I am quite skeptical about any pay-to-increase proposal because it is difficult to predict the game dynamics and determine the right amount of penalty. But anyway, here is my response to your revised proposal:

1. I agree with you that there should be a cap in the rate of change, and also the maximum possible size. This is already part of BIP100

2. Requiring a higher difficulty is bad for everyone:
 a) it increases the variance of the miner;
b) average confirmation time for all tx are increased. It may even cause a feedback: many tx in mempool -> increase block size -> wait longer for confirmation -> more tx in mempool; c) difficulty of the next round will be decreased, leading to a greater fluctuation in confirmation time.

Instead, you should require miners to burn their coinbase reward. This is effectively same as higher difficulty but is good for everyone: a) mining variance and confirmation time unchanged; b) all bitcoin holders become relatively richer

If you don't want to burn any bitcoin, you may require the miner the send to penalty to <840000 + current height> OP_CHECKLOCKTIMEVERIFY, which will subsidize the mining when the block reward drops below 1 BTC

3. It is a better idea to allow mining of a bigger block immediately, which reduces (but not eliminates) the problem of tragedy of the commons. However, you can't use the blocksize as the vote. Mining an empty block doesn't mean the miner wants to decrease the block size to 200 bytes. That will just encourage some miners to fill up a block with garbage which does no good for anyone. Therefore, you need to look at both the actual block size and the coinbase vote, and always take the bigger value to determine the penalty and the max block size of next round. If a miner includes nothing in the coinbase, it should be consider as a vote for the current max block size.



Btc Drak via bitcoin-dev 於 2015-08-29 06:15 寫到:
On Sat, Aug 29, 2015 at 1:29 AM, Mark Friedenbach via bitcoin-dev
<bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:

Mark and Jorge,

I am very glad you have brought up this particular objection because
it's something I thought about but was unclear if it was an opinion
that would be shared by others. I chose to omit it from the proposal
to see if it would come up during peer review.

I feel that giving miners a blank cheque to increase blocksize, by any
means, goes against a key design of bitcoin's security model. Full
nodes keep miners honest by ensuring by validating their blocks. Under
any voting-only scheme there is no way for full nodes to keep miners
in cheque because miner have free reign to increase the blocksize.

This problem can be solved by introducing a hard cap on blocksize. By
introducing an upper limit miners now have the freedom to increase
blocksize but only within defined parameters.  Remember my proposal
allows blocksize to increase and decrease in such a way that miners
must collectively agree if they want the size to increase.

I believe the idea of a hard upper limit has become rather politicised
but is essential to the security model of bitcoin.

With respect to the flexicap idea where miners can create a larger
block by paying extra difficulty, I believe that proposal has a
critical flaw because, as Gavin pointed out, it makes it very
expensive (and risky) to include a few extra transactions. I believe
it suffers from tragedy of the commons because there is no incentive
for the mining community to reach consensus. Each and every block is
going to be a gamble, "should we include a few extra transactions at
the risk of losing the block?". Under my proposal miners can
collectively agree to change the blocksize. Let's say they want a 10%
increase, they can collude together to make that increase and once
reached, it remains until they want to change it again. Yet, the upper
hard limit keeps the ultimate control of the maximum block size
squarely in the hands of full nodes.

Whilst the exact number may be up for discussion, I would propose an
initial upper limit of 8MB, so under my proposal the blocksize would
be flexible between 1MB and 8MB.

An alternative methodology to voting in the coinbase would be to
change the vote to be the blocksize itself

1. miners pay extra difficulty to create a larger block.
2. every 2016 blocks the average or median of the last 2016 blocks is
calculated and becomes the new maximum blocksize limit.

This would retain incentive to collude to increase blocksize, as well
as the property of costing to increase while being free to propose
decrease.

It would still require an upper blocksize limit in order for full
nodes to retain control. Without an upper limit, any proposal is going
to break the security model as full nodes give up some oversight
control over miners.

Another way of looking at these ideas is we're raising blocksize hard
limit (to 8MB or whatever is decided), but making a soft of "softer"
or inner limit part of consensus. Such a concept is not really
departing from the current idea of a soft limit except to make it
consensus enforced. Obviously it's not identical, but I think you can
see the similarities.

Does that make sense?
_______________________________________________
bitcoin-dev mailing list
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev

_______________________________________________
bitcoin-dev mailing list
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev

Reply via email to