* [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement
@ 2017-05-26 17:47 Jacob Eliosoff
2017-05-26 18:48 ` Tom Zander
2017-05-26 20:02 ` Matt Corallo
0 siblings, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Jacob Eliosoff @ 2017-05-26 17:47 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: bitcoin-dev
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Forgive me if this is a dumb question. Suppose that rather than directly
activating segwit, the Silbert/NYC Segwit2MB proposal's lock-in just
triggered BIP141 signaling (plus later HF). Would that avoid
incompatibility with existing BIP141 nodes, and get segwit activated
sooner? Eg:
- Bit 4 (or bit 5 or whatever, now that BIP91 uses 4) signals support for
"segwit now, HF (TBD) at scheduled date (Nov 23?)"
- If bit 4 support reaches 80%, it locks in two things: the scheduled HF
(conditional on segwit), and *immediately* turning on bit 1 (BIP141 support)
I realize this would still leave problems like the aggressive HF schedule,
possible chain split at the HF date between Segwit2MB nodes and any
remaining BIP141 nodes, etc. My focus here is how incompatibility with
existing nodes could be minimized.
(BIP91 could also be used if BIP141 support still fell short of 95%. But
if Segwit2MB support reaches 80%, it seems likely that an additional 15%
will support BIP141-without-HF.)
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement
2017-05-26 17:47 [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement Jacob Eliosoff
@ 2017-05-26 18:48 ` Tom Zander
2017-05-26 20:02 ` Matt Corallo
1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Tom Zander @ 2017-05-26 18:48 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: bitcoin-dev, Jacob Eliosoff
On Friday, 26 May 2017 19:47:11 CEST Jacob Eliosoff via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> Forgive me if this is a dumb question.
Sorry for picking your email.
I understand people want something different for the agreement, I know I do
too.
We have a specific agreement on the table, signed by a huge subsection of the
industry.
Maybe the time for changing things is not to be *after* the signatures are
set. I know I’d change some detials. But do we really want to go through
another conference where all the important people are present to agree on a
compromise? Or can we use the one we have?
The compromise is pretty simple;
https://medium.com/@DCGco/bitcoin-scaling-agreement-at-consensus-2017-133521fe9a77
* Activate Segregated Witness at an 80% threshold, signaling at bit 4
* Activate a 2 MB hard fork within six months
--
Tom Zander
Blog: https://zander.github.io
Vlog: https://vimeo.com/channels/tomscryptochannel
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement
2017-05-26 17:47 [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement Jacob Eliosoff
2017-05-26 18:48 ` Tom Zander
@ 2017-05-26 20:02 ` Matt Corallo
2017-05-26 20:10 ` Jacob Eliosoff
1 sibling, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread
From: Matt Corallo @ 2017-05-26 20:02 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Jacob Eliosoff, bitcoin-dev
Your proposal seems to be simply BIP 91 tied to the
as-yet-entirely-undefined hard fork Barry et al proposed.
Using James' BIP 91 instead of the Barry-bit-4/5/whatever proposal, as
you propose, would make the deployment on the incredibly short timeline
Barry et al proposed slightly more realistic, though I would expect to
see hard fork code readily available and well-tested at this point in
order to meet that timeline.
Ultimately, due to their aggressive timeline, the Barry et al proposal
is incredibly unlikely to meet the requirements of a
multi-billion-dollar system, and continued research into meeting the
spirit, not the text, of their agreement seems warranted.
Matt
On 05/26/17 17:47, Jacob Eliosoff via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> Forgive me if this is a dumb question. Suppose that rather than
> directly activating segwit, the Silbert/NYC Segwit2MB proposal's lock-in
> just triggered BIP141 signaling (plus later HF). Would that avoid
> incompatibility with existing BIP141 nodes, and get segwit activated
> sooner? Eg:
>
> - Bit 4 (or bit 5 or whatever, now that BIP91 uses 4) signals support
> for "segwit now, HF (TBD) at scheduled date (Nov 23?)"
