Re: [Bitcoin-development] BIP32 wallet structure in use? Remove it?

2014-04-26 Thread Thomas Voegtlin
I totally agree with gmaxwell here. The cost of interoperability is too
high. It would force us to freeze all features, and to require a broad
consensus everytime we want to add something new.

In addition, some partial level of compatibility would probably lead to
users not able to recover all their funds when they enter their seed in
another wallet. That is not acceptable, and should be avoided.




Le 25/04/2014 17:46, Gregory Maxwell a écrit :
 
 I don't believe that wallet interoperability at this level is possible
 in general except as an explicit compatibility feature. I also don't
 believe that it is a huge loss that it is so.
 
 The structure of the derivation defines and constrains functionality.
 You cannot be structure compatible unless you have the same features
 and behavior with respect to key management.  To that extent that
 wallets have the same features, I agree its better if they are
 compatible— but unless they are dead software they likely won't keep
 the same features for long.
 
 Even if their key management were compatible there are many other
 things that go into making a wallet portable between systems; the
 handling of private keys is just one part:  a complete wallet will
 have other (again, functionality specific) metadata.
 
 I agree that it would be it would be possible to support a
 compatibility mode where a wallet has just a subset of features which
 works when loaded into different systems, but I'm somewhat doubtful
 that it would be widely used. The decision to use that mode comes at
 the wrong time— when you start, not when you need the features you
 chose to disable or when you want to switch programs. But the obvious
 thing to do there is to just specify that a linear chain with no
 further branching is that mode: then that will be the same mode you
 use when someone gives you a master public key and asks you to use it
 for reoccurring changes— so at least the software will get used.
 
 Compatibility for something like a recovery tool is another matter,
 and BIP32 probably defines enough there that with a bit of extra data
 about how the real wallet worked that recovery can be successful.
 
 Calling it vendor lock in sounds overblown to me.  If someone wants
 to change wallets they can transfer the funds— manual handling of
 private keys is seldom advisable, and as is they're going to lose
 their metadata in any case.  No one expects to switch banks and to
 keep their account records at the new bank. And while less than
 perfect, the price of heavily constraining functionality in order to
 get another result is just too high.
 
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Re: [Bitcoin-development] BIP32 wallet structure in use? Remove it?

2014-04-26 Thread Tier Nolan
Maybe the solution is to have a defined way to import an unknown wallet?

This means that the gap space and a search ordering needs to be defined.

Given a blockchain and a root seed, it should be possible to find all the
addresses for that root seed.

The hierarchy that the wallet actually uses could be anything.


On Sat, Apr 26, 2014 at 11:36 AM, Thomas Voegtlin thoma...@gmx.de wrote:

 I totally agree with gmaxwell here. The cost of interoperability is too
 high. It would force us to freeze all features, and to require a broad
 consensus everytime we want to add something new.

 In addition, some partial level of compatibility would probably lead to
 users not able to recover all their funds when they enter their seed in
 another wallet. That is not acceptable, and should be avoided.




 Le 25/04/2014 17:46, Gregory Maxwell a écrit :
 
  I don't believe that wallet interoperability at this level is possible
  in general except as an explicit compatibility feature. I also don't
  believe that it is a huge loss that it is so.
 
  The structure of the derivation defines and constrains functionality.
  You cannot be structure compatible unless you have the same features
  and behavior with respect to key management.  To that extent that
  wallets have the same features, I agree its better if they are
  compatible— but unless they are dead software they likely won't keep
  the same features for long.
 
  Even if their key management were compatible there are many other
  things that go into making a wallet portable between systems; the
  handling of private keys is just one part:  a complete wallet will
  have other (again, functionality specific) metadata.
 
  I agree that it would be it would be possible to support a
  compatibility mode where a wallet has just a subset of features which
  works when loaded into different systems, but I'm somewhat doubtful
  that it would be widely used. The decision to use that mode comes at
  the wrong time— when you start, not when you need the features you
  chose to disable or when you want to switch programs. But the obvious
  thing to do there is to just specify that a linear chain with no
  further branching is that mode: then that will be the same mode you
  use when someone gives you a master public key and asks you to use it
  for reoccurring changes— so at least the software will get used.
 
  Compatibility for something like a recovery tool is another matter,
  and BIP32 probably defines enough there that with a bit of extra data
  about how the real wallet worked that recovery can be successful.
 
