Hi Antoine,

> Even with cheaper, more efficient protocols like BIP 157, you may have a
> huge discrepancy between what is asked and what is offered. Assuming 10M
> light clients [0] each of them consuming ~100MB/month for filters/headers,
> that means you're asking 1PB/month of traffic to the backbone network. If
> you assume 10K public nodes, like today, assuming _all_ of them opt-in to
> signal BIP 157, that's an increase of 100GB/month for each. Which is
> consequent with regards to the estimated cost of 350GB/month for running
> an actual public node

One really dope thing about BIP 157+158, is that the protocol makes serving
light clients now _stateless_, since the full node doesn't need to perform
any unique work for a given client. As a result, the entire protocol could
be served over something like HTTP, taking advantage of all the established
CDNs and anycast serving infrastructure, which can reduce syncing time
(less latency to
fetch data) and also more widely distributed the load of light clients using
the existing web infrastructure. Going further, with HTTP/2's server-push
capabilities, those serving this data can still push out notifications for
new headers, etc.

> Therefore, you may want to introduce monetary compensation in exchange of
> servicing filters. Light client not dedicating resources to maintain the
> network but free-riding on it, you may use their micro-payment
> capabilities to price chain access resources [3]

Piggy backing off the above idea, if the data starts being widely served
over HTTP, then LSATs[1][2] can be used to add a lightweight payment
mechanism by inserting a new proxy server in front of the filter/header
infrastructure. The minted tokens themselves may allow a user to purchase
access to a single header/filter, a range of them in the past, or N headers
past the known chain tip, etc, etc.

-- Laolu

[1]: https://lsat.tech/
[2]: https://lightning.engineering/posts/2020-03-30-lsat/