> - If bit 4 support reaches 80%, it locks in two things: the scheduled HF
> (conditional on segwit), and *immediately* turning on bit 1 (BIP141 support)
>
> I realize this would still leave problems like the aggressive HF
> schedule, possible chain split at the HF date between Segwit2MB nodes
> and any remaining BIP141 nodes, etc. My focus here is how
> incompatibility with existing nodes could be minimized.
>
> (BIP91 could also be used if BIP141 support still fell short of 95%.
> But if Segwit2MB support reaches 80%, it seems likely that an additional
> 15% will support BIP141-without-HF.)
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> bitcoin-dev mailing list
> bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement
2017-05-26 20:02 ` Matt Corallo
@ 2017-05-26 20:10 ` Jacob Eliosoff
2017-05-26 21:30 ` James Hilliard
0 siblings, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread
From: Jacob Eliosoff @ 2017-05-26 20:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Matt Corallo; +Cc: bitcoin-dev
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Just to clarify one thing, what I described differs from BIP91 in that
there's no orphaning. Just when Segwit2MB support reaches 80%, those 80%
join everyone else in signaling for BIP141. BIP91 orphaning is an optional
addition but my guess is it wouldn't be needed.
On May 26, 2017 4:02 PM, "Matt Corallo" <lf-lists@mattcorallo.com> wrote:
> Your proposal seems to be simply BIP 91 tied to the
> as-yet-entirely-undefined hard fork Barry et al proposed.
>
> Using James' BIP 91 instead of the Barry-bit-4/5/whatever proposal, as
> you propose, would make the deployment on the incredibly short timeline
> Barry et al proposed slightly more realistic, though I would expect to
> see hard fork code readily available and well-tested at this point in
> order to meet that timeline.
>
> Ultimately, due to their aggressive timeline, the Barry et al proposal
> is incredibly unlikely to meet the requirements of a
> multi-billion-dollar system, and continued research into meeting the
> spirit, not the text, of their agreement seems warranted.
>
> Matt
>
> On 05/26/17 17:47, Jacob Eliosoff via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> > Forgive me if this is a dumb question. Suppose that rather than
> > directly activating segwit, the Silbert/NYC Segwit2MB proposal's lock-in
> > just triggered BIP141 signaling (plus later HF). Would that avoid
> > incompatibility with existing BIP141 nodes, and get segwit activated
> > sooner? Eg:
> >
> > - Bit 4 (or bit 5 or whatever, now that BIP91 uses 4) signals support
> > for "segwit now, HF (TBD) at scheduled date (Nov 23?)"
> > - If bit 4 support reaches 80%, it locks in two things: the scheduled HF
> > (conditional on segwit), and *immediately* turning on bit 1 (BIP141
> support)
> >
> > I realize this would still leave problems like the aggressive HF
> > schedule, possible chain split at the HF date between Segwit2MB nodes
> > and any remaining BIP141 nodes, etc. My focus here is how
> > incompatibility with existing nodes could be minimized.
> >
> > (BIP91 could also be used if BIP141 support still fell short of 95%.
> > But if Segwit2MB support reaches 80%, it seems likely that an additional
> > 15% will support BIP141-without-HF.)
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > bitcoin-dev mailing list
> > bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
> > https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
> >
>
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement
2017-05-26 20:10 ` Jacob Eliosoff
@ 2017-05-26 21:30 ` James Hilliard
2017-05-26 22:12 ` Tom Zander
2017-05-26 22:44 ` Matt Corallo
0 siblings, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: James Hilliard @ 2017-05-26 21:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Jacob Eliosoff; +Cc: Bitcoin Dev
Mandatory signalling is the only way to lock in segwit with less than
95% hashpower without a full redeployment(which for a number of
technical reasons isn't feasible until after the existing segwit
deployment expires). There's no reason not to signal BIP141 bit 1
while also signalling bit 4, but you would want to use bit 4 to
coordinate bit 1 mandatory signalling.
It would not be feasible to schedule any HF until one can be
completely sure BIP141 is active(at least not without waiting for the
timeout and doing a redeployment) due to activation/p2p codepath
complexity. This is why the mandatory signalling period is needed.