  Calling it vendor lock in sounds overblown to me.  If someone wants
  to change wallets they can transfer the funds— manual handling of
  private keys is seldom advisable, and as is they're going to lose
  their metadata in any case.  No one expects to switch banks and to
  keep their account records at the new bank. And while less than
  perfect, the price of heavily constraining functionality in order to
  get another result is just too high.
 
 
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Re: [Bitcoin-development] BIP32 wallet structure in use? Remove it?

2014-04-26 Thread Tamas Blummer
Yes, it is expensive but possible to discover any funds associated with a seed, 
provided there are set limits to:

1. gap of address use (e.g. 20)
2. depth of hierarchy (e.g. 6)
3. gap in use of parallel branches (e.g. 0) 

I would pick the limits in brackets above. 

Regards,

Tamas Blummer
http://bitsofproof.com

On 26.04.2014, at 12:48, Tier Nolan tier.no...@gmail.com wrote:

 Maybe the solution is to have a defined way to import an unknown wallet?
 
 This means that the gap space and a search ordering needs to be defined.
 
 Given a blockchain and a root seed, it should be possible to find all the 
 addresses for that root seed.
 
 The hierarchy that the wallet actually uses could be anything.



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Re: [Bitcoin-development] BIP32 wallet structure in use? Remove it?

2014-04-26 Thread Tamas Blummer
Actually gap in parallel branches already fails with BIP64 as it starts with 
m/64'/…. without having m/63'

Regards,

Tamas Blummer
http://bitsofproof.com

On 26.04.2014, at 12:59, Tamas Blummer ta...@bitsofproof.com wrote:

 Yes, it is expensive but possible to discover any funds associated with a 
 seed, provided there are set limits to:
 
 1. gap of address use (e.g. 20)
 2. depth of hierarchy (e.g. 6)
 3. gap in use of parallel branches (e.g. 0) 
 
 I would pick the limits in brackets above. 
 
 Regards,
 
 Tamas Blummer
 http://bitsofproof.com
 
 On 26.04.2014, at 12:48, Tier Nolan tier.no...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Maybe the solution is to have a defined way to import an unknown wallet?
 
 This means that the gap space and a search ordering needs to be defined.
 
 Given a blockchain and a root seed, it should be possible to find all the 
 addresses for that root seed.
 
 The hierarchy that the wallet actually uses could be anything.
 



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Re: [Bitcoin-development] BIP32 wallet structure in use? Remove it?

2014-04-26 Thread Pavol Rusnak
On 04/26/2014 12:48 PM, Tier Nolan wrote:
 Maybe the solution is to have a defined way to import an unknown wallet?

That is nonsense. There is no way how to import the wallet if you don't
know its structure.

 Given a blockchain and a root seed, it should be possible to find all the
 addresses for that root seed.

Unless the keyspace is almost infinite because:

 The hierarchy that the wallet actually uses could be anything.

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Re: [Bitcoin-development] BIP32 wallet structure in use? Remove it?

2014-04-26 Thread Pieter Wuille
On Sat, Apr 26, 2014 at 2:24 PM, Pavol Rusnak st...@gk2.sk wrote:
 On 04/26/2014 12:48 PM, Tier Nolan wrote:
 Maybe the solution is to have a defined way to import an unknown wallet?

 That is nonsense. There is no way how to import the wallet if you don't
 know its structure.

I agree. Especially when multiple chains are combined (multisig) for
P2SH usage, defining things like a gap limit becomes impossible
without knowing some metadata.

However, perhaps it is possible to define something like BIP44
import-compatible, meaning that the application doesn't actually
support all of BIP44 features, but does guarantee not losing any funds
when imported? Similar things could be done for other purpose types.

-- 
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Re: [Bitcoin-development] BIP32 wallet structure in use? Remove it?

2014-04-26 Thread Jeff Garzik
It is very young in bitcoin's life.  We don't know what features will
work out best, or need to be radically changed after initial
deployment in the field.

Loose coordination is good.  Good ideas will spread on their own.
Users will demand compatibility with certain features, and fail to
care incompatibilities in other features.

Tight interoperability at this stage is too confining.




On Fri, Apr 25, 2014 at 11:46 AM, Gregory Maxwell gmaxw...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Fri, Apr 25, 2014 at 7:53 AM, Jim jim...@fastmail.co.uk wrote:
 Oh dear.

