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lightning-bolts/02-peer-protocol.md
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BOLT #2: Peer Protocol for Channel Management

The peer channel protocol has three phases: establishment, normal operation, and closing.

The messages described in this document are grouped logically into 4 groups by their most significant set bit:

  • Setup & signalling (types 0-31): comprises setup of the cryptographic transport, communication of supported features and error reporting. These are described in BOLT #1.
  • Channel (types 32-127): comprises messages used to setup, update and tear down micropayment channels
  • HTLC (types 128-255: comprises messages related to adding, revoking and settling HTLCs on a micropayment channel
  • Routing (types 256-511): node and channel announcements, as well as any active route exploration.

Table of Contents

Channel

Channel Establishment

Channel establishment begins immediately after authentication, and consists of each node sending an open_channel message, followed by one node sending open_funding, the other providing its open_commit_sig then both sides waiting for the funding transaction to enter the blockchain and reach their specified depth, at which point they send open_complete. After both sides have sent open_complete the channel is established and can begin normal operation.

    +-------+                              +-------+
    |       |--(1)---  open_channel  ----->|       |
    |       |<-(2)--  accept_channel  -----|       |
    |       |                              |       |
    |   A   |--(3)--  funding_created  --->|   B   |
    |       |<-(4)--  funding_signed  -----|       |
    |       |                              |       |
    |       |--(5)--- funding_locked  ---->|       |
    |       |<-(6)--- funding_locked  -----|       |
    +-------+                              +-------+

If this fails at any stage, or a node decides that the channel terms offered by the other node are not suitable, the channel establishment fails.

The open_channel message

This message contains information about a node, and indicates its desire to set up a new channel.

  1. type: 32 (open_channel)
  2. data:
    • [8:temporary-channel-id]
    • [8:funding-satoshis]
    • [8:push-msat]
    • [8:dust-limit-satoshis]
    • [8:max-htlc-value-in-flight-msat]
    • [8:channel-reserve-satoshis]
    • [4:htlc-minimum-msat]
    • [4:max-accepted-htlcs]
    • [4:feerate-per-kw]
    • [2:to-self-delay]
    • [33:funding-pubkey]
    • [33:revocation-basepoint]
    • [33:payment-basepoint]
    • [33:delayed-payment-basepoint]
    • [33:first-per-commitment-point]

The temporary-channel-id is used to identify this channel until the funding transaction is established. funding-satoshis is the amount the sender is putting into the channel. dust-limit-satoshis is the threshold below which output should be generated for this nodes commitment or HTLC transaction; ie. HTLCs below this amount plus HTLC transaction fess are not enforceable onchain. This reflects the reality that tiny outputs are not considered standard transactions and will not propagate through the bitcoin network. max-htlc-value-in-inflight-msat is a cap on total value of outstanding HTLCs, which allows a node to limit its exposure to HTLCs; similarly max-accepted-htlcs limits the number of outstanding HTLCs the other node can offer. channel-reserve-satoshis is the minimum amount that the other node is to keep as a direct payment. htlc-minimum-msat indicates the smallest value HTLC this node wil accept. feerate-per-kw indicates the initial fee rate which this side will pay for commitment and HTLC transactions as described in BOLT #3 (this can be adjusted later with a update_fee message). to-self-delay is the number of block that the other nodes to-self outputs must be delayed, using OP_CHECKSEQUENCEVERIFY delays; this is how long it will have to wait in case of breakdown before redeeming its own funds.

The funding-pubkey is the public key in the 2-of-2 multisig script of the funding transaction output. The revocation-basepoint is combined with the revocation preimage for this commitment transaction to generate a unique revocation key for this commitment transaction. The payment-basepoint and delayed-payment-basepoint are similarly used to generate a series of keys for any payments to this node: delayed-payment-basepoint is used to for payments encumbered by a delau. Varying these keys ensures that the transaction ID of each commitment transaction is unpredictable by an external observer, even if one commitment transaction is seen: this property is very useful for preserving privacy when outsourcing penalty transactions to third parties.

FIXME: Describe Dangerous feature bit for larger channel amounts.