On Tue, May 5, 2020 at 3:17 AM Antoine Riard <antoine.ri...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Hi,
>
> (cross-posting as it's really both layers concerned)
>
> Ongoing advancement of BIP 157 implementation in Core maybe the
> opportunity to reflect on the future of light client protocols and use this
> knowledge to make better-informed decisions about what kind of
> infrastructure is needed to support mobile clients at large scale.
>
> Trust-minimization of Bitcoin security model has always relied first and
> above on running a full-node. This current paradigm may be shifted by LN
> where fast, affordable, confidential, censorship-resistant payment services
> may attract a lot of adoption without users running a full-node. Assuming a
> user adoption path where a full-node is required to benefit for LN may
> deprive a lot of users, especially those who are already denied a real
> financial infrastructure access. It doesn't mean we shouldn't foster node
> adoption when people are able to do so, and having a LN wallet maybe even a
> first-step to it.
>
> Designing a mobile-first LN experience opens its own gap of challenges
> especially in terms of security and privacy. The problem can be scoped as
> how to build a scalable, secure, private chain access backend for millions
> of LN clients ?
>
> Light client protocols for LN exist (either BIP157 or Electrum are used),
> although their privacy and security guarantees with regards to
> implementation on the client-side may still be an object of concern
> (aggressive tx-rebroadcast, sybillable outbound peer selection, trusted fee
> estimation). That said, one of the bottlenecks is likely the number of
> full-nodes being willingly to dedicate resources to serve those clients.
> It's not about _which_ protocol is deployed but more about _incentives_ for
> node operators to dedicate long-term resources to client they have lower
> reasons to care about otherwise.
>
> Even with cheaper, more efficient protocols like BIP 157, you may have a
> huge discrepancy between what is asked and what is offered. Assuming 10M
> light clients [0] each of them consuming ~100MB/month for filters/headers,
> that means you're asking 1PB/month of traffic to the backbone network. If
> you assume 10K public nodes, like today, assuming _all_ of them opt-in to
> signal BIP 157, that's an increase of 100GB/month for each. Which is
> consequent with regards to the estimated cost of 350GB/month for running an
> actual public node. Widening full-node adoption, specially in term of
> geographic distribution means as much as we can to bound its operational
> cost.
>
> Obviously,  deployment of more efficient tx-relay protocol like Erlay will
> free up some resources but it maybe wiser to dedicate them to increase
> health and security of the backbone network like deploying more outbound
> connections.
>
> Unless your light client protocol is so ridiculous cheap to rely on
> niceness of a subset of node operators offering free resources, it won't
> scale. And it's likely you will always have a ratio disequilibrium between
> numbers of clients and numbers of full-node, even worst their growth rate
> won't be the same, first ones are so much easier to setup.
>
> It doesn't mean servicing filters for free won't work for now, numbers of
> BIP157 clients is still pretty low, but what is worrying is  wallet vendors
> building such chain access backend, hitting a bandwidth scalability wall
> few years from now instead of pursuing better solutions. And if this
> happen, maybe suddenly, isn't the quick fix going to be to rely on
> centralized services, so much easier to deploy ?
>
> Of course, it may be brought that actually current full-node operators
> don't get anything back from servicing blocks, transactions, addresses...
> It may be replied that you have an indirect incentive to participate in
> network relay and therefore guarantee censorship-resistance, instead of
> directly connecting to miners. You do have today ways to select your
> resources exposure like pruning, block-only or being private but the wider
> point is the current (non?)-incentives model seems to work for the base
> layer. For light clients data, are node operators going to be satisfied to
> serve this new *class* of traffic en masse ?
>
> This doesn't mean you won't find BIP157 servers, ready to serve you with
> unlimited credit, but it's more likely their intentions maybe not aligned,
> like spying on your transaction broadcast or block fetched. And you do want
> peer diversity to avoid every BIP157 servers being on few ASNs for
> fault-tolerance. Do people expect a scenario a la Cloudflare, where
> everyone connections is to far or less the same set of entities ?
>
> Moreover, the LN security model diverges hugely from basic on-chain
> transactions. Worst-case attack on-chain a malicious light client server
> showing a longest, invalid, PoW-signed chain to double-spend the user. On
> LN, the *liveliness* requirement means the entity owning your view of the
> chain can lie to you on whether your channel has been spent by a revoked
> commitment, the real tip of the blockchain or even dry-up block
> announcement to trigger unexpected behavior in the client logic. A
> malicious light client server may just drop any filters/utxos spends, what
> your LN client should do in this case ? [1]
>
> Therefore, you may want to introduce monetary compensation in exchange of
> servicing filters. Light client not dedicating resources to maintain the
> network but free-riding on it, you may use their micro-payment capabilities
> to price chain access resources [3]. This proposition may suit within the
> watchtower paradigm, where another entity is delegated some part of
> protocol execution, alleviating client onliness requirement. It needs
> further analysis but how your funds may be compromised by a watchtower are
> likely to be the same scenario that how a chain validation provider can
> compromise you. That said, how do you avoid such "chain access" market
> turning as an oligopoly is an open question. You may "bind" them to
> internet topology or ask for fidelity bonds and create some kind of
> scarcity but still...
>
> Maybe I'm completely wrong, missing some numbers, and it's maybe fine to
> just rely on few thousands of full-node operators being nice and servicing
> friendly millions of LN mobiles clients. But just in case it may be good to
> consider a reasonable alternative.
>
> Thanks Gleb for many points exposed here but all mistakes are my own.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Antoine
>
> [0] UTXO set size may be a bottleneck, but still if you have 2 channels by
> clients that's 20M utxos, just roughly ~x3 than today.
>
> [1] And committing filters as part of headers may not solve everything as
> an attacker can just delay or slow announcements to you, so you still need
> network access to at least one honest node.
>
> [2]  It maybe argue that distinction client-vs-peer doesn't hold because
> you may start as a client and start synchronizing the chain, relaying
> blocks, etc. AFAIK, there is no such hybrid implementation and that's not
> what you want to run in a mobile.
>
> _______________________________________________
> Lightning-dev mailing list
> lightning-...@lists.linuxfoundation.org
> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/lightning-dev
>
_______________________________________________
bitcoin-dev mailing list
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev

Reply via email to