Since it is likely a HF will take months of development and testing I
see this or something similar as the fastest safe path forward:
1. Use BIP91 or similar to activate BIP141 via mandatory signalling
ASAP(likely using bit 4)
2. Develop HF code based on assumption that BIP141 is active so that
you only have to test the BIP141->HF upgrade/activation codepath.
3. Deploy HF after BIP141 lock in(bit 4 can be reused again here since
this will be after BIP91 expiration)
When rolling out some features it often makes sense to combine them
into a single fork for example BIP's 68, 112, 113 were rolled out at
the same time as are BIP's 141, 143, 144, 145 for segwit, however a HF
has required features that would conflict with with features in the
segwit rollout which is why attempting to simultaneously deploy them
would cause major complexity/testing issues(you would have to deal
with feature conflict resolution for multiple potential activation
scenarios). By doing a staged rollout of segwit and then a HF you get
a single testable upgrade path.
Based on past development experiences I wouldn't expect a 6 month
timeline to be realistic for a properly tested HF, but this proposed
upgrade path should be the fastest available for both SegWit and a HF
regardless.
On Fri, May 26, 2017 at 4:10 PM, Jacob Eliosoff via bitcoin-dev
<bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
> Just to clarify one thing, what I described differs from BIP91 in that
> there's no orphaning. Just when Segwit2MB support reaches 80%, those 80%
> join everyone else in signaling for BIP141. BIP91 orphaning is an optional
> addition but my guess is it wouldn't be needed.
>
>
> On May 26, 2017 4:02 PM, "Matt Corallo" <lf-lists@mattcorallo.com> wrote:
>>
>> Your proposal seems to be simply BIP 91 tied to the
>> as-yet-entirely-undefined hard fork Barry et al proposed.
>>
>> Using James' BIP 91 instead of the Barry-bit-4/5/whatever proposal, as
>> you propose, would make the deployment on the incredibly short timeline
>> Barry et al proposed slightly more realistic, though I would expect to
>> see hard fork code readily available and well-tested at this point in
>> order to meet that timeline.
>>
>> Ultimately, due to their aggressive timeline, the Barry et al proposal
>> is incredibly unlikely to meet the requirements of a
>> multi-billion-dollar system, and continued research into meeting the
>> spirit, not the text, of their agreement seems warranted.
>>
>> Matt
>>
>> On 05/26/17 17:47, Jacob Eliosoff via bitcoin-dev wrote:
>> > Forgive me if this is a dumb question. Suppose that rather than
>> > directly activating segwit, the Silbert/NYC Segwit2MB proposal's lock-in
>> > just triggered BIP141 signaling (plus later HF). Would that avoid
>> > incompatibility with existing BIP141 nodes, and get segwit activated
>> > sooner? Eg:
>> >
>> > - Bit 4 (or bit 5 or whatever, now that BIP91 uses 4) signals support
>> > for "segwit now, HF (TBD) at scheduled date (Nov 23?)"
>> > - If bit 4 support reaches 80%, it locks in two things: the scheduled HF
>> > (conditional on segwit), and *immediately* turning on bit 1 (BIP141
>> > support)
>> >
>> > I realize this would still leave problems like the aggressive HF
>> > schedule, possible chain split at the HF date between Segwit2MB nodes
>> > and any remaining BIP141 nodes, etc. My focus here is how
>> > incompatibility with existing nodes could be minimized.
>> >
>> > (BIP91 could also be used if BIP141 support still fell short of 95%.
>> > But if Segwit2MB support reaches 80%, it seems likely that an additional
>> > 15% will support BIP141-without-HF.)
>> >
>> >
>> > _______________________________________________
>> > bitcoin-dev mailing list
>> > bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
>> > https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
>> >
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> bitcoin-dev mailing list
> bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement
2017-05-26 21:30 ` James Hilliard
@ 2017-05-26 22:12 ` Tom Zander
[not found] ` <CADvTj4qdr2yGYFEWA7oVmL-KkrchYb5aQBRY9w0OK4ZVopSTSA@mail.gmail.com>
2017-05-26 22:44 ` Matt Corallo
1 sibling, 1 reply; 13+ messages in thread
From: Tom Zander @ 2017-05-26 22:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: bitcoin-dev
On Friday, 26 May 2017 23:30:37 CEST James Hilliard via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> It would not be feasible to schedule any HF until one can be
> completely sure BIP141 is active
why?