Requirements

A sending node MUST set the most significant bit in temporary-channel-id, and MUST ensure it is unique from any other channel id with the same peer. The sender MUST set funding-satoshis to less than 2^24 satoshi. The sender MUST set push-msat to equal or less than to 1000 * funding-satoshis. The sender SHOULD set to-self-delay sufficient to ensure the sender can irreversibly spend a commitment transaction output in case of misbehavior by the receiver. The sender SHOULD set minimum-depth to an amount where the sender considers reorganizations to be low risk. funding-pubkey, revocation-basepoint, payment-basepoint and delayed-payment-basepoint MUST be valid DER-encoded compressed secp256k1 pubkeys. The sender SHOULD set feerate-per-kw to at least the rate it estimates would cause the transaction to be immediately included in a block.

The sender SHOULD set dust-limit-satoshis to sufficient value to allow commitment transactions to propagate through the bitcoin network. It MUST set max-accepted-htlcs to less than or equal to 600 BOLT #5. It SHOULD set htlc-minimum-msat to the minimum amount HTLC it is willing to accept from this peer.

The receiving node MUST fail the channel if to-self-delay is unreasonably large. The receiver MAY fail the channel if funding-satoshis is too small, and MUST fail the channel if push-msat is greater than funding-amount * 1000. The receiving node MAY fail the channel if it considers htlc-minimum-msat too large, max-htlc-value-in-flight too small, channel-reserve-satoshis too large, or max-accepted-htlcs too small. It MUST fail the channel if max-accepted-htlcs is greater than 600.

The receiver MUST fail the channel if considers feerate-per-kw too small for timely processing, or unreasonably large. The receiver MUST fail the channel if funding-pubkey, revocation-basepoint, payment-basepoint or delayed-payment-basepoint are not be valid DER-encoded compressed secp256k1 pubkeys.

The receiver MUST NOT consider funds received using push-msat to be received until the funding transaction has reached sufficient depth.

Rationale

The channel reserve is specified by the peer's channel-reserve-satoshis; 1% of the channel total is suggested. Each side of a channel maintains this reserve so it always has something to lose if it were to try to broadcast an old, revoked commitment transaction. Initially this reserve may not be met, as only one side has funds, but the protocol ensures that progress is always toward it being met, and once met it is maintained.

The sender can unconditionally give initial funds to the receiver using a non-zero push-msat, and this is one case where the normal reserve mechanism doesn't apply. However, like any other on-chain transaction, this payment is not certain until the funding transaction has been confirmed sufficiently (may be double-spent) and may require a separate method to prove payment via on-chain confirmation.

The feerate-per-kw is generally only a concern to the sender (who pays the fees), but that is also the feerate paid by HTLC transactions; thus unresonably large fee rates can also penalize the reciepient.

Future

It would be easy to have a local feature bit which indicated that a receiving was prepared to fund a channel, which would reverse this protocol.

The accept_channel message

This message contains information about a node, and indicates its acceptance of the new channel.

  1. type: 33 (accept_channel)
  2. data:
    • [8:temporary-channel-id]
    • [8:dust-limit-satoshis]
    • [8:max-htlc-value-in-flight-msat]
    • [8:channel-reserve-satoshis]
    • [4:minimum-depth]
    • [4:htlc-minimum-msat]
    • [4:max-accpted-htlcs]
    • [2:to-self-delay]
    • [33:funding-pubkey]
    • [33:revocation-basepoint]
    • [33:payment-basepoint]
    • [33:delayed-payment-basepoint]
    • [33:first-per-commitment-point]

Requirements

The temporary-channel-id MUST be the same as the temporary-channel-id in the open_channel message. The sender SHOULD set minimum-depth to a number of blocks it considers reasonable to avoid double-spending of the funding transaction.

The receiver MAY reject the minimum-depth if it considers it unreasonably large. Other fields have the same requirements as their counterparts in open_channel.

The funding_created message

This message describes the outpoint which the funder has created for the initial commitment transactions. After receiving the peer's signature, it will broadcast the funding transaction.

  1. type: 34 (funding_created)
  2. data:
    • [8:temporary-channel-id]
    • [32:txid]
    • [1:output-index]
    • [1:pad]
    • [64:signature]

Requirements

The sender MUST set temporary-channel-id the same as the temporary-channel-id in the open_channel message. The sender MUST set txid to the transaction ID to a non-malleably transaction, which it MUST NOT broadcast, and MUST set output-index to output number of that transaction which corresponds the funding transaction output as defined in BOLT #3, MUST set pad to zero, and MUST set signature to the valid signature using its funding-pubkey for the initial commitment transaction as defined in BOLT #3.

The recipient MUST fail the channel if signature is incorrect, and MUST ignore pad.

Rationale

The output-index can only be 1 byte, since that's how we'll pack it into the channel-id used throughout the protocol. The limit of 255 outputs should not be overly burdensome.

