it's
10.5 + 41 + 73 + 43 = 167.5 vb
^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^
header input|witness output
The transaction size is not what you'd necessarily want to optimize for first, still, it is smaller
in this case than using other feebumping primitives and has a smaller footprint on the UTxO set. For
instance for adding a feebumping input and change output assuming all Taproot inputs and outputs
(CPFP is necessarily even larger):
5 * 64 + 1 + 5 * (32 + 1) + 1 + 33 = 520 WU (105 vb)
^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^
witness witscript control
10.5 + 41 + 105 + 41 + 16.5 + 2 * 43 = 300 vb
^^^^ ^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^
header input|witness fb input|witness outputs
>From there, you can afford more depths at the tiny cost of 8 more vbytes each. You might want them
for:
- more granularity (if you can afford large enough timelocks)
- optimizing for the spending path rather than the revocation one
- adding a hashlock to prevent nuisance (with the above script a third party could malleate a
spending path into a revocation one). You can use the OP_RETURN trick from above to prevent that.

Unfortunately, the timelocked-covenant approach to feebumping only applies to bumping the first
transaction of a chain (you can't pay for the parent with a timelock) so for instance it's not
usable for HTLC transactions in Lightning to bump the parent commitment tx. The same goes for
bumping the update tx in Coinpool.
It could be worked around by having a different covenant per participant (paying the fee from either
of the participants' output) behind a signature check. Of course it requires funds to already be in
the contract (HTLC, Coinpool leaf) to pay for your own unilateral close, but if you don't have any
fund in the contract it doesn't make sense to try to feebump it in the first place. The same goes
for small amounts: you'd only allocate up to the value of the contract (minus a dust preference) in
fees in order to enforce it.
This is less nice for external monitors as it requires a private key (or another secret) to be
committed to in advance) to be able to bump [4] and does not get rid of the "who's gonna pay for the
enforcement" issue in >2-parties contracts. Still, it's more optimal and usable than CPFP or adding
a pair of input/output for all the reasons mentioned above.


Thoughts?
Antoine


[0] https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2021-November/019614.html
[1] https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2021-November/019615.html
[2] https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2021-December/019627.html
[3] That's obviously close to the CTV construction. But using another more flexible (and therefore
less optimized) construction would not be a big deal. It might in fact be necessary for more
elaborated (realistic?) usecases than the simple one detailed here.
[4] https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2022-February/019879.html
Author Public Key
npub1pj9022f74rzq7d5x7gnxje6wpsgk4r5jgeck8y5awd423ydhan3q7x22xp