Return-Path: Received: from smtp1.osuosl.org (smtp1.osuosl.org [140.211.166.138]) by lists.linuxfoundation.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 9E573C0032 for ; Mon, 25 Sep 2023 18:18:51 +0000 (UTC) Received: from localhost (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by smtp1.osuosl.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 8213A820E0 for ; Mon, 25 Sep 2023 18:18:51 +0000 (UTC) DKIM-Filter: OpenDKIM Filter v2.11.0 smtp1.osuosl.org 8213A820E0 Authentication-Results: smtp1.osuosl.org; dkim=pass (2048-bit key) header.d=gmail.com header.i=@gmail.com header.a=rsa-sha256 header.s=20230601 header.b=RlWGAgKo X-Virus-Scanned: amavisd-new at osuosl.org X-Spam-Flag: NO X-Spam-Score: 0.602 X-Spam-Level: X-Spam-Status: No, score=0.602 tagged_above=-999 required=5 tests=[BAYES_50=0.8, DKIM_SIGNED=0.1, DKIM_VALID=-0.1, DKIM_VALID_AU=-0.1, DKIM_VALID_EF=-0.1, FREEMAIL_FROM=0.001, HTML_MESSAGE=0.001, RCVD_IN_DNSWL_NONE=-0.0001, SPF_HELO_NONE=0.001, SPF_PASS=-0.001] autolearn=ham autolearn_force=no Received: from smtp1.osuosl.org ([127.0.0.1]) by localhost (smtp1.osuosl.org [127.0.0.1]) (amavisd-new, port 10024) with ESMTP id PIS6KsKzXbCK for ; Mon, 25 Sep 2023 18:18:49 +0000 (UTC) Received: from mail-io1-xd29.google.com (mail-io1-xd29.google.com [IPv6:2607:f8b0:4864:20::d29]) by smtp1.osuosl.org (Postfix) with ESMTPS id 3A657820D9 for ; Mon, 25 Sep 2023 18:18:49 +0000 (UTC) DKIM-Filter: OpenDKIM Filter v2.11.0 smtp1.osuosl.org 3A657820D9 Received: by mail-io1-xd29.google.com with SMTP id ca18e2360f4ac-79fa2125e19so196311539f.0 for ; Mon, 25 Sep 2023 11:18:49 -0700 (PDT) DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=gmail.com; s=20230601; t=1695665928; x=1696270728; darn=lists.linuxfoundation.org; h=to:subject:message-id:date:from:mime-version:from:to:cc:subject :date:message-id:reply-to; bh=jS0yRYtv0q2fYMX4zE0oK4Ssx9CKbB/vegA4p1tt30I=; b=RlWGAgKoraQVUjTVAHzkVLiPhq4EXnauHB7/Jobn9kaAlqX6W6nyVYmJQZvlKJrKdi G3G6cVKiGuTapcj7DOyZHvqKQvLBvZE9gaguGq0XhHQhSQw11cO94gJ4cHTW0MnNpHgc bAx+/rNYzLkJfhLAxcVQUzSzgdufb77nnvDqkUzYow9et+Hv+2aguAZtbdJc6k3NjVYq GAQQvWaunzgMejcGEUhCRyJ6o8S30hYpPVt+HUvqw08j9wOPrJgJFXCt/jzLzUO5dn9e oYUa9VlKBNgj/mfL1SSo/+Z736SVrzeYqKEWI1HzzSyNcNyCGeBuowhm+q9xYHh260wT Et/g== X-Google-DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=1e100.net; s=20230601; t=1695665928; x=1696270728; h=to:subject:message-id:date:from:mime-version:x-gm-message-state :from:to:cc:subject:date:message-id:reply-to; bh=jS0yRYtv0q2fYMX4zE0oK4Ssx9CKbB/vegA4p1tt30I=; b=kT4eTl9yzCt7inAwNcpH/U0OshWBBOM9mCw9EZ0+IMaIGdebIye3q6AUoYOY+qwkU1 bdWUqIz/zBm26dNGi6bSDbT71LUeghUmWSr7fYpamwEB4fSPYZ+No3IeIbGIvEA2gBDB r8o1wP2LcMODMU6RL8xuD+nEgD0HMOb4e/e1UDCxvC6uXOThKI9cbynYWWcxx9eNVEuJ 5wejDDYvOUhN3fnh4QaF4KPN3wEZ0UbqRjtVwmwrlaLRLbdiyF1XJqTCnLRcYMzCG7M9 OI7ai8roQGFgbIAkW5suq0Xp3DPi4sAB6hCp3tIL7Z3kRIrdAGJh+h9vdhb754EjOedK 3ABg== X-Gm-Message-State: AOJu0YzO7agwGLMxfWb+9VkojX+8wTe+SFHCFH/20Ig5c60X86h0Siwj bOwg6ftEuc4E6gvX0M+QvAvYOpQlDWcCbChXr0ulyXM8VRWCZ6fx X-Google-Smtp-Source: AGHT+IFOJuuQSfq1kXmIxTRIjARezklFV0iCIr9B0UDdfqo1r2heovtzH8+3OmuPPR5hy+jTKI8K2c70GMx6CnlTT3w= X-Received: by 2002:a6b:7d05:0:b0:794:ed2b:2520 with SMTP id c5-20020a6b7d05000000b00794ed2b2520mr8379033ioq.15.1695665927850; Mon, 25 Sep 2023 11:18:47 -0700 (PDT) MIME-Version: 1.0 From: Antoine Riard Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2023 19:18:36 +0100 Message-ID: To: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="0000000000004991b3060632fde0" X-Mailman-Approved-At: Tue, 26 Sep 2023 06:41:16 +0000 Subject: [bitcoin-dev] Solving