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lightning-bolts/00-introduction.md

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# BOLT #0: Introduction and Index
Welcome, friend! These Basis of Lightning Technology (BOLT) documents
describe a layer-2 protocol for off-chain bitcoin transfer by mutual
cooperation, relying on on-chain transactions for enforcement if
necessary.
Some requirements are subtle; we have tried to highlight motivations
and reasoning behind the results you see here. I'm sure we've fallen
short; if you find any part confusing or wrong, please contact us and
help us improve.
This is version 0.
1. [BOLT #1](01-messaging.md): Base Protocol
2. [BOLT #2](02-peer-protocol.md): Peer Protocol for Channel Management
3. [BOLT #3](03-transactions.md): Bitcoin Transaction and Script Formats
4. [BOLT #4](04-onion-routing.md): Onion Routing Protocol
5. [BOLT #5](05-onchain.md): Recommendations for On-chain Transaction Handling
7. [BOLT #7](07-routing-gossip.md): P2P Node and Channel Discovery
8. [BOLT #8](08-transport.md): Encrypted and Authenticated Transport
9. [BOLT #9](09-features.md): Assigned Feature Flags
10. [BOLT #10](10-dns-bootstrap.md): DNS Bootstrap and Assisted Node Location
11. [BOLT #11](11-payment-encoding.md): Invoice Protocol for Lightning Payments
## The Spark: A Short Introduction to Lightning
Lightning is a protocol for making fast payments with Bitcoin using a
network of channels.
### Channels
Lightning works by establishing *channels*: two participants create a
Lightning payment channel that contains some amount of bitcoin (e.g.,
0.1 bitcoin) that they've locked up on the Bitcoin network. It is
spendable only with both their signatures.
Initially they each hold a bitcoin transaction that sends all the
bitcoin (e.g. 0.1 bitcoin) back to one party. They can later sign a new bitcoin
transaction that splits these funds differently, e.g. 0.09 bitcoin to one
party, 0.01 bitcoin to the other, and invalidate the previous bitcoin
transaction so it won't be spent.
See [BOLT #2: Channel Establishment](02-peer-protocol.md#channel-establishment) for more on
channel establishment and [BOLT #3: Funding Transaction Output](03-transactions.md#funding-transaction-output) for the format of the bitcoin transaction that creates the channel. See [BOLT #5: Recommendations for On-chain Transaction Handling](05-onchain.md) for the requirements when participants disagree or fail, and the cross-signed bitcoin transaction must be spent.
### Conditional Payments
A Lightning channel only allows payment between two participants, but channels can be connected together to form a network that allows payments between all members of the network. This requires the technology of a conditional payment, which can be added to a channel,
e.g. "you get 0.01 bitcoin if you reveal the secret within 6 hours".
Once the recipient presents the secret, that bitcoin transaction is
replaced with one lacking the conditional payment and adding the funds
to that recipient's output.
See [BOLT #2: Adding an HTLC](02-peer-protocol.md#adding-an-htlc-update_add_htlc) for the commands a participant uses to add a conditional payment, and [BOLT #3: Commitment Transaction](03-transactions.md#commitment-transaction) for the
complete format of the bitcoin transaction.
### Forwarding
Such a conditional payment can be safely forwarded to another
participant with a lower time limit, e.g. "you get 0.01 bitcoin if you reveal the secret
within 5 hours". This allows channels to be chained into a network
without trusting the intermediaries.
See [BOLT #2: Forwarding HTLCs](02-peer-protocol.md#forwarding-htlcs) for details on forwarding payments, [BOLT #4: Packet Structure](04-onion-routing.md#packet-structure) for how payment instructions are transported.
### Network Topology
To make a payment, a participant needs to know what channels it can
send through. Participants tell each other about channel and node
creation, and updates.
See [BOLT #7: P2P Node and Channel Discovery](07-routing-gossip.md)
for details on the communication protocol, and [BOLT #10: DNS
Bootstrap and Assisted Node Location](10-dns-bootstrap.md) for initial
network bootstrap.
### Payment Invoicing
A participant receives invoices that tell her what payments to make.
See [BOLT #11: Invoice Protocol for Lightning Payments](11-payment-encoding.md) for the protocol describing the destination and purpose of a payment such that the payer can later prove successful payment.