The funding_signed message

This message gives the funder the signature they need for the first commitment transaction, so they can broadcast it knowing they can redeem their funds if they need to.

  1. type: 35 (funding_signed)
  2. data:
    • [8:temporary-channel-id]
    • [64:signature]

Requirements

The sender MUST set temporary-channel-id the same as the temporary-channel-id in the open_channel message, and MUST set signature to the valid signature using its funding-pubkey for the initial commitment transaction as defined in BOLT #3.

The recipient MUST fail the channel if signature is incorrect.

The funding_locked message

This message indicates that the funding transaction has reached the minimum-depth asked for in accept_channel. Once both nodes have sent this, the channel enters normal operating mode.

  1. type: 36 (funding_locked)
  2. data:
    • [8:temporary-channel-id]
    • [8:channel-id]
    • [64:announcement-node-signature]
    • [64:announcement-bitcoin-signature]
    • [33:next-per-commitment-point]

The channel-id is the unique description of the funding transaction. It is constructed with the most significant 3 bytes as the block height, the next 3 bytes indicating the transaction index within the block, and the least significant two bytes indicating the output index which pays to the channel.

This channel-id is used in all messages referring to the channel from this point onwards.

announcement-node-signature and announcement-bitcoin-signature are the optional signature for channel_announcement as described in BOLT #7.

Requirements

The sender MUST wait until the funding transaction has reached minimum-depth before sending this message. The sender MUST encode the block position of the funding transaction into channel-id. If the sender has already received funding_locked from the other node, it MUST fail the channel if its own channel-id does not match that received. The sender MUST set next-per-commitment-point to the per-commitment point to be used for the following commitment transaction, derived as specified in BOLT #3.

If the recipient has already sent funding_locked it MUST fail the channel if channel-id does not match the channel-id it sent.

The sender MUST set announcement-node-signature and announcement-bitcoin-signature to the signatures for the channel_announcement message, or all zeroes if it does not want the channel announced.

The recipient SHOULD fail the channel if the announcement-node-signature and announcement-bitcoin-signatures are incorrect (and not all zeroes). The recipient SHOULD queue the channel_announcement message for its peers if it has sent and received a non-zero announcement-node-signature and announcement-bitcoin-signature.

Future

We could add an SPV proof, and route block hashes in separate messages.

Updating Fees: update_fee

An update_fee message is sent by the node which is paying the bitcoin fee. Like any update, it is first committed to the receiver's commitment transaction, then (once acknowledged) committed to the sender's. Unlike an HTLC, update_fee is never closed, simply replaced.

There is a possibility of a race: the recipient can add new HTLCs before it receives the update_fee, and the sender may not be able to afford the fee on its own commitment transaction once the update_fee is acknowledged by the recipient. In this case, the fee will be less than the fee rate, as described in BOLT #3.

The exact calculation used for deriving the fee from the fee rate is given in [BOLT #3].

  1. type: 37 (update_fee)
  2. data:
    • [8:channel-id]
    • [4:feerate-per-kw]

Requirements

The node which is responsible for paying the bitcoin fee SHOULD send update_fee when to ensure the current fee rate is sufficient for timely processing of the commitment transaction by a significant margin.

The node which is not responsible for paying the bitcoin fee MUST NOT send update_fee.

A receiving node SHOULD fail the channel if the update_fee is too low for timely processing, or unreasonably large.

A receiving node MUST fail the channel if the sender is not responsible for paying the bitcoin fee.

A receiving node SHOULD fail the channel if the sender cannot afford the new fee rate on the receiving node's current commitment transaction, but it MAY delay this check until the update_fee is committed.

Rationale

Bitcoin fees are required for unilateral closes to be effective, particularly since there is no general method for the node which broadcasts it to use child-pays-for-parent to increase its effective fee.

Given the variance in fees, and the fact that the transaction may be spent in the future, it's a good idea for the fee payer to keep a good margin, say 5x the expected fee requirement, but differing methods of fee estimation mean we don't specify an exact value.

Since the fees are currently one-sided (the party which requested the channel creation always pays the fees for the commitment transaction), it is simplest to only allow them to set fee levels, but as the same fee rate applies to HTLC transactions, the receiving node must also care about the reasonableness of the fee.

Channel Close

Nodes can negotiate a mutual close for the connection, which unlike a unilateral close, allows them to access their funds immediately and can be negotiated with lower fees.

