Hi Zeeman,
I think one of the general problems for any participant in an interdependent chain of contracts like Lightning or CoinSwap is to avoid a disequilibrium in its local HTLC ledger. Concretely sending forward more than you receive backward. W.r.t, timelocks delta aim to enforce order of events, namely that a forward contract must be terminated before any backward contract to avoid a discrepancy in settlement. Order of events can be enforced by a) absolute timelocks and thus linearized on the same scale by blockchain ticks or b) by a counterparty to two relative-time locked contracts which observe the broadcast of the backward transaction and thus manually trigger the kickoff of forward timelock by broadcasting the corresponding transaction.
With this rough model in mind, pinning an absolute or relative timelocked transaction produce the same effect, i.e breaking contracts settlement order.
> This can be arranged by having one side offer partial signatures for the transaction of the other, and once completing the signature, not sharing it with the other until we are ready to actually broadcast the transaction of our own volition.
> There is no transaction that both participants hold in completely-signed form
I don't think that's different from the current model where you have either a valid HTLC-timeout or HTLC-Sucess tx to solve a HTLC output but never full witness material to build both ?
I see a theoretical issue with RBF-range, if you're likely to lose the balance, you can broadcast your highest-RBF version thus incentivizing miners to censor counterparty claim tx. Kind of a "nothing at stake" issue. As of today, you have to take this fee out of your pocket if you want to incentivize miners to act so, not promising a fee from an ongoing disputed balance.
> Private key turnover is still useful even in an absolute-timelock world.
The way I understand the either-HTLC-or-private-key-turnover construction in CoinSwap is for the HTLC to serve as a security backup in case the cooperative key turnover fails. Lightning don't have this model as you don't switch funding transaction ownership.
> To reduce this risk, A can instead first swap A->B->A, then when that completes, A->C->A.
This limits its funding lockup to 1 week.
Okay I think I understand your point. So by intermediating the chain with the taker you ensure that in case of previous hop failure, taker funds are only timelocked for the delta of this faulting hop not the whole route. But still not anchoring onchain the next route segment means that any moment the next maker can exit from the proposed position ?
That's interesting, so a) you require all takers to lock their funds onchain before initiating the whole routing and you will pay more in service fees or b) you only lock them step by step but you increase risk of next hop default and thus latency. Roughly.
It might be an interesting construction to explore on its own, minus the downside of producing weird spend patterns due to next hop maker bidding with another party.
Cheers,
Antoine
Good morning Antoine,
> Note, I think this is independent of picking up either relative or absolute timelocks as what matters is the block delta between two links.
I believe it is quite dependent on relative locktimes.
Relative locktimes *require* a contract transaction to kick off the relative locktime period.
On the other hand, with Scriptless Script (which we know how to do with 2p-ECDSA only, i.e. doable pre-Taproot), absolute locktimes do not need a contract transaction.
With absolute locktimes + Scriptless SCript, in a single onchain PTLC, one participant holds a completely-signed timelock transaction while the other participant holds a completely-signed pointlock transaction.
This can be arranged by having one side offer partial signatures for the transaction of the other, and once completing the signature, not sharing it with the other until we are ready to actually broadcast the transaction of our own volition.
There is no transaction that both participants hold in completely-signed form.
This should remove most of the shenanigans possible, and makes the 30xRBF safe for any range of fees.
I think.
Since for each PTLC a participant holds only its "own" transaction, it is possible for a participant to define its range of fees for the RBF versions of the transaction it owns, without negotiation with the other participant.
Since the fee involved is deducted from its own transaction, each participant can define this range of RBFed fees and impose it on the partial signatures it gets from the other participant.
--
Private key turnover is still useful even in an absolute-timelock world.
If we need to bump up the block delta between links, it might be impractical to have the total delta of a multi-hop swap be too long at the taker.
As a concrete example, suppose A is a taker who wants to route over makers B and C.
However, B and C require a CLTV delta of 1 week.
If A wants to route "directly" A->B->C->A, then if something bad happens, it could be looking at having its funds locked for two weeks.
To reduce this risk, A can instead first swap A->B->A, then when that completes, A->C->A.
This limits its funding lockup to 1 week.
Private key turnover is useful since as soon as the A->B->A swap completes, it can directly fund the A->C->A swap from the B-side funding transaction of the A->B->A swap.
| A->B->A | A->C->A |
: : :
A -:->funding A&B--> B : :
: : :
B -:->funding A&B -----:--> funding A&C --> C :
: : :
: :C-> funding A&C ------:-> to-cold A -->
: : :
This increases the number of transactions by 1 per swap beyond the first, compared to a direct routing A->B->C->A, but this may be worth it for A if the timelocks involved are too big for A.
With 2p-ECDSA, a funding A&C looks exactly the same as a to-cold A, so B is unable to reliably determine if it is the last hop in the route.
Without private key turnover, A would have:
**NO** private key turnover!
| A->B->A | A->C->A |
: : :
A -:->funding A&B--> B : :
: : :
B -:->funding A&B -----:--> claim A -> funding A&C --> C :
: : :
: : C-> funding A&C ------:-> to-cold A -->
: : :
So if timelock-deltas are possibly-high (to reduce the probability of the MAD-HTLC argument, and other attacks, succeeding), takers might prefer to route by completing one swap first before starting the next one, and private key turnover is useful by reducing blockspace required by each hop.
For reference, this is how it looks like with a single A->B->C->A swap with private key turnover:
| A->B->C->A |
: :
A -:->funding A&B--> B :
: :
B -:->funding B&C -> C :
: :
C -:->funding A&C -----:-> to-cold A -->
: :
This is still smaller than in the A->B->A, A->C->A with private key turnover, by one funding tx per hop.
However, A risks a much higher timelock (twice the timelock).
Thus, A might prefer a lower timelock in exchange for paying for an additional transaction.
Regards,
ZmnSCPxj