2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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# Funding (segwit+CSV)
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2015-12-30 16:38:57 +03:00
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This is two-party funder for a single Funding Transaction (more efficient and
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makes the channel creation atomic, but doesn't work for
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CSV-no-malleability-fix).
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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### Funding Request
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2015-12-30 16:38:57 +03:00
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Someone wants to open a channel. The requester provides any inputs and relevant
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information on how much they want to fund and the parameters, these paramters
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are a proposal.
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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### Funding Response
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2015-12-30 16:38:57 +03:00
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If the responder accepts the request, they also provide any inputs, and returns
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with parameters as well. These parameters are now considered "Committed" and the
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negotation has finished. If the requester doesn't agree with the new conditions,
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they stop. The response also contains the first Commitment pubkey provided by the
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responder, which refunds the initial balance back to both parties.
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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### Funding SignAccept
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2015-12-30 16:38:57 +03:00
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The requester now has sufficient information to get a refund if the transaction
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is ever broadcast. The requester signs the Funding Transaction and this message
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gives the signature to the responder. The requester also provides the signature
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for the initial Commitment Transaction.
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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### Funding SignComplete
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2015-12-30 16:38:57 +03:00
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The responder has sufficient information to broadcast the Funding Transaction
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(with the ability to receive a refund), the responder broadcasts on the
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blockchain and returns the txid to the requester, with the signature of the
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Funding Transaction. This is provided as a courtesy, it cannot be relied upon
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with non-cooperative channel counterparties and the Funding Transaction can be
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braodcast without this message being received by the requester. After the
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necessary number of confirmations, Lightning Network transactions can proceed.
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2015-12-31 09:28:14 +03:00
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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# Cooperative Channel Close
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2015-12-31 09:28:14 +03:00
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This is when either party want to close out a channel with the current balance.
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Requires the cooperation of both parites for this type. In the event of
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non-cooperation, either party may broadcast the most recent Commitment
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Transaction.
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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### Close Request
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2015-12-31 11:48:41 +03:00
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One party unilaterally sends their sig and fee amount to the other party. No
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further channel updates are possible. In the future, we might include HTLCs in
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the outputs, but for now, we're assuming *all* HTLCs are cleared out.
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2015-12-31 09:28:14 +03:00
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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### Close Complete
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2015-12-31 11:48:41 +03:00
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Returns the Txid and sig as a courtesy. The counterparty might not send this if
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they're being non-cooperative.
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2015-12-31 09:28:14 +03:00
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2016-01-15 04:08:18 +03:00
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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# Commitments and HTLCs
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2016-01-15 04:02:23 +03:00
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This is designed to be non-blocking where there can be multiple Commitments per
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person and the Commitments do not need to match. A HTLC is only believed to be
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added when it's in both parties' most recent Commitment (same with
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2016-01-15 04:08:18 +03:00
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timeout/settle) and all prior Commitments not reflecting the change are revoked
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by the counterparty.
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2016-01-15 04:02:23 +03:00
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As a result, there can easily be hundreds of state updates/payments per second
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per channel.
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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### Commitment States
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Commitments:
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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2016-01-15 04:02:23 +03:00
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1. HTLCs, can be modified. Any add/settlement/timeout/etc. gets added to
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staging.
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2016-01-15 04:23:22 +03:00
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2. Signed, more than one signed state at a time may exist per party. Takes
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HTLCs staging and locks it in, can now be broadcast on-chain by the
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counterparty.
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2016-01-15 04:02:23 +03:00
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3. Completed and Revoked, other party sends their revocation accepting this
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Commitment. Sending a revocation means you *ACCEPT* the Commitment. There
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should never be a case where a Commitment Signature happens and the client
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refusees to revoke -- instead the client should immediately close out the
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channel.
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4. Deprecated, a commitment is old, marked as deprecated when there is a new
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Commitment and this one is revoked. These commitments never be broadcasted.
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5. Invalid, close out channel immediately.
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There can be multiple commitments going at a time per party (currently limits a
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total of 16 possible in-flight that can be broadcast for sanity, but there's no
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real limit).
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For validity, all you do is ensure that the changes from the old commitment are
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legit (based on your HTLC/staging data)
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COMMIT\_STAGING
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COMMIT\_SIGNED
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COMMIT\_COMPLETE
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Messages:
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CommitSignature: Signature to establish COMMIT\_SIGNED state
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CommitRevocation: Revoke prior states
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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### ADD HTLCs
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Requester Add HTLC states (Adding HTLCs):
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1. Pre-staged, don't know if the other person wants it
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2. Staged, both parties agree to add this HTLC. If a staging request packet is
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received, then BOTH PARTIES will have it in their next Commitment. Nothing
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is guaranteed here, but violations are treated as immediate channel closure.
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3. Signed and sent the Commitment Tx to the counterparty, one should now assume
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that there's a possibility that this HTLC will be boradcast on-chain.
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4. Completed and Revoked, *counterparty* has included this in the Commitment
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they're broadcasting and revoked their prior state. This means the
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*Requeseter* can continue to take action, since the Commitment they have,
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the HTLC doesn't exist (no payment), and the *Responder* will broadcast with
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the payment to the *Responder*. However, the *Responder* cannot treat the
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HTLC as cleared.