Closing happens in two stages: the first is by one side indicating that it wants to clear the channel (and thus will accept no new HTLCs), and once all HTLCs are resolved, the final channel close negotiation begins.

    +-------+                              +-------+
    |       |--(1)-----  shutdown  ------->|       |
    |       |<-(2)-----  shutdown  --------|       |
    |       |                              |       |
    |       | <complete all pending htlcs> |       |
    |   A   |                 ...          |   B   |
    |       |                              |       |
    |       |<-(3)-- closing_signed  F1----|       |
    |       |--(4)-- closing_signed  F2--->|       |
    |       |              ...             |       |
    |       |--(?)-- closing_signed  Fn--->|       |
    |       |<-(?)-- closing_signed  Fn----|       |
    +-------+                              +-------+

Closing initiation: shutdown

Either node (or both) can send a shutdown message to initiate closing, and indicating the scriptpubkey it wants to be paid to.

  1. type: 38 (shutdown)
  2. data:
    • [8:channel-id]
    • [4:len]
    • [len:scriptpubkey]

Requirements

A node MUST NOT send a shutdown if there are updates pending on the receiving node's commitment transaction which are not yet added to the senders commitment.

A node MUST NOT send an update_add_htlc after a shutdown, and MUST NOT send more than one shutdown. A sending node SHOULD fail to route any HTLC added after it sent shutdown.

A sending node MUST set scriptpubkey to one of the following forms:

  1. OP_DUP OP_HASH160 20 20-bytes OP_EQUALVERIFY OP_CHECKSIG (pay to pubkey hash), OR
  2. OP_HASH160 20 20-bytes OP_EQUAL (pay to script hash), OR
  3. OP_0 20 20-bytes (version 0 pay to witness pubkey), OR
  4. OP_0 32 32-bytes (version 0 pay to witness script hash)

A receiving node SHOULD fail the connection if the scriptpubkey is not one of those forms.

A receiving node MUST reply to a shutdown message with a shutdown once there are no outstanding updates on the peer, unless it has already sent a shutdown.

Rationale

If channel state is always "clean" (no pending changes) when a shutdown starts, we avoid the question of how to behave if it wasn't; the sender an always send an update_commit first.

As shutdown implies a desire to terminate, it implies that no new HTLCs will be added or accepted.

The scriptpubkey forms include only standard forms accepted by the bitcoin network, ensuring that the resulting transaction will propagate to miners.

The shutdown response requirement implies that the node sends update_commit to commit any outstanding changes before replying, but it could theoretically reconnect instead, which simply erases all outstanding uncommitted changes.

Closing negotiation: closing_signed

Once shutdown is complete and the channel is empty of HTLCs, the final current commitment transactions will have no HTLCs, and closing fee negotiation begins. Each node chooses a fee it thinks is fair, and signs the close transaction with the script_pubkey fields from the shutdown messages and that fee, and sends the signature. The process terminates when both agree on the same fee, or one side fails the channel.

  1. type: 39 (closing_signed)
  2. data:
    • [8:channel-id]
    • [8:fee-satoshis]
    • [64:signature]

Requirements

Nodes SHOULD send a closing_signed message after shutdown has been received and no HTLCs remain in either commitment transaction.

A sending node MUST set fee-satoshis lower than or equal to the fee of the final commitment transaction.

The sender SHOULD set the initial fee-satoshis according to its estimate of cost of inclusion in a block.

The sender MUST set signature to the bitcoin signature of the close transaction with the node responsible for paying the bitcoin fee paying fee-satoshis, without populating any output which is below the receiver's dust-limit-satoshis.

The receiver MUST check signature is valid for the close transaction with the given fee-satoshis as detailed above, and MUST fail the connection if it is not.

If the receiver agrees with the fee, it SHOULD reply with a closing_signed with the same fee-satoshis value, otherwise it SHOULD propose a value strictly between the received fee-satoshis and its previously-sent fee-satoshis.

Once a node has sent or received a closing_signed with matching fee-satoshis it SHOULD close the connection and SHOULD sign and broadcast the final closing transaction.

Rationale

Note that there is limited risk if the closing transaction is delayed, and it will be broadcast very soon, so there is usually no reason to pay a premium for rapid processing.

Normal Operation

Once both nodes have exchanged funding_locked, the channel can be used to make payments via Hash TimeLocked Contracts.

