Good morning Matt Bell,

Thinking of this further, I observe that there are limits on the number of 
operations in a SCRIPT (I believe 201 non-push operations, and maybe a smaller 
number of CHECKSIG operations?).
This implies that the number of signatories of the sidechain funds in the 
mainchain are limited.
This is an important care point.
I am uncertain what is the best way to solve this issue.


---

In any case, I now present a design for a proof-of-mainstake sidechain, now 
without any modifications to Bitcoin mainchain.

---

I observe that a blockchain is, stripped to its barest minimum, nothing more 
than a Merklized singly-linked list.
Each block header is a node in a singly-linked list.
It commits to the previous block header, and also commits to the block data 
(traditionally a Merkle binary tree).

Via such block headers, a chain of blocks --- a blockchain --- is formed.

---

I observe that a (non-coinbase) transaction in Bitcoin refers to at least one 
existing transaction output.
A representation of that transaction output must be committed to in the 
transaction.

If we create single-input single-output transactions, a chain of transactions 
is formed.

---

Thus the idea: the sidechain *is* the transaction chain.

I observe that the mainchain *must* contain some UTXO(s) that are purportedly 
controlled by the sidechain rules.

It is also possible that the sidechain funds be a single UTXO, with deposits 
and withdrawals requiring that the single UTXO be spent, in order to maintain 
the invariant that the sidechains funds are handled completely in a single UTXO.
In addition, it is possible for a transaction to commit to some data 
arbitrarily, either via `OP_RETURN`, or via some technique such as 
pay-to-contract (which reduces space utilization on the mainchain compared to 
`OP_RETURN`).

When we use the above technique (i.e. the sidechain only "owns" a single 
mainchain UTXO at each block of the mainchain):

1.  Each transaction commits to the previous transaction (via spending the 
output of the previous transaction).
2.  Each transaction may commit to some other data (via `OP_RETURN` or other 
technique).

I observe also that under a blockchain:

1.  Each block header commits to the previous block header.
2.  Each block header commits to the block data.

>From this, the analogy is simple and obvious.
The sidechain "blockchain" *is* the transaction chain.

---

Under certain forms of proof-of-stake, the block must be signed by some set of 
signatories of the stakers.
Under transaction rules, the transaction must be signed according to the 
SCRIPT, and the SCRIPT may indicate that some set of signatories must sign.

Thus, it becomes possible to simply embed the sidechain block headers on the 
mainchain directly, by spending the previous transaction (== sidechain block 
header).
This spend requires that the transaction be signed in order to authorize the 
spend.
However, these same signatures are in fact also the signatures that, under 
proof-of-stake, prove that a sufficient signatory set of the stakers has 
authorized a particular block of the proof-of-stake blockchain.

The magic here is that, on the mainchain, a transaction may only be spent once.
Thus, nothing-at-stake and stake-grinding problems disappear.

---

Now let us introduce some details.

We have two mainchain-to-sidechain requests:

1.  An indication that a mainchain coin owner wants to stake coins to the 
sidechain.
2.  An indication that a mainchain coin owner wants to transfer coins to the 
sidechain.

>From within the sidechain, sidechain-to-mainchain withdrawals must somehow be 
>signalled, but that is up to the sidechain to define.
We shall ignore it here.

When a sidechain receives a request to add stake, then the current stakers 
create a mainchain transaction, spending the sidechain UTXO, plus the  staked 
coins, and outputting the next sidechain UTXO (with the signatory set modified 
appropriately), plus a stake UTXO that locks the coins.
When a sidechain receives a request to transfer coins from mainchain to 
sidechain, then the current stakers create a mainchain transaction, spending 
the sidechain UTXO, plus the transferred coins, and outputting the next 
sidechain UTXO (with the same signatory set).

Multiple such requests can be processed for each transaction (i.e. sidechain 
block).
This simply consumes the sidechain UTXO, any stake or transfer coins, and 
creates the next sidechain UTXO and any stake UTXOs.

Now, the indication to stake is a UTXO with a special script.
It has two branches:

1.  A signature from the current signatory set.
2.  Or, 2 OP_CSV and the staker signature.

The intent of the latter branch is to ensure that, if the current signatories 
ignore the incoming staker, the incoming staker can still recover its funds.

If the current set of stakers accepts the incoming staker (which requires both 
that they change the signatory set, and put the money being staked into a stake 
UTXO which is simply a long CSV and the staker signature), then the first 
branch is performed and the coin is an input of the sidechain block header (== 
sidechain managing transaction).

A similar technique is used for mainchain-to-sidechain transfers.
If the mainchain-to-sidechain transfer is ignored (either deliberately, or by 
an accident of disrupted communication from the mainchain trasnferrer to the 
sidechain network), the mainchain transferrer can recover its money and try 
again.

---

Ideally, every mainchain block would have a sidechain managing transaction (== 
sidechain block header).
Of course, we must consider fees.
Obviously the sidechain itself must charge fees within the sidechain.
Some fraction of those fees will be spent in order for the sidechain managing 
transaction to be confirmed on the mainchain.

Now it may happen that the sidechain managing transaction is not confirmed 
immediately on the mainchain.
The sidechain stakers (the signatory set) may elect to sacrifice even more of 
their fees to increase the fees of the sidechain managing transaction via RBF.

---

Now perhaps the sidechain may wish to have a faster (or more regular) block 
rate than the mainchain.
In such a case, it may maintain a "real" blockchain (i.e. headers that commit 
to a single previous header, and commits the block data).
Then each sidechain managing transaction would commit to the latest sidechain 
block header agreed upon by the stakers.

These sidechain blocks need not be signed; they only become "real" if they are 
committed to, directly or indirectly, in a sidechain managing transaction.

At each sidechain block, the signatory set (the stakers) create a sidechain 
managing transaction.
If it is immediately put into a mainchain block, then the next sidechain 
managing transaction spends it.
Otherwise, if it is not put into a mainchain block, then the stakers just 
recreate the sidechain managing transaction with RBF.

Regards,
ZmnSCPxj
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