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5. Cleared. Both parties have signed and revoked. Responder can continue
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routing. Make sure it's included in *BOTH COMMITMENTS and ALL PREVIOUS
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REVOKED*
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6. Staging Reject, removal request, tx rejected, begin flow to reject HTLC from
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other channels, can only be sent during the *pre-staging* state
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In the event that an HTLC stays in "Completed and Revoked" and it is timed out,
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and the counterparty refuses to add it into a new Commitment, the channel is
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*closed out on-chain*. In other words, when checking which ones to send a
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settle/timeout notification, do it for anything which is
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ADD\_SIGNING\_AND\_REVOKING, *or* ADD\_COMPLETE (AND ALL OTHER PRE-COMPLETE
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STAGES, e.g. in timeout or settlement).
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As part of moving to any further stage, check if it's timed out.
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If there is a request to stage and it's already staged, treat it as accepting.
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When it has cleared and timed out, a timeout notification is sent.
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HTLC ID numbers are uint64 and each counterparty is responsible to only make
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sequential/incremental, and each party can only make evens/odds (odd channel
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creation responder, evens channel creation initiator)
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State is for *YOUR* signatures (what kind of action you need to do in the future)
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ADD\_PRESTAGE
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ADD\_STAGED
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ADD\_SIGNING\_AND\_REVOKING
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ADD\_COMPLETE
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ADD\_REJECTED
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Messages:
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HTLCAddRequest: Request to add to staging
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HTLCAddAccept: Add to staging (both parties have added when recv)
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HTLCAddReject: Deny add to staging (both parties don't have in staging)
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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### HTLC Settle (payment success)
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Requester Settle HTLC states (Fulfill HTLCs):
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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2016-01-15 04:02:23 +03:00
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1. Pre-staged, don't know if the other person will agree to settle
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2. Staged, both parties agree to settle this HTLC
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3. Signed and sent Commitment Tx to the counterparty, there is now the
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possibility that the HTLC does not exist on-chain (of course, the Commitment
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includes the payment so there's no real loss of funds). In the event that it
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does not complete past this step, then one *must* close out on-chain as if
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it was never staged/signed in the first place and the counterparty went
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offline.
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4. Both parties have signed and revoked, the settlement is complete (there is
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no intermediate step of Revoked because this is only reliable and actionable
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if BOTH PARTIES have updated their settlement state).
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This has one less state because when adding, you're encumbering yourself. With
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removing, both parties are potentially encumbered, so they cannot take action
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until it's fully settled.
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State is for *your* signatures
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SETTLE\_PRESTAGE
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SETTLE\_STAGED
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SETTLE\_SIGNING\_AND\_REVOKING
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SETTLE\_COMPLETE
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Message:
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HTLCSettleRequest: Request to add to staging the removal from Commitment.
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HTLCSettleAccept: Add to staging the removal from Commitment.
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(There is no HTLCSettleReject as the counterparty should immediately close out
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or at worst ignore if it's getting garbage requests)
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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### Timeout (falure/refund)
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2016-01-15 04:02:23 +03:00
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Requester Timeout HTLC States:
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2016-01-15 04:02:23 +03:00
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1. Pre-staged
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2. Staged, both parties agree to time out the HTLC and refund the money
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3. Signe dnad sent commitment to the counterparty, there is now the possibility
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that the transaction will no longer exist on-chain (of course, they can be
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redeemed either way). In the even that it does not complete past this step,
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then one *must* close out on-chain as if it was never staged/signed in the
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first place adn the counterparty was offline.
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4. Both parties have signed and revoked, the settlement is complete (there is no
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intermediate step of Revoked because there is only reliable and actionable if
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BOTH PARTIES have updated their settlement state).
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Similar to HTLC Settlement, there is one less state.
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State is for *your* signatures
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TIMEOUT\_PRESTAGE
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TIMEOUT\_STAGED
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TIMEOUT\_SIGNING\_AND\_REVOKING
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TIMEOUT\_COMPLETE
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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### Example (this section to be removed)
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2016-01-15 04:23:22 +03:00
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A bit redundant, but this was written first... will merge with "Add" example
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2016-01-15 04:02:23 +03:00
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Adding a single HTLC process:
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2016-01-17 04:11:04 +03:00
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2016-01-15 04:02:23 +03:00
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1. Requester flags as pre-staged, and sends an "add requeset"
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2. Responder decides whether to add. If they don't, they invalidate it. If they
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do, they send a message accepting the staging request. It is now marked as
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staged on both sides and is ready to be accepted into a Commitment.
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3. When a party wants to update with a new Commitment, they send a new signed
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Commitment, this includes data that the HTLC is part of it. Let's say it's
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the Requester that sends this new Commitment. As a result, the HTLC is
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marked *BY THE RESPONDER* as Signed. It's only when the Responder includes a
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transaction including the new HTLC in a new Commitment that the Requester
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marks it as Signed.
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4. Upon the Responder receiving the new Commitment, they send the revocation
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for the old Commitment, and commit to broadcasting only the new one.
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5. The *Requester* marks the HTLC as complete, but the *Responder* waits until
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they receive a Commitment (and the old one is revoked) before marking it as
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complete on the Responder's end.
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6. When both parties have the new Commitments and the old ones are revoked,
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then the HTLC is marked as complete
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The two Commitment Transactions may not be completely in sync, but that's OK!
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What's added in both (and removed in both) are regarded as valid and locked-in.
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If it's only added to one, then it's regarded as in-transit and can go either
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way.
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The behavior is to sign after all additions/removals/cancellations, but there
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may be multiple in the staging buffer.
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Each party has their own revocation height (*for the other party to use*), and
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they may be different.
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