 For reasons that are perfectly reasonable we are close to losing any chance 
 of intra-client HD compatibility for BIP32 wallets.

 In the next 12 months there will probably be collectively millions of users 
 of our new wallets. I don't want them to suffer from vendor lockin.

 Can we not agree on a lowest common denominator that we agree to support ?
 An HD Basic if you like.
 For entry level users we can keep things simple and any HD Basic bitcoin 
 will be fully interoperable.

 Sure, if you use anything fancy you'll be locked in to a particular wallet 
 but a lot of users just want somewhere safe to put their bitcoin, spend it 
 and receive it.

 I appreciate standising everything is very difficult (if not impossible) but 
 if we don't have a minimum of interoperability I think we'll do our users a 
 disservice.

 I don't believe that wallet interoperability at this level is possible
 in general except as an explicit compatibility feature. I also don't
 believe that it is a huge loss that it is so.

 The structure of the derivation defines and constrains functionality.
 You cannot be structure compatible unless you have the same features
 and behavior with respect to key management.  To that extent that
 wallets have the same features, I agree its better if they are
 compatible-- but unless they are dead software they likely won't keep
 the same features for long.

 Even if their key management were compatible there are many other
 things that go into making a wallet portable between systems; the
 handling of private keys is just one part:  a complete wallet will
 have other (again, functionality specific) metadata.

 I agree that it would be it would be possible to support a
 compatibility mode where a wallet has just a subset of features which
 works when loaded into different systems, but I'm somewhat doubtful
 that it would be widely used. The decision to use that mode comes at
 the wrong time-- when you start, not when you need the features you
 chose to disable or when you want to switch programs. But the obvious
 thing to do there is to just specify that a linear chain with no
 further branching is that mode: then that will be the same mode you
 use when someone gives you a master public key and asks you to use it
 for reoccurring changes-- so at least the software will get used.

 Compatibility for something like a recovery tool is another matter,
 and BIP32 probably defines enough there that with a bit of extra data
 about how the real wallet worked that recovery can be successful.

 Calling it vendor lock in sounds overblown to me.  If someone wants
 to change wallets they can transfer the funds-- manual handling of
 private keys is seldom advisable, and as is they're going to lose
 their metadata in any case.  No one expects to switch banks and to
 keep their account records at the new bank. And while less than
 perfect, the price of heavily constraining functionality in order to
 get another result is just too high.

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[Bitcoin-development] BIP32 wallet structure in use? Remove it?

2014-04-25 Thread Andreas Schildbach
Does anyone use or plan to use the wallet structure part of the BIP32
document?

I suggest removing it from the document and maybe instead point at
BIP43. That new specification proposal just defines a purpose and
leaves everything else to the inventor of that purpose. The idea it that
over time a standard will evolve naturally rather than top-down.

https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0043.mediawiki

I'd volunteer to submit a pull request if I can see some level of
consent here.


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Re: [Bitcoin-development] BIP32 wallet structure in use? Remove it?

2014-04-25 Thread Jim
Oh dear.

For reasons that are perfectly reasonable we are close to losing any chance of 
intra-client HD compatibility for BIP32 wallets.

In the next 12 months there will probably be collectively millions of users of 
our new wallets. I don't want them to suffer from vendor lockin.

Can we not agree on a lowest common denominator that we agree to support ?
An HD Basic if you like. 
For entry level users we can keep things simple and any HD Basic bitcoin will 
be fully interoperable.

Sure, if you use anything fancy you'll be locked in to a particular wallet but 
a lot of users just want somewhere safe to put their bitcoin, spend it and 
receive it.

I appreciate standising everything is very difficult (if not impossible) but if 
we don't have a minimum of interoperability I think we'll do our users a 
disservice.






On Fri, Apr 25, 2014, at 11:23 AM, Andreas Schildbach wrote:
 Does anyone use or plan to use the wallet structure part of the BIP32
 document?
 
 I suggest removing it from the document and maybe instead point at
 BIP43. That new specification proposal just defines a purpose and
 leaves everything else to the inventor of that purpose. The idea it that
 over time a standard will evolve naturally rather than top-down.
 
 https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0043.mediawiki
 
 I'd volunteer to submit a pull request if I can see some level of
 consent here.
 
 
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Re: [Bitcoin-development] BIP32 wallet structure in use? Remove it?

