On Monday, February 01, 2016 6:41:06 PM Cory Fields wrote:
> Noticeably absent here is the "default_witness_commitment" key, as
> added by the current reference implementation[0].
> 
> I assume (please correct me if I'm wrong) that this has been omitted
> for the sake of having clients create the commitment themselves as
> opposed to having it provided to them.
> 
> I don't think that the two approaches (providing the default
> commitment for the complete tx set as well as the ability to create it
> from chosen transactions) are at odds with each-other, rather it
> merely allows for a simpler approach for those who are taking tx's
> as-is from bitcoind. It's obviously important for the clients to be
> able to chose tx's and create commitments as they desire, but it's
> equally important to allow for simpler use-cases.

Allowing for simpler cases both encourages the lazy case, and enables pools to 
require miners use it. It also complicates the server-side implementation 
somewhat, and could in some cases make it more vulnerable to DoS attacks. Keep 
in mind that GBT is not merely a bitcoind protocol, but is used between
pool<->miner as well... For now, it makes sense to leave 
"default_witness_commitment" as a bitcoind-specific extension to encourage 
adoption, but it seems better to leave it out of the standard protocol. Let me 
know if this makes sense or if I'm overlooking something.

> The issue in particular here is that a non-trivial burden is thrust
> upon mining software, increasing the odds of bugs in the process. 

It can always use libblkmaker to handle the "heavy lifting"... In any case, 
the calculation for the commitment isn't significantly more than what it must 
already do for the stripped merkle tree.

> I'd like to point out that this is not a theoretical argument. I've
> already fixed a handful of bugs relating to serialization or
> commitment creation in the mining/pool software that I've worked on
> for segwit [1][2][3][4].

That's not really fair IMO. I wrote the libblkmaker branch prior to even 
reading the SegWit BIPs or code, and without a way to test it. It's only to be 
expected there are bugs that get fixed in first-try testing.

> [4]:
> https://github.com/theuni/ckpool/commit/7d84b1d76b39591cc1c1ef495ebec513cb
> 19a08e

I'm pretty sure this commit is actually /introducing/ a bug in working (albeit 
ugly) code. The height, while always positive, is serialised as a signed 
number, so 0x80 needs to be two bytes: 80 00.

Luke
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