> Since it is likely a HF will take months of development and testing I
> see this or something similar as the fastest safe path forward
This should not be an issue, it started 2 years ago. Its tested.
--
Tom Zander
Blog: https://zander.github.io
Vlog: https://vimeo.com/channels/tomscryptochannel
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement
2017-05-26 21:30 ` James Hilliard
2017-05-26 22:12 ` Tom Zander
@ 2017-05-26 22:44 ` Matt Corallo
1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Matt Corallo @ 2017-05-26 22:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: James Hilliard, Jacob Eliosoff; +Cc: Bitcoin Dev
While I'm not 100% convinced there are strict technical reasons for needing to wait till after segwit is active before a hard fork can be started (you can, after all, activate segwit as a part of the HF), there are useful design and conservatism reasons (not causing massive discontinuity in fee market, handling major system changes one at a time, etc).
Still, totally agree that attempting to design, code, and test a new hard fork in six months, let alone deploy it, let alone simultaneously with segwit, is a joke and fails to take seriously the investment many have made in the bitcoin system. Previous, rather simple, soft forks required similar if not more development time, not counting deployment and activation time.
If the community is unable to form consensus around segwit alone for political reasons, further research into hard fork design may help, but even forks tied together would nearly certainly need to activate months apart.
On May 26, 2017 5:30:37 PM EDT, James Hilliard <james.hilliard1@gmail.com> wrote:
>Mandatory signalling is the only way to lock in segwit with less than
>95% hashpower without a full redeployment(which for a number of
>technical reasons isn't feasible until after the existing segwit
>deployment expires). There's no reason not to signal BIP141 bit 1
>while also signalling bit 4, but you would want to use bit 4 to
>coordinate bit 1 mandatory signalling.
>
>It would not be feasible to schedule any HF until one can be
>completely sure BIP141 is active(at least not without waiting for the
>timeout and doing a redeployment) due to activation/p2p codepath
>complexity. This is why the mandatory signalling period is needed.
>
>Since it is likely a HF will take months of development and testing I
>see this or something similar as the fastest safe path forward:
>1. Use BIP91 or similar to activate BIP141 via mandatory signalling
>ASAP(likely using bit 4)
>2. Develop HF code based on assumption that BIP141 is active so that
>you only have to test the BIP141->HF upgrade/activation codepath.
>3. Deploy HF after BIP141 lock in(bit 4 can be reused again here since
>this will be after BIP91 expiration)
>
>When rolling out some features it often makes sense to combine them
>into a single fork for example BIP's 68, 112, 113 were rolled out at
>the same time as are BIP's 141, 143, 144, 145 for segwit, however a HF
>has required features that would conflict with with features in the
>segwit rollout which is why attempting to simultaneously deploy them
>would cause major complexity/testing issues(you would have to deal
>with feature conflict resolution for multiple potential activation
>scenarios). By doing a staged rollout of segwit and then a HF you get
>a single testable upgrade path.
>
>Based on past development experiences I wouldn't expect a 6 month
>timeline to be realistic for a properly tested HF, but this proposed
>upgrade path should be the fastest available for both SegWit and a HF
>regardless.
>
>On Fri, May 26, 2017 at 4:10 PM, Jacob Eliosoff via bitcoin-dev
><bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
>> Just to clarify one thing, what I described differs from BIP91 in
>that
>> there's no orphaning. Just when Segwit2MB support reaches 80%, those
>80%
>> join everyone else in signaling for BIP141. BIP91 orphaning is an
>optional
>> addition but my guess is it wouldn't be needed.
>>
>>
>> On May 26, 2017 4:02 PM, "Matt Corallo" <lf-lists@mattcorallo.com>
>wrote:
>>>
>>> Your proposal seems to be simply BIP 91 tied to the
>>> as-yet-entirely-undefined hard fork Barry et al proposed.