2014-04-25 Thread Gregory Maxwell
On Fri, Apr 25, 2014 at 7:53 AM, Jim jim...@fastmail.co.uk wrote:
 Oh dear.

 For reasons that are perfectly reasonable we are close to losing any chance 
 of intra-client HD compatibility for BIP32 wallets.

 In the next 12 months there will probably be collectively millions of users 
 of our new wallets. I don't want them to suffer from vendor lockin.

 Can we not agree on a lowest common denominator that we agree to support ?
 An HD Basic if you like.
 For entry level users we can keep things simple and any HD Basic bitcoin 
 will be fully interoperable.

 Sure, if you use anything fancy you'll be locked in to a particular wallet 
 but a lot of users just want somewhere safe to put their bitcoin, spend it 
 and receive it.

 I appreciate standising everything is very difficult (if not impossible) but 
 if we don't have a minimum of interoperability I think we'll do our users a 
 disservice.

I don't believe that wallet interoperability at this level is possible
in general except as an explicit compatibility feature. I also don't
believe that it is a huge loss that it is so.

The structure of the derivation defines and constrains functionality.
You cannot be structure compatible unless you have the same features
and behavior with respect to key management.  To that extent that
wallets have the same features, I agree its better if they are
compatible— but unless they are dead software they likely won't keep
the same features for long.

Even if their key management were compatible there are many other
things that go into making a wallet portable between systems; the
handling of private keys is just one part:  a complete wallet will
have other (again, functionality specific) metadata.

I agree that it would be it would be possible to support a
compatibility mode where a wallet has just a subset of features which
works when loaded into different systems, but I'm somewhat doubtful
that it would be widely used. The decision to use that mode comes at
the wrong time— when you start, not when you need the features you
chose to disable or when you want to switch programs. But the obvious
thing to do there is to just specify that a linear chain with no
further branching is that mode: then that will be the same mode you
use when someone gives you a master public key and asks you to use it
for reoccurring changes— so at least the software will get used.

Compatibility for something like a recovery tool is another matter,
and BIP32 probably defines enough there that with a bit of extra data
about how the real wallet worked that recovery can be successful.

Calling it vendor lock in sounds overblown to me.  If someone wants
to change wallets they can transfer the funds— manual handling of
private keys is seldom advisable, and as is they're going to lose
their metadata in any case.  No one expects to switch banks and to
keep their account records at the new bank. And while less than
perfect, the price of heavily constraining functionality in order to
get another result is just too high.

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Re: [Bitcoin-development] BIP32 wallet structure in use? Remove it?

2014-04-25 Thread Mike Hearn
I generally agree, but I wonder how popular cloning wallets between devices
will be in future. Right now if someone wants to have a wallet shared
between Hive, blockchain.info and Bitcoin Wallet for Android, we just tell
them they're out of luck and they need to pick one, or split their funds up
manually.

But probably a lot of people would like to use different UI's to access the
same wallets. Sharing key trees is a part of that, though full blown wallet
metadata sync would also be needed.

So I guess we're going to end up with some kind of fairly complex
compatibility matrix. But I agree it may be unavoidable.
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Re: [Bitcoin-development] BIP32 wallet structure in use? Remove it?

2014-04-25 Thread Aaron Voisine
On github I commented on the BIP43 pull request about adding a
purpose of 0' which would correspond to the BIP32 recommended tree
structure for a single account wallet. (m/0'/chain) This will allow
for backwards compatibility and interoperability at least for existing
single account BIP32 implementations like my own. The only issue is
that it would involve a new BIP, and it wouldn't follow the BIP43
recommendation of using the BIP number as the purpose number, unless
I can get BIP0.  :)

Aaron

There's no trick to being a humorist when you have the whole
government working for you -- Will Rodgers


On Fri, Apr 25, 2014 at 8:49 AM, Mike Hearn m...@plan99.net wrote:
 I generally agree, but I wonder how popular cloning wallets between devices
 will be in future. Right now if someone wants to have a wallet shared
 between Hive, blockchain.info and Bitcoin Wallet for Android, we just tell
 them they're out of luck and they need to pick one, or split their funds up
 manually.

 But probably a lot of people would like to use different UI's to access the
 same wallets. Sharing key trees is a part of that, though full blown wallet
 metadata sync would also be needed.

 So I guess we're going to end up with some kind of fairly complex
 compatibility matrix. But I agree it may be unavoidable.

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