## Glossary and Terminology Guide
* *Announcement*:
* A gossip message sent between *peers* intended to aid the discovery of a *channel* or a *node*.
* `chain_hash`:
* The uniquely identifying hash of the target blockchain (usually the genesis hash).
This allows *nodes* to create and reference *channels* on
several blockchains. Nodes are to ignore any messages that reference a
`chain_hash` that are unknown to them. Unlike `bitcoin-cli`, the hash is
not reversed but is used directly.
For the main chain Bitcoin blockchain, the `chain_hash` value MUST be
(encoded in hex):
`6fe28c0ab6f1b372c1a6a246ae63f74f931e8365e15a089c68d6190000000000`.
* *Channel*:
* A fast, off-chain method of mutual exchange between two *peers*.
To transact funds, peers exchange signatures to create an updated *commitment transaction*.
* _See closure methods: mutual close, revoked transaction close, unilateral close_
* _See related: route_
* *Closing transaction*:
* A transaction generated as part of a _mutual close_. A closing transaction is similar to a _commitment transaction_, but with no pending payments.
* _See related: commitment transaction, funding transaction, penalty transaction_
* *Commitment number*:
* A 48-bit incrementing counter for each *commitment transaction*; counters
are independent for each *peer* in the *channel* and start at 0.
* _See container: commitment transaction_
* _See related: closing transaction, funding transaction, penalty transaction_
* *Commitment revocation private key*:
* Every *commitment transaction* has a unique commitment revocation private-key
value that allows the other *peer* to spend all outputs
immediately: revealing this key is how old commitment
transactions are revoked. To support revocation, each output of the
commitment transaction refers to the commitment revocation public key.
* _See container: commitment transaction_
* _See originator: per-commitment secret_
* *Commitment transaction*:
* A transaction that spends the *funding transaction*.
Each *peer* holds the other peer's signature for this transaction, so that each
always has a commitment transaction that it can spend. After a new
commitment transaction is negotiated, the old one is *revoked*.
* _See parts: commitment number, commitment revocation private key, HTLC, per-commitment secret_
* _See related: closing transaction, funding transaction, penalty transaction_
* _See types: revoked commitment transaction_
* *Final node*:
* The final recipient of a packet that is routing a payment from an _origin node_ through some number of _hops_. It is also the final *receiving peer* in a chain.
* _See category: node_
* _See related: origin node, processing node_
* *Funding transaction*:
* An irreversible on-chain transaction that pays to both *peers* on a *channel*.
It can only be spent by mutual consent.
* _See related: closing transaction, commitment transaction, penalty transaction_
* *Hop*:
* A *node*. Generally, an intermediate node lying between an *origin node* and a *final node*.
* _See category: node_
* *HTLC*: Hashed Time Locked Contract.
* A conditional payment between two *peers*: the recipient can spend
the payment by presenting its signature and a *payment preimage*,
otherwise the payer can cancel the contract by spending it after
a given time. These are implemented as outputs from the
*commitment transaction*.
* _See container: commitment transaction_
* _See parts: Payment hash, Payment preimage_
* *Invoice*: A request for funds on the Lightning Network, possibly
including payment type, payment amount, expiry, and other
information. This is how payments are made on the Lightning
Network, rather than using Bitcoin-style addresses.
* *It's ok to be odd*:
* A rule applied to some numeric fields that indicates either optional or
compulsory support for features. Even numbers indicate that both endpoints
MUST support the feature in question, while odd numbers indicate
that the feature MAY be disregarded by the other endpoint.
* *MSAT*:
* A millisatoshi, often used as a field name.
* *Mutual close*:
* A cooperative close of a *channel*, accomplished by broadcasting an unconditional
spend of the *funding transaction* with an output to each *peer*
(unless one output is too small, and thus is not included).
* _See related: revoked transaction close, unilateral close_
* *Node*:
* A computer or other device that is part of the Lightning network.
* _See related: peers_
* _See types: final node, hop, origin node, processing node, receiving node, sending node_
* *Origin node*:
* The _node_ that originates a packet that will route a payment through some number of _hops_ to a _final node_. It is also the first _sending peer_ in a chain.
* _See category: node_
* _See related: final node, processing node_
* *Payment hash*:
* The *HTLC* contains the payment hash, which is the hash of the
*payment preimage*.