Changes are sent in batches: one or more update messages are sent before a commit_sig message, as in the following diagram:

    +-------+                            +-------+
    |       |--(1)---- add_htlc   ------>|       |
    |       |--(2)---- add_htlc   ------>|       |
    |       |<-(3)---- add_htlc   -------|       |
    |       |                            |       |
    |       |--(4)----   commit   ------>|       |
    |   A   |                            |   B   |
    |       |<-(5)--- revoke_and_ack-----|       |
    |       |<-(6)----   commit   -------|       |
    |       |                            |       |
    |       |--(7)--- revoke_and_ack---->|       |
    +-------+                            +-------+

Counterintuitively, these updates apply to the other node's commitment transaction; the node only adds those updates to its own commitment transaction when the remote node acknowledges it has applied them via revoke_and_ack.

Thus each update traverses through the following states:

  1. Pending on the receiver
  2. In the receiver's latest commitment transaction,
  3. ... and the receiver's previous commitment transaction has been revoked, and the HTLC is pending on the sender.
  4. ... and in the sender's latest commitment transaction
  5. ... and the sender's previous commitment transaction has been revoked

As the two nodes updates are independent, the two commitment transactions may be out of sync indefinitely. This is not concerning: what matters is whether both sides have irrevocably committed to a particular HTLC or not (the final state, above).

Risks With HTLC Timeouts

HTLCs tend to be chained across the network. For example, a node A might offer node B an HTLC with a timeout of 3 days, and node B might offer node C the same HTLC with a timeout of 2 days.

This difference in timeouts is important: after 2 days B can try to remove the offer to C even if C is unresponsive, by broadcasting the commitment transaction it has with C and spending the HTLC output. Even though C might race to try to use its payment preimage at that point to also spend the HTLC, it should be resolved well before the 3 day deadline so B can either redeem the HTLC off A or close it.

If the timing is too close, there is a risk of "one-sided redemption", where the payment preimage received from an offered HTLC is too late to be used for an incoming HTLC, leaving the node with unexpected liability.

Thus the effective timeout of the HTLC is the expiry, plus some additional delay for the transaction which redeems the HTLC output to be irreversibly committed to the blockchain.

Thus a node MUST estimate the deadline for successful redemption for each HTLC it offers. A node MUST NOT offer a HTLC after this deadline, and MUST fail the channel if an HTLC which it offered is in either node's current commitment transaction past this deadline.

Adding an HTLC

Either node can send update_add_htlc to offer a HTLC to the other, which is redeemable in return for a payment preimage. Amounts are in millisatoshi, though on-chain enforcement is only possible for whole satoshi amounts greater than the dust limit: in commitment transactions these are rounded down as specified in [BOLT #3].

The format of the route portion, which indicates where the payment is destined, is described in [BOLT #4].

  1. type: 128 (update_add_htlc)
  2. data:
    • [8:channel-id]
    • [8:id]
    • [4:amount-msat]
    • [4:expiry]
    • [32:payment-hash]
    • [1254:onion-routing-packet]

Requirements

A sending node MUST NOT offer amount-msat it cannot pay for in the remote commitment transaction at the current fee-rate (see "Updating Fees") while maintaining its channel reserve, and MUST offer amount-msat greater than 0, and MUST NOT offer amount-msat below the receiving node's htlc-minimum-msat.

A sending node MUST NOT add an HTLC if it would result in it offering more than the remote's max-accepted-htlcs HTLCs in the remote commitment transaction.

A sending node MUST set id to 0 for the first HTLC it offers, and increase the value by 1 for each successive offer.

A receiving node SHOULD fail the channel if it receives an amount-sat equal to zero, below its own htlc-minimum-msat, or which the sending node cannot afford at the current fee-rate while maintaining its channel reserve. A receiving node SHOULD fail the channel if a sending node adds more than its max-accepted-htlcs HTLCs to its local commitment transaction.

A receiving node MUST allow multiple HTLCs with the same payment hash.

A receiving node MUST ignore a repeated id value after a reconnection if it has the sender did not previously acknowledge the commitment of that HTLC. A receiving node MAY fail the channel if other id violations occur.

Rationale

Invalid amounts are a clear protocol violation and indicate a breakdown.

If a node did not accept multiple HTLCs with the same payment hash, an attacker could probe to see if a node had an existing HTLC. This requirement deal with duplicates leads us to using a separate identifier; we assume a 64 bit counter never wraps.

Retransmissions of unacknowledged updates are explicitly allowed for reconnection purposes; allowing them at other times simplifies the recipient code, though strict checking may help debugging.