CoinPool high-interactivity issue with cut-through update of Taproot leaves X-BeenThere: bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.15 Precedence: list List-Id: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , X-List-Received-Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2023 18:18:51 -0000 --0000000000004991b3060632fde0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8" Payment pools and channel factories are afflicted by severe interactivity constraints worsening with the number of users owning an off-chain balance in the construction. The security of user funds is paramount on the ability to withdraw unilaterally from the off-chain construction. As such any update applied to the off-chain balances requires a signature contribution from the unanimity of the construction users to ensure this ability is conserved along updates. As soon as one user starts to be offline or irresponsive, the updates of the off-chain balances must have to be halted and payments progress are limited among subsets of 2 users sharing a channel. Different people have proposed solutions to this issue: introducing a coordinator, partitioning or layering balances in off-chain users subsets. I think all those solutions have circled around a novel issue introduced, namely equivocation of off-chain balances at the harm of construction counterparties [0]. As ZmnSCPxj pointed out recently, one way to mitigate this equivocation consists in punishing the cheating pre-nominated coordinator on an external fidelity bond. One can even imagine more trust-mimized and decentralized fraud proofs to implement this mitigation, removing the need of a coordinator [1]. However, I believe punishment equivocation to be game-theory sound should compensate a defrauded counterparty of the integrity of its lost off-chain balance. As one cheating counterparty can equivocate in the worst-case against all the other counterparties in the construction, one fidelity bond should be equal to ( C - 1 ) * B satoshi amount, where C is the number of construction counterparty and B the initial off-chain balance of the cheating counterparty. Moreover, I guess it is impossible to know ahead of a partition or transition who will be the "honest" counterparties from the "dishonest" ones, therefore this ( C - 1 ) * B-sized fidelity bond must be maintained by every counterparty in the pool or factory. On this ground, I think this mitigation and other corrective ones are not economically practical for large-scale pools among a set of anonymous users. I think the best solution to solve the interactivity issue which is realistic to design is one ruling out off-chain group equivocation in a prophylactic fashion. The pool or factory funding utxo should be edited in an efficient way to register new off-chain subgroups, as lack of interactivity from a subset of counterparties demands it. With CoinPool, there is already this idea of including a user pubkey and balance amount to each leaf composing the Taproot tree while preserving the key-path spend in case of unanimity in the user group. Taproot leaves can be effectively regarded as off-chain user accounts available to realize privacy-preserving payments and contracts. I think one (new ?) idea can be to introduce taproot leaves "cut-through" spends where multiple leaves are updated with a single witness, interactively composed by the owners of the spent leaves. This spend sends back the leaves amount to a new single leaf, aggregating the amounts and user pubkeys. The user leaves not participating in this "cut-through" are inherited with full integrity in the new version of the Taproot tree, at the gain of no interactivity from their side. Let's say you have a CoinPool funded and initially set with Alice, Bob, Caroll, Dave and Eve. Each pool participant has a leaf L.x committing to an amount A.x and user pubkey P.x, where x is the user name owning a leaf. Bob and Eve are deemed to be offline by the Alice, Caroll and Dave subset (the ACD group). The ACD group composes a cut-through spend of L.a + L.c + L.d. This spends generates a new leaf L.(acd) leaf committing to amount A.(acd) and P.(acd). Amount A.(acd) = A.a + A.c + A.d and pubkey P.(acd) = P.a + P.c + P.d. Bob's leaf L.b and Eve's leaf L.e are left unmodified. The ACD group generates a new Taproot tree T' = L.(acd) + L.b + L.e, where the key-path K spend including the original unanimity of pool counterparties is left unmodified. The ACD group can confirm a transaction spending the pool funding utxo to a new single output committing to the scriptpubkey K + T'. From then, the ACD group can pursue off-chain balance updates among the subgroup thanks to the new P.(acd) and relying on the known Eltoo mechanism. There is no possibility for any member of the ACD group to equivocate with Bob or Eve in a non-observable fashion. Once Bob and Eve are online and ready to negotiate an on-chain pool "refresh" transaction, the conserved key-path spend can be used to re-equilibrate the Taproot tree, prune out old subgroups unlikely to be used and provision future subgroups, all with a compact spend based on signature aggregation. Few new Taproot tree update script primitives have been proposed, e.g [2]. Though I think none with the level of flexibility offered to generate leaves cut-through spends, or even batch of "cut-through" where M subgroups are willing to spend N leaves to compose P new subgroups fan-out in Q new outputs, with showing a single on-chain witness. I believe such a hypothetical primitive can also reduce the chain space consumed in the occurrence of naive mass pool withdraws at the same time. I think this solution to the high-interactivity issue of payment pools and factories shifts the burden on each individual user to pre-commit fast Taproot tree traversals, allowing them to compose new pool subgroups as fluctuations in pool users' level of liveliness demand it. Pool efficiency becomes the sum of the quality of user prediction on its counterparties' liveliness during the construction lifetime. Recursive taproot tree spends or more efficient accumulator than merkle tree sounds ideas to lower the on-chain witness space consumed by every pool in the average non-interactive case. Cheers, Antoine [0] https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2022-April/020370.html [1] https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/lightning-dev/2023-August/004043.html [2] https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2021-September/019420.html --0000000000004991b3060632fde0 Content-Type: text/html; charset="UTF-8" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Payment pools and channel factories are afflicted by sever= e interactivity constraints worsening with the number of users owning an of= f-chain balance in the construction. The security of user funds is paramoun= t on the ability to withdraw unilaterally from the off-chain construction. = As such any update applied to the off-chain balances requires a signature c= ontribution from the unanimity of the construction users to ensure this abi= lity is conserved along updates.