>>>
>>> Using James' BIP 91 instead of the Barry-bit-4/5/whatever proposal,
>as
>>> you propose, would make the deployment on the incredibly short
>timeline
>>> Barry et al proposed slightly more realistic, though I would expect
>to
>>> see hard fork code readily available and well-tested at this point
>in
>>> order to meet that timeline.
>>>
>>> Ultimately, due to their aggressive timeline, the Barry et al
>proposal
>>> is incredibly unlikely to meet the requirements of a
>>> multi-billion-dollar system, and continued research into meeting the
>>> spirit, not the text, of their agreement seems warranted.
>>>
>>> Matt
>>>
>>> On 05/26/17 17:47, Jacob Eliosoff via bitcoin-dev wrote:
>>> > Forgive me if this is a dumb question. Suppose that rather than
>>> > directly activating segwit, the Silbert/NYC Segwit2MB proposal's
>lock-in
>>> > just triggered BIP141 signaling (plus later HF). Would that avoid
>>> > incompatibility with existing BIP141 nodes, and get segwit
>activated
>>> > sooner? Eg:
>>> >
>>> > - Bit 4 (or bit 5 or whatever, now that BIP91 uses 4) signals
>support
>>> > for "segwit now, HF (TBD) at scheduled date (Nov 23?)"
>>> > - If bit 4 support reaches 80%, it locks in two things: the
>scheduled HF
>>> > (conditional on segwit), and *immediately* turning on bit 1
>(BIP141
>>> > support)
>>> >
>>> > I realize this would still leave problems like the aggressive HF
>>> > schedule, possible chain split at the HF date between Segwit2MB
>nodes
>>> > and any remaining BIP141 nodes, etc. My focus here is how
>>> > incompatibility with existing nodes could be minimized.
>>> >
>>> > (BIP91 could also be used if BIP141 support still fell short of
>95%.
>>> > But if Segwit2MB support reaches 80%, it seems likely that an
>additional
>>> > 15% will support BIP141-without-HF.)
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > _______________________________________________
>>> > bitcoin-dev mailing list
>>> > bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
>>> > https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
>>> >
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> bitcoin-dev mailing list
>> bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
>> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
>>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement
@ 2017-05-22 12:29 Daniele Pinna
0 siblings, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Daniele Pinna @ 2017-05-22 12:29 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: hampus.sjoberg, Bitcoin Dev
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I couldn't agree more. It would require however for the Devs to throw their
weight behind this with a lot of momentum. Spoonnet has been under
development for quite some time now. Counter offering SegWit plus Spoonnet
12-24 months later would be a very progressive stance that I think would
catch the interest of large swaths of the community. I'd be curious to hear
Johnson's opinion on this. How much more testing would his proposal require?
Daniele
----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Mon, 22 May 2017 11:23:22 +0200
> From: Hampus Sj?berg <hampus.sjoberg@gmail.com>
> To: shaolinfry <shaolinfry@protonmail.ch>
> Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
> <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>
> Subject: Re: [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement
> Message-ID:
> <CAFMkqK_8CfaPmZgwMqGWpRujmmyGKXhZyxK_
> tQ6f1OMHKdEMJA@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
>
> I'm really happy to see people trying to cooperate to get SegWit activated.
> But I'm really unsure about the technicalities about Silbert's proposal.
>
> If we're going to do a hardfork, it makes most sense to assist Johnson in
> his spoonnet/forcenet proposals.
> Just doing a simple 2MB without fixing anything else is very uninteresting,
> and a hardfork without addressing replay protection seems really
> unprofessional to me.
> And proposing a hardfork in 4 months in the future, is completely insane.
> You cannot expect a 100% of all nodes in P2P network to upgrade in 4
> months.
>
> I think it's much better to activate BIP141 ASAP, and then hardfork to 2MB
> September 2018, or 2019 (together with forcenet/spoonnet).
> And if not, BIP148 is gaining momentum once again so that sounds much more
> interesting.