Removing an HTLC: update_fulfill_htlc and update_fail_htlc

For simplicity, a node can only remove HTLCs added by the other node. There are three reasons for removing an HTLC: it has timed out, it has failed to route, or the payment preimage is supplied.

The reason field is an opaque encrypted blob for the benefit of the original HTLC initiator as defined in [BOLT #4].

  1. type: 130 (update_fulfill_htlc)
  2. data:
    • [8:channel-id]
    • [8:id]
    • [32:payment-preimage]

For a timed out or route-failed HTLC:

  1. type: 131 (update_fail_htlc)
  2. data:
    • [8:channel-id]
    • [8:id]
    • [154:reason]

Requirements

A node SHOULD remove an HTLC as soon as it can; in particular, a node SHOULD fail an HTLC which has timed out.

A receiving node MUST check that id corresponds to an HTLC in its current commitment transaction, and MUST fail the channel if it does not.

A receiving node MUST check that the payment-preimage value in update-fulfill_htlc SHA256 hashes to the corresponding HTLC payment-hash, and MUST fail the channel if it does not.

A receiving node which closes an incoming HTLC in response to an update-fail-htlc message on an offered HTLC MUST copy the reason field to the outgoing update-fail-htlc.

Rationale

A node which doesn't time out HTLCs it risks channel failure (see "Risks With HTLC Timeouts").

Committing Updates So Far: commitsig

When a node has changes for the remote commitment, it can apply them, sign the resulting transaction as defined in [BOLT #3] and send a commitsig message.

  1. type: 132 (commit_sig)
  2. data:
    • [8:channel-id]
    • [64:signature]
    • [4:num-htlcs]
    • [num-htlcs*64:htlc-signature]

Requirements

A node MUST NOT send a commitsig message which does not include any updates. Note that a node MAY send a commitsig message which only alters the fee, and MAY send a commitsig message which doesn't change the commitment transaction other than the new revocation hash (due to dust, identical HTLC replacement, or insignificant or multiple fee changes). A node MUST include one htlc-signature for every HTLC transaction corresponding to BIP69 lexicographic ordering of the commitment transaction.

A receiving node MUST fail the channel if signature is not valid for its local commitment transaction once all pending updates are applied. A receiving node MUST fail the channel if num-htlcs is not exactly the number of HTLC outputs in the local commitment transaction once all pending updates are applied. A receiving node MUST fail the channel if any htlc-signature is not valid for the corresponding HTLC transaction.

A receiving node MUST respond with a revoke_and_ack message.

Rationale

There's little point offering spam updates; it implies a bug.

The num-htlcs field is redundant, but makes the packet length check fully self-contained.

Completing the transition to the updated state: revoke_and_ack

Once the recipient of commitsig checks the signature, it knows that it has a valid new commitment transaction, replies with the commitment preimage for the previous commitment transaction in a revoke_and_ack message.

This message also implicitly serves as an acknowledgement of receipt of the commitsig, so it's a logical time for the commitsig sender to apply to its own commitment, any pending updates it sent before that commitsig.

This message also supplies the signatures for the sender's HTLC-timeout transactions. See BOLT #5 for how this is used with a penalty transaction.

The description of key derivation is in BOLT #3.

  1. type: 133 (revoke_and_ack)
  2. data:
    • [8:channel-id]
    • [32:per-commitment-secret]
    • [33:next-per-commitment-point]
    • [3:padding]
    • [4:num-htlc-timeouts]
    • [num-htlc-timeouts*64:htlc-timeout-signature]

Requirements

A sending node MUST set per-commitment-secret to the secret used to generate keys for the previous commitment transaction, MUST set next-per-commitment-point to the values for its next commitment transsaction, and MUST set padding to all zeroes.

A receiving node MUST check that per-commitment-secret generates the previous per-commitment-point, and MUST fail if it does not. A receiving node MUST ignore the value of padding. A receiving node MAY fail if the per-commitment-secret was not generated by the protocol in BOLT #3.

A receiving node MUST fail the channel if any htlc-timeout-signature is not valid, or if num-htlc-timeout is not equal to the number of outputs in the sending node's commitment transaction corresponding to HTLCs offered be the sending node.

Nodes MUST NOT broadcast old (revoked) commitment transactions; doing so will allow the other node to seize all the funds. Nodes SHOULD NOT sign commitment transactions unless it is about to broadcast them (due to a failed connection), to reduce this risk.

Authors

FIXME

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