As soon as one user sta= rts to be offline or irresponsive, the updates of the off-chain balances mu= st have to be halted and payments progress are limited among subsets of 2 u= sers sharing a channel. Different people have proposed solutions to this is= sue: introducing a coordinator, partitioning or layering balances in off-ch= ain users subsets. I think all those solutions have circled around a novel = issue introduced, namely equivocation of off-chain balances at the harm of = construction counterparties [0].

As ZmnSCPxj point= ed out recently, one way to mitigate this equivocation consists in punishin= g the cheating pre-nominated coordinator on an external fidelity bond. One = can even imagine more trust-mimized and decentralized fraud proofs to imple= ment this mitigation, removing the need of a coordinator [1].
However, I believe punishment equivocation to be game-theory so= und should compensate a defrauded counterparty of the integrity of its lost= off-chain balance. As one cheating counterparty can equivocate in the wors= t-case against all the other counterparties in the construction, one fideli= ty bond should be equal to ( C - 1 ) * B satoshi amount, where C is the num= ber of construction counterparty and B the initial off-chain balance of the= cheating counterparty.

Moreover, I guess it is im= possible to know ahead of a partition or transition who will be the "h= onest" counterparties from the "dishonest" ones, therefore t= his ( C - 1 ) * B-sized fidelity bond must be maintained by every counterpa= rty in the pool or factory. On this ground, I think this mitigation and oth= er corrective ones are not economically practical for large-scale pools amo= ng a set of anonymous users.

I think the best solu= tion to solve the interactivity issue which is realistic to design is one= =C2=A0ruling out off-chain group equivocation in a prophylactic fashion. Th= e pool or factory funding utxo should be edited in an efficient way to regi= ster new off-chain subgroups, as lack of interactivity from a subset of cou= nterparties demands it.

With CoinPool, there is al= ready this idea of including a user pubkey and balance amount to each leaf = composing the Taproot tree while preserving the key-path spend in case of u= nanimity in the user group. Taproot leaves can be effectively regarded as o= ff-chain user accounts available to realize privacy-preserving payments and= contracts.

I think one (new ?) idea can be to int= roduce taproot leaves "cut-through" spends where multiple leaves = are updated with a single witness, interactively composed by the owners of = the spent leaves. This spend sends back the leaves amount to a new single l= eaf, aggregating the amounts and user pubkeys. The user leaves not particip= ating in this "cut-through" are inherited with full integrity in = the new version of the Taproot tree, at the gain of no interactivity from t= heir side.

Let's say you have a CoinPool funde= d and initially set with Alice, Bob, Caroll, Dave and Eve. Each pool partic= ipant has a leaf L.x committing to an amount A.x and user pubkey P.x, where= x is the user name owning a leaf.

Bob and Eve are= deemed to be offline by the Alice, Caroll and Dave subset (the ACD group).=

The ACD group composes a cut-through spend of L.a= =C2=A0+ L.c=C2=A0+ L.d. This spends generates a new leaf L.(acd) leaf commi= tting to amount A.(acd) and P.(acd).

Amount A.(acd= ) =3D A.a=C2=A0+ A.c=C2=A0+ A.d and pubkey P.(acd) =3D P.a=C2=A0+ P.c=C2=A0= + P.d.

Bob's leaf L.b and Eve's leaf L.e a= re left unmodified.

The ACD group generates a new = Taproot tree T' =3D L.(acd)=C2=A0+ L.b=C2=A0+ L.e, where the key-path K= spend including the original unanimity of pool counterparties is left unmo= dified.

The ACD group can confirm a transaction sp= ending the pool funding utxo to a new single output committing to the scrip= tpubkey K=C2=A0+ T'.

From then, the ACD group = can pursue off-chain balance=C2=A0updates among the subgroup thanks to the = new P.(acd) and relying on the known Eltoo mechanism. There is no possibili= ty for any member of the ACD group to equivocate with Bob or Eve in a non-o= bservable fashion.

Once Bob and Eve are online and= ready to negotiate an on-chain pool "refresh" transaction, the c= onserved key-path spend can be used to re-equilibrate the Taproot tree, pru= ne out old subgroups unlikely to be used and provision future subgroups, al= l with a compact spend based on signature aggregation.

=
Few new Taproot tree update script primitives have been proposed, e.g = [2]. Though I think none with the level of flexibility offered to generate = leaves cut-through spends, or even batch of "cut-through" where M= subgroups are willing to spend N leaves to compose P new subgroups fan-out= in Q new outputs, with showing a single on-chain witness. I believe such a= hypothetical primitive can also reduce the chain space consumed in the occ= urrence of naive mass pool withdraws at the same time.

=
I think this solution to the high-interactivity issue of payment pools= and factories shifts the burden on each individual user to pre-commit fast= Taproot tree traversals, allowing them to compose new pool subgroups as fl= uctuations in pool users' level of liveliness=C2=A0demand it. Pool effi= ciency becomes the sum of the quality of user prediction on its counterpart= ies' liveliness during the construction lifetime. Recursive taproot tre= e spends or more efficient accumulator than merkle tree sounds ideas to low= er the on-chain witness space consumed by every pool in the average non-int= eractive case.

Cheers,
Antoine

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