Good morning Lisa,
>Should a node be able to request more liquidity than they put into the channel
>on their half? In the case of a vendor who wants inbound capacity, capping the
>liquidity request
>allowed seems unnecessary.
My initial thought is that it would be dangerous to allow the initiat
Good morning Laolu,
>> I worry about doing away with initiator distinction
>
> Can you re-phrase this sentence? I'm having trouble parsing it, thanks.
The initiator of an action is the node which performs the first step in an
action.
For instance, when opening a channel, the node which initiate
We implemented the latter scheme. lightning-dissector already supports key
rotation.
FYI, here's the key log file format lightning-dissector currently
implements.
https://github.com/nayutaco/lightning-dissector/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#by-dumping-key-log-file
Whenever key rotation happens(nonce
Hi Rusty,
> funding_satoshis
>
>
> c-lightning: must be >= 1000 (after reserve subtracted)
> Eclair: must be >= 10
> lnd: any
>
> SUGGESTION: At 253 satoshi/kSipa, and dust at 546, 1000 is too low to be
> sane (one output would always be dust). Eclair seems pessimistic
> thou
Problem
Currently it’s difficult to reliably source inbound capacity for your node.
This is incredibly problematic for vendors and nodes hoping to setup shop
as a route facilitator. Most solutions at the moment require an element of
out of band negotiation in or
Olaoluwa Osuntokun writes:
>> However personally I do not really see the need to create multiple
> channels
>> to a single peer, or increase the capacity with a specific peer (via
> splice
>> or dual-funding). As Christian says in the other mail, this
> consideration,
>> is that it becomes less
> On 7 Nov 2018, at 12:01, Anthony Towns wrote:
>
> I don't think it quite makes sense either fwiw.
Glad it’s not just me :)
> What's enforcable on chain will vary though -- as fees rise, even if the
> network will still relay your 546 satoshi output, it may no longer be
> economical to claim i
On Tue, Nov 06, 2018 at 10:22:56PM +, Gert-Jaap Glasbergen wrote:
> > On 6 Nov 2018, at 14:10, Christian Decker
> > wrote:
> > It should be pointed out here that the dust rules actually prevent us
> > from creating an output that is smaller than the dust limit (546
> > satoshis on Bitcoin). B
Olaoluwa Osuntokun writes:
>> Mainly limitations of our descriptor language, TBH.
>
> I don't follow...so it's a size issue? Or wanting to avoid "repeated"
> fields?
Not that smart: tools/extract-formats.py extracts descriptions from the
spec for each message. It currently requires constants in
Hi Laolu and Fabrice,
> I think HORNET would address this rather nicely!
HORNET sounds awesome, but does it really address the specific issue
Fabrice is describing though? IIUC, HORNET would operate at a lower
layer and it could be possible to have a valid circuit and still
indefinitely waiting f
> On 6 Nov 2018, at 14:10, Christian Decker wrote:
>
> It should be pointed out here that the dust rules actually prevent us
> from creating an output that is smaller than the dust limit (546
> satoshis on Bitcoin). By the same logic we would be forced to treat the
> dust limit as our atomic unit
Gert-Jaap Glasbergen writes:
> Op 1 nov. 2018 om 03:38 heeft Rusty Russell
> mailto:ru...@rustcorp.com.au>> het volgende geschreven:
>> I believe this would render you inoperable in practice; fees are
>> frequently sub-satoshi, so you would fail everything. The entire
>> network would have to dr
Hi Fabrice,
I think HORNET would address this rather nicely!
During the set up phase (which uses Sphinx), the sender is able to get a
sense
of if the route is actually "lively" or not, as the circuit can't be
finalized
if all the nodes aren't available. Additionally, during the set up phase,
the
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