>
> Hampus
>
> 2017-05-22 8:12 GMT+02:00 shaolinfry via bitcoin-dev <
> bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>:
>
> > Someone sent me a copy of the Barry Silbert agreement, an agreement
> forged
> > between a select number of participants https://pastebin.com/VuCYteJh
> >
> > Participants agree to immediately activate Segwit, however, under a
> > different activation proposal. Since I have spent the last few months
> > researching various activation strategies of the current BIP141
> deployment,
> > as well as redeployment, I feel I am quite well placed to comment on the
> > technicalities.
> >
> > To be clear, the proposal as far as I can see does not activate BIP141,
> > but is a completely new deployment which would be incompatible with the
> > BIP141 deployment. I'm not sure how that can be considered "immediate"
> > activation. Surely immediate activation would just be for miners to start
> > signalling and segwit would be activated in 4-5 weeks. The proposal seems
> > to require a lower 80% threshold, I assume because they were unable to
> > convince 95% of the hashpower to go trigger activation.
> >
> > There are a few options to activating segwit now, the first being for 95%
> > of hashrate to signal. The second is for the community to deploy BIP148
> > UASF which will force miners to signal segwit. Being a UASF it is date
> > triggered. The third option is a redeployment of segwit on a new bit, but
> > requires waiting for the existing deployment to time out, because all the
> > p2p messages and service bits related to segwit must be replaced too
> (which
> > is what BIP149 does).
> >
> > A fourth option, first suggested to me by James Hilliard, was to make
> > BIP148 miner triggered (MASF) with a lower threshold, above 50%. I coded
> > this up a few weeks ago https://github.com/bitcoin/
> > bitcoin/compare/master...shaolinfry:segsignal but didnt get around to
> > posting to the ML yet. This effectively lowers the threshold from 95% to
> > 65% as coded, or could be upped to 80% or whatever was preferable.
> >
> > I think this removes the primary risk of BIP148 causing the creation of
> > two chains, and gives an improved chance to get segwit activated quickly
> > (assuming a majority of miners wish to go this route). But hash a primary
> > disadvantage of still leaving the activation in the hands of miners. If
> it
> > doesn't work out, then BIP149 can then be used as proposed, but it'll be
> > even safer because we'll have futher guaged support.
> >
> > References:
> >
> > SEGSIGNAL: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/compare/master...
> > shaolinfry:segsignal
> > BIP148: https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0148.mediawiki
> > BIP149: https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0149.mediawiki
> >
> > I think the Barry Silbert agreement is very ill considered, and clearly
> > lacking peer review from the technical community. Suggestions of a HF in
> 4
> > months are completely unrealistic and without technical merits. But more
> > importantly, closed door agreements between selected participants is not
> > how to garner consensus to change a $30bn decentralized system. The
> purpose
> > of my email is to try and assist in the "immediate activation of segwit"
> > which only requires hashrate to participate; and to provide some
> techincal
> > input since I have done a great deal of research and development into the
> > topic.
> >
> > Given the history we've already passed the point where we should be
> > expecting miners to cooperate in lowering their own fee income with a
> > capacity increase; but we should be open to all reasonable options in the
> > interest in moving things forward in a safe and collaborative way.
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > bitcoin-dev mailing list
> > bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
> > https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
> >
> >
>
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement
@ 2017-05-22 6:12 shaolinfry
2017-05-22 6:27 ` Peter Todd
2017-05-22 9:23 ` Hampus Sjöberg
0 siblings, 2 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: shaolinfry @ 2017-05-22 6:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3348 bytes --]
Someone sent me a copy of the Barry Silbert agreement, an agreement forged between a select number of participants https://pastebin.com/VuCYteJh
Participants agree to immediately activate Segwit, however, under a different activation proposal. Since I have spent the last few months researching various activation strategies of the current BIP141 deployment, as well as redeployment, I feel I am quite well placed to comment on the technicalities.
To be clear, the proposal as far as I can see does not activate BIP141, but is a completely new deployment which would be incompatible with the BIP141 deployment. I'm not sure how that can be considered "immediate" activation. Surely immediate activation would just be for miners to start signalling and segwit would be activated in 4-5 weeks. The proposal seems to require a lower 80% threshold, I assume because they were unable to convince 95% of the hashpower to go trigger activation.
