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ZmnSCPxj [ARCHIVE] /
npub1g5z…ms3l
2023-09-19 10:19:29
in reply to nevent1q…rm3g

ZmnSCPxj [ARCHIVE] on Nostr: 📅 Original date posted:2023-09-18 🗒️ Summary of this message: A covenant tree ...

📅 Original date posted:2023-09-18
🗒️ Summary of this message: A covenant tree can create channels for casual users without requiring signatures, but it doesn't provide long-term scaling benefits. Adding a deadline can achieve long-term scaling.
📝 Original message:
Good morning John,

> On the other hand, if the consensus rules are changed to allow even simple covenants, this scaling bottleneck is eliminated.
> The key observation is that with covenants, a casual user can co-own an off-chain Lightning channel without having to sign all (or any) of the transactions on which it depends.
> Instead, a UTXO can have a covenant that guarantees the creation of the casual user's channel.
> The simplest way to have a single UTXO create channels for a large number of casual users is to put a covenant on the UTXO that forces the creation of a tree of transactions, the leaves of which are the casual users' channels.
>
> While such a covenant tree can create channels for millions of casual users without requiring signatures or solving a difficult group coordination problem, it's not sufficient for scaling.
> The problem is that each channel created by a covenant tree has a fixed set of owners, and changing the ownership of a channel created by a covenant tree requires putting the channel on-chain.
> Therefore, assuming that all casual users will eventually want to pair with different dedicated users (and vice-versa), the covenant tree doesn't actually provide any long-term scaling benefit.
>
> Fortunately, real long-term scaling can be achieved by adding a deadline after which all non-leaf outputs in the covenant tree can be spent without having to meet the conditions of the covenant.
> The resulting covenant tree is called a "timeout-tree" [9, Section 5.3].
>
> Let A_1 ... A_n denote a large number of casual users, let B be a dedicated user, and let E denote some fixed time in the future.
> User B creates a timeout-tree with expiry E where:
>  * leaf i has an output that funds a Lightning channel owned by A_i and B, and
>  * after time E, each non-leaf output in the covenant tree can also be spent by user B without having to meet the conditions of the covenant.

I think, based solely on the description above, that it is not safe for dedicated user `B` to create this, unless it gets a signature from `A_i`.

Basically, suppose the entire thing is single-funded from `B`.
(Funding from `A_i` requires that each `A_i` that wants to contribute be online at the time, at which point you might as well just use signatures instead of `OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY`.)

If a particular `A_i` never contacts `B` but *does* get the entire path from the funding TXO to the `A_i && B` output confirmed, then the funds that `B` allocated are locked, ***unless*** `B` got a unilateral close signature from `A_i` to spend from `A_i && B`.
Thus, `A_i` still needs to be online at the time `B` signs the funding transaction that anchors the entire tree.

(This is why many people lost funds when they went and implemented `multifundchannel` by themselves --- you need to ensure that all the counterparties in the same batch of openingshave given you unilateral close signatures ***before*** you broadcast the funding transaction.
And in principle, whether the channels are represented onchain by a single transaction output, or multiple separate ones on the same transaction, is immaterial --- the funder still needs a unilateral close signature from the fundee.)

The alternative is to also infect the leaf itself with a lifetime `(A_i && B) || (B && CLTV)`.
This is essentially a Spilman channel variant, which is what we use in swap-in-potentiam, BTW.

If so, then `B` can dedicate that leaf output to a separate 1-input 1-output transaction that takes the `(A_i && B)` branch and spends to a plain `A && B` Lightning channel.
`B` can fund the tree, then when `A_i` comes online and is wiling to accept the channel from `B`, that is when `A_i` creates two signatures:

* For the transaction spending `(A_i && B) || (B && CLTV)` (taking the `A_i && B` branch) to spend to the `A && B`.
* For the unilateral close transaction from the above output.

Regards,
ZmnSCPxj
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npub1g5zswf6y48f7fy90jf3tlcuwdmjn8znhzaa4vkmtxaeskca8hpss23ms3l