[bitcoin-dev] [Lightning-dev] L2s Onchain Support IRC Workshop

Antoine Riard antoine.riard at gmail.com
Fri Apr 23 15:39:15 UTC 2021


Hi Jeremy,

Yes dates are floating for now. After Bitcoin 2021, sounds a good idea.

Awesome, I'll be really interested to review again an improved version of
sponsorship. And I'll try to sketch out the sighash_no-input fee-bumping
idea which was floating around last year during pinnings discussions. Yet
another set of trade-offs :)

Le ven. 23 avr. 2021 à 11:25, Jeremy <jlrubin at mit.edu> a écrit :

> I'd be excited to join. Recommend bumping the date  to mid June, if that's
> ok, as many Americans will be at Bitcoin 2021.
>
> I was thinking about reviving the sponsors proposal with a 100 block lock
> on spending a sponsoring tx which would hopefully make less controversial,
> this would be a great place to discuss those tradeoffs.
>
> On Fri, Apr 23, 2021, 8:17 AM Antoine Riard <antoine.riard at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> During the lastest years, tx-relay and mempool acceptances rules of the
>> base layer have been sources of major security and operational concerns for
>> Lightning and other Bitcoin second-layers [0]. I think those areas require
>> significant improvements to ease design and deployment of higher Bitcoin
>> layers and I believe this opinion is shared among the L2 dev community. In
>> order to make advancements, it has been discussed a few times in the last
>> months to organize in-person workshops to discuss those issues with the
>> presence of both L1/L2 devs to make exchange fruitful.
>>
>> Unfortunately, I don't think we'll be able to organize such in-person
>> workshops this year (because you know travel is hard those days...) As a
>> substitution, I'm proposing a series of one or more irc meetings. That
>> said, this substitution has the happy benefit to gather far more folks
>> interested by those issues that you can fit in a room.
>>
>> # Scope
>>
>> I would like to propose the following 4 items as topics of discussion.
>>
>> 1) Package relay design or another generic L2 fee-bumping primitive like
>> sponsorship [0]. IMHO, this primitive should at least solve mempools spikes
>> making obsolete propagation of transactions with pre-signed feerate, solve
>> pinning attacks compromising Lightning/multi-party contract protocol
>> safety, offer an usable and stable API to L2 software stack, stay
>> compatible with miner and full-node operators incentives and obviously
>> minimize CPU/memory DoS vectors.
>>
>> 2) Deprecation of opt-in RBF toward full-rbf. Opt-in RBF makes it trivial
>> for an attacker to partition network mempools in divergent subsets and from
>> then launch advanced security or privacy attacks against a Lightning node.
>> Note, it might also be a concern for bandwidth bleeding attacks against L1
>> nodes.
>>
>> 3) Guidelines about coordinated cross-layers security disclosures.
>> Mitigating a security issue around tx-relay or the mempool in Core might
>> have harmful implications for downstream projects. Ideally, L2 projects
>> maintainers should be ready to upgrade their protocols in emergency in
>> coordination with base layers developers.
>>
>> 4) Guidelines about L2 protocols onchain security design. Currently
>> deployed like Lightning are making a bunch of assumptions on tx-relay and
>> mempool acceptances rules. Those rules are non-normative, non-reliable and
>> lack documentation. Further, they're devoid of tooling to enforce them at
>> runtime [2]. IMHO, it could be preferable to identify a subset of them on
>> which second-layers protocols can do assumptions without encroaching too
>> much on nodes's policy realm or making the base layer development in those
>> areas too cumbersome.
>>
>> I'm aware that some folks are interested in other topics such as
>> extension of Core's mempools package limits or better pricing of RBF
>> replacement. So l propose a 2-week concertation period to submit other
>> topics related to tx-relay or mempools improvements towards L2s before to
>> propose a finalized scope and agenda.
>>
>> # Goals
>>
>> 1) Reaching technical consensus.
>> 2) Reaching technical consensus, before seeking community consensus as it
>> likely has ecosystem-wide implications.
>> 3) Establishing a security incident response policy which can be applied
>> by dev teams in the future.
>> 4) Establishing a philosophy design and associated documentations (BIPs,
>> best practices, ...)
>>
>> # Timeline
>>
>> 2021-04-23: Start of concertation period
>> 2021-05-07: End of concertation period
>> 2021-05-10: Proposition of workshop agenda and schedule
>> late 2021-05/2021-06: IRC meetings
>>
>> As the problem space is savagely wide, I've started a collection of
>> documents to assist this workshop : https://github.com/ariard/L2-zoology
>> Still wip, but I'll have them in a good shape at agenda publication, with
>> reading suggestions and open questions to structure discussions.
>> Also working on transaction pinning and mempool partitions attacks
>> simulations.
>>
>> If L2s security/p2p/mempool is your jam, feel free to get involved :)
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Antoine
>>
>> [0] For e.g see optech section on transaction pinning attacks :
>> https://bitcoinops.org/en/topics/transaction-pinning/
>> [1]
>> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2020-September/018168.html
>> [2] Lack of reference tooling make it easier to have bug slip in like
>> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/lightning-dev/2020-October/002858.html
>> _______________________________________________
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>> Lightning-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org
>> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/lightning-dev
>>
>
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