There are a few options to activating segwit now, the first being for 95% of hashrate to signal. The second is for the community to deploy BIP148 UASF which will force miners to signal segwit. Being a UASF it is date triggered. The third option is a redeployment of segwit on a new bit, but requires waiting for the existing deployment to time out, because all the p2p messages and service bits related to segwit must be replaced too (which is what BIP149 does).
A fourth option, first suggested to me by James Hilliard, was to make BIP148 miner triggered (MASF) with a lower threshold, above 50%. I coded this up a few weeks ago https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/compare/master...shaolinfry:segsignal but didnt get around to posting to the ML yet. This effectively lowers the threshold from 95% to 65% as coded, or could be upped to 80% or whatever was preferable.
I think this removes the primary risk of BIP148 causing the creation of two chains, and gives an improved chance to get segwit activated quickly (assuming a majority of miners wish to go this route). But hash a primary disadvantage of still leaving the activation in the hands of miners. If it doesn't work out, then BIP149 can then be used as proposed, but it'll be even safer because we'll have futher guaged support.
References:
SEGSIGNAL: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/compare/master...shaolinfry:segsignal
BIP148: https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0148.mediawiki
BIP149: https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0149.mediawiki
I think the Barry Silbert agreement is very ill considered, and clearly lacking peer review from the technical community. Suggestions of a HF in 4 months are completely unrealistic and without technical merits. But more importantly, closed door agreements between selected participants is not how to garner consensus to change a $30bn decentralized system. The purpose of my email is to try and assist in the "immediate activation of segwit" which only requires hashrate to participate; and to provide some techincal input since I have done a great deal of research and development into the topic.
Given the history we've already passed the point where we should be expecting miners to cooperate in lowering their own fee income with a capacity increase; but we should be open to all reasonable options in the interest in moving things forward in a safe and collaborative way.
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* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement
2017-05-22 6:12 shaolinfry
@ 2017-05-22 6:27 ` Peter Todd
2017-05-22 9:23 ` Hampus Sjöberg
1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Peter Todd @ 2017-05-22 6:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: shaolinfry; +Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
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On Mon, May 22, 2017 at 02:12:08AM -0400, shaolinfry via bitcoin-dev wrote:
> Someone sent me a copy of the Barry Silbert agreement, an agreement forged between a select number of participants https://pastebin.com/VuCYteJh
It's interesting how changing the bit used to signal could be used as a way to
try to trick people into changing node software ASAP to support the hard-fork
code. Basically, the narrative would be that other software *doesn't* support
segwit, so you have to upgrade right away.
> A fourth option, first suggested to me by James Hilliard, was to make BIP148 miner triggered (MASF) with a lower threshold, above 50%. I coded this up a few weeks ago https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/compare/master...shaolinfry:segsignal but didnt get around to posting to the ML yet. This effectively lowers the threshold from 95% to 65% as coded, or could be upped to 80% or whatever was preferable.
In contrast this proposal wouldn't have that effect, because as you point out
it's compatibel with the existing segwit protocol once activated.
Smells like political engineering to me.
--
https://petertodd.org 'peter'[:-1]@petertodd.org
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 13+ messages in thread
* Re: [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement
2017-05-22 6:12 shaolinfry
2017-05-22 6:27 ` Peter Todd
@ 2017-05-22 9:23 ` Hampus Sjöberg
1 sibling, 0 replies; 13+ messages in thread
From: Hampus Sjöberg @ 2017-05-22 9:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: shaolinfry; +Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
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I'm really happy to see people trying to cooperate to get SegWit activated.
But I'm really unsure about the technicalities about Silbert's proposal.
If we're going to do a hardfork, it makes most sense to assist Johnson in
his spoonnet/forcenet proposals.
Just doing a simple 2MB without fixing anything else is very uninteresting,
and a hardfork without addressing replay protection seems really
unprofessional to me.
And proposing a hardfork in 4 months in the future, is completely insane.
You cannot expect a 100% of all nodes in P2P network to upgrade in 4 months.
I think it's much better to activate BIP141 ASAP, and then hardfork to 2MB
September 2018, or 2019 (together with forcenet/spoonnet).