* _See container: HTLC_
* _See originator: payment preimage_
* *Payment preimage*:
* Proof that payment has been received, held by
the final recipient, who is the only person who knows this
secret. The final recipient releases the preimage in order to
release funds. The payment preimage is hashed as the *payment hash*
in the *HTLC*.
* _See container: HTLC_
* _See derivation: payment hash_
* *Peers*:
* Two *nodes* that are in communication with each other.
* Two peers may gossip with each other prior to setting up a channel.
* Two peers may establish a *channel* through which they transact.
* _See related: node_
* *Penalty transaction*:
* A transaction that spends all outputs of a *revoked commitment
transaction*, using the *commitment revocation private key*. A *peer* uses this
if the other peer tries to "cheat" by broadcasting a *revoked
commitment transaction*.
* _See related: closing transaction, commitment transaction, funding transaction_
* *Per-commitment secret*:
* Every *commitment transaction* derives its keys from a per-commitment secret,
which is generated such that the series of per-commitment secrets
for all previous commitments can be stored compactly.
* _See container: commitment transaction_
* _See derivation: commitment revocation private key_
* *Processing node*:
* A *node* that is processing a packet that originated with an *origin node* and that is being sent toward a *final node* in order to route a payment. It acts as a _receiving peer_ to receive the message, then a _sending peer_ to send on the packet.
* _See category: node_
* _See related: final node, origin node_
* *Receiving node*:
* A *node* that is receiving a message.
* _See category: node_
* _See related: sending node_
* *Receiving peer*:
* A *node* that is receiving a message from a directly connected *peer*.
* _See category: peer_
* _See related: sending peer_
* *Revoked commitment transaction*:
* An old *commitment transaction* that has been revoked because a new commitment transaction has been negotiated.
* _See category: commitment transaction_
* *Revoked transaction close*:
* An invalid close of a *channel*, accomplished by broadcasting a *revoked
commitment transaction*. Since the other *peer* knows the
*commitment revocation secret key*, it can create a *penalty transaction*.
* _See related: mutual close, unilateral close_
* *Route*: A path across the Lightning Network that enables a payment
from an *origin node* to a *final node* across one or more
*hops*.
* _See related: channel_
* *Sending node*:
* A *node* that is sending a message.
* _See category: node_
* _See related: receiving node_
* *Sending peer*:
* A *node* that is sending a message to a directly connected *peer*.
* _See category: peer_
* _See related: receiving peer_.
* *Unilateral close*:
* An uncooperative close of a *channel*, accomplished by broadcasting a
*commitment transaction*. This transaction is larger (i.e. less
efficient) than a *mutual close transaction*, and the *peer* whose
commitment is broadcast cannot access its own outputs for some
previously-negotiated duration.
* _See related: mutual close, revoked transaction close_
## Theme Song
Why this network could be democratic...
Numismatic...
Cryptographic!
Why it could be released Lightning!
(Release Lightning!)
We'll have some timelocked contracts with hashed pubkeys, oh yeah.
(Keep talking, whoa keep talkin')
We'll segregate the witness for trustless starts, oh yeah.
(I'll get the money, I've got to get the money)
With dynamic onion routes, they'll be shakin' in their boots;
You know that's just the truth, we'll be scaling through the roof.
Release Lightning!
(Go, go, go, go; go, go, go, go, go, go)
[Chorus:]
Oh released Lightning, it's better than a debit card..
(Release Lightning, go release Lightning!)
With released Lightning, micropayments just ain't hard...
(Release Lightning, go release Lightning!)
Then kaboom: we'll hit the moon -- release Lightning!
(Go, go, go, go; go, go, go, go, go, go)
We'll have QR codes, and smartphone apps, oh yeah.
(Ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo)
P2P messaging, and passive incomes, oh yeah.
(Ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo)
Outsourced closure watch, gives me feelings in my crotch.
You'll know it's not a brag when the repo gets a tag:
Released Lightning.
[Chorus]
[Instrumental, ~1m10s]
[Chorus]
(Lightning! Lightning! Lightning! Lightning!
Lightning! Lightning! Lightning! Lightning!)
C'mon guys, let's get to work!
-- Anthony Towns <aj@erisian.com.au>
## Authors
[ FIXME: Insert Author List ]
![Creative Commons License](https://i.creativecommons.org/l/by/4.0/88x31.png "License CC-BY")
<br>
This work is licensed under a [Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License](http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).