And if not, BIP148 is gaining momentum once again so that sounds much more
interesting.
Hampus
2017-05-22 8:12 GMT+02:00 shaolinfry via bitcoin-dev <
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>:
> Someone sent me a copy of the Barry Silbert agreement, an agreement forged
> between a select number of participants https://pastebin.com/VuCYteJh
>
> Participants agree to immediately activate Segwit, however, under a
> different activation proposal. Since I have spent the last few months
> researching various activation strategies of the current BIP141 deployment,
> as well as redeployment, I feel I am quite well placed to comment on the
> technicalities.
>
> To be clear, the proposal as far as I can see does not activate BIP141,
> but is a completely new deployment which would be incompatible with the
> BIP141 deployment. I'm not sure how that can be considered "immediate"
> activation. Surely immediate activation would just be for miners to start
> signalling and segwit would be activated in 4-5 weeks. The proposal seems
> to require a lower 80% threshold, I assume because they were unable to
> convince 95% of the hashpower to go trigger activation.
>
> There are a few options to activating segwit now, the first being for 95%
> of hashrate to signal. The second is for the community to deploy BIP148
> UASF which will force miners to signal segwit. Being a UASF it is date
> triggered. The third option is a redeployment of segwit on a new bit, but
> requires waiting for the existing deployment to time out, because all the
> p2p messages and service bits related to segwit must be replaced too (which
> is what BIP149 does).
>
> A fourth option, first suggested to me by James Hilliard, was to make
> BIP148 miner triggered (MASF) with a lower threshold, above 50%. I coded
> this up a few weeks ago https://github.com/bitcoin/
> bitcoin/compare/master...shaolinfry:segsignal but didnt get around to
> posting to the ML yet. This effectively lowers the threshold from 95% to
> 65% as coded, or could be upped to 80% or whatever was preferable.
>
> I think this removes the primary risk of BIP148 causing the creation of
> two chains, and gives an improved chance to get segwit activated quickly
> (assuming a majority of miners wish to go this route). But hash a primary
> disadvantage of still leaving the activation in the hands of miners. If it
> doesn't work out, then BIP149 can then be used as proposed, but it'll be
> even safer because we'll have futher guaged support.
>
> References:
>
> SEGSIGNAL: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/compare/master...
> shaolinfry:segsignal
> BIP148: https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0148.mediawiki
> BIP149: https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0149.mediawiki
>
> I think the Barry Silbert agreement is very ill considered, and clearly
> lacking peer review from the technical community. Suggestions of a HF in 4
> months are completely unrealistic and without technical merits. But more
> importantly, closed door agreements between selected participants is not
> how to garner consensus to change a $30bn decentralized system. The purpose
> of my email is to try and assist in the "immediate activation of segwit"
> which only requires hashrate to participate; and to provide some techincal
> input since I have done a great deal of research and development into the
> topic.
>
> Given the history we've already passed the point where we should be
> expecting miners to cooperate in lowering their own fee income with a
> capacity increase; but we should be open to all reasonable options in the
> interest in moving things forward in a safe and collaborative way.
>
> _______________________________________________
> bitcoin-dev mailing list
> bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
>
>
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end of thread, other threads:[~2017-05-28 23:28 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 13+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2017-05-26 17:47 [bitcoin-dev] Barry Silbert segwit agreement Jacob Eliosoff
2017-05-26 18:48 ` Tom Zander
2017-05-26 20:02 ` Matt Corallo
2017-05-26 20:10 ` Jacob Eliosoff
2017-05-26 21:30 ` James Hilliard
2017-05-26 22:12 ` Tom Zander
[not found] ` <CADvTj4qdr2yGYFEWA7oVmL-KkrchYb5aQBRY9w0OK4ZVopSTSA@mail.gmail.com>
2017-05-28 20:51 ` Tom Zander
2017-05-28 23:28 ` James Hilliard
2017-05-26 22:44 ` Matt Corallo
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2017-05-22 12:29 Daniele Pinna
2017-05-22 6:12 shaolinfry
2017-05-22 6:27 ` Peter Todd
2017-05-22 9:23 ` Hampus Sjöberg
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