From: pithosian <pithosian@i2pmail•org>
To: bitcoindev@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [bitcoindev] Unbreaking testnet4
Date: Mon, 28 Apr 2025 11:48:58 +0000 (UTC) [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20250428114858.46B477C1126@smtp.postman.i2p> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20250428110655.D4A1C7C0AE9@smtp.postman.i2p>
On Sun, 27 Apr 2025 22:54:54 +0000 (UTC)
Jameson Lopp <jameson.lopp@gmail•com> wrote:
> I'd suggest simply disabling the halving logic and making it a
> perpetual 50 TBTC issuance. At that rate, it would still take ~8
> years or so to surpass the 21M limit and I'd think that testnets
> should be reset more frequently than that.
On Mon, 28 Apr 2025 11:06:55 +0000 (UTC)
Jameson Lopp <jameson.lopp@gmail•com> wrote:
> Encoding an "end of life date" into testnets is actually an
> interesting idea worth discussing. As far as I'm aware it's never
> been done before on any network.
What about having the halving act as a reset? Eg: don't reduce the
mining reward AND disallow spends of UTXOs from before the last halving.
> On Mon, Apr 28, 2025 at 2:11 AM Saint Wenhao <saintwenhao@gmail•com>
> wrote:
>
> > > Demurrage might be asking a bit much in terms of deviation.
> >
> > If that's the case, then why signing all blocks in signet is not
> > "too much"?
> >
>
> Because signet isn't testnet? It gives up permissionless block
> creation in return for predictability.
>
>
> > Or why unlimited supply is not "too much"?
> >
>
> It might be, but it might not be, given that the point of testnet is
> for coins to be free for developers to acquire and use without fear of
> financial loss. Thus scarcity isn't really an inviolable property of
> testnet.
>
>
> > All of these changes were put in the same basket of "Require
> > unanimous consent", so why one kind of change is better or worse
> > than the others? All of them deviates from the mainnet, and we
> > probably wouldn't want anything like that on the original chain
> > anyway.
> >
> > > I'd think that testnets should be reset more frequently than that.
> >
> > Then why don't we put any kind of reset logic into testnet5
> > consensus rules? Because when nothing like that is present, then
> > testnets can potentially run forever. Testnet3 is becoming an
> > altcoin, and new testnets will also be, if no significant changes
> > will be made. Signet is not traded yet, mainly because of
> > centralized mining, but there already are centralized altcoin
> > federations, so it may change in the future.
> >
> >
> Encoding an "end of life date" into testnets is actually an
> interesting idea worth discussing. As far as I'm aware it's never
> been done before on any network.
>
> And again, the word "reset" should be replaced by "abandon", unless
> you
> > really want to reorganize the whole old chain of some existing
> > testnet, by producing a stronger alternative chain in testnet5,
> > which would replace the old network in a backward-compatible way,
> > by mining everything on top of the same Genesis Block, and
> > eventually producing a bigger chainwork.
> >
> > pon., 28 kwi 2025 o 00:50 Jameson Lopp <jameson.lopp@gmail•com>
> > napisał(a):
> >
> >>
> >>
> >> On Sun, Apr 27, 2025 at 12:47 PM Saint Wenhao
> >> <saintwenhao@gmail•com> wrote:
> >>
> >>> What about introducing demurrage in testnet5 consensus rules?
> >>>
> >> In general it seems desirable for a testnet to be as close as
> >> possible to mainnet's rules. Demurrage might be asking a bit much
> >> in terms of deviation.
> >>
> >> I'd suggest simply disabling the halving logic and making it a
> >> perpetual 50 TBTC issuance. At that rate, it would still take ~8
> >> years or so to surpass the 21M limit and I'd think that testnets
> >> should be reset more frequently than that.
> >>
> >>>
> >>> Testnet coins were supposed to be worthless. But it failed in both
> >>> testnet3 and testnet4. In the meanwhile, signet was introduced,
> >>> to make a more stable test network. However, signing blocks was
> >>> listed on wiki page https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Prohibited_changes
> >>> as something, that "Require unanimous consent". And, as the
> >>> history can tell us, people still wanted to test mining anyway,
> >>> which is why testnet3 and testnet4 have much more chainwork than
> >>> signet (and when it comes to signet, sending signed-but-unmined
> >>> blocks to the miners was never implemented, so they had no chance
> >>> to provide more hashing power).
> >>>
> >>> Another kind of change on the list, that would require consent,
> >>> was increasing the total number of coins beyond 21 million. But
> >>> then, testing supply limits would be harder, and it could cause
> >>> integer overflows in some cases. But: in all test networks,
> >>> including testnet3, testnet4, and signet, there was never a
> >>> problem of "not enough coins for miners", so that change probably
> >>> wouldn't solve any problems (and seeing it in action would take
> >>> years anyway; testnet4 is still far from the first halving, and
> >>> it is traded anyway, so that change won't fix it).
> >>>
> >>> Then, we have the third option, which was not yet tried in test
> >>> networks: demurrage. There are two main options: burning coins, or
> >>> re-assigning them to someone else. To make a soft-fork out of it,
> >>> re-assigning would be backward-incompatible, so it is probably
> >>> easier to just implement burning, and just treat all coins older
> >>> than N blocks in the same way, as OP_RETURN, by simply
> >>> invalidating transactions spending them on consensus level.
> >>>
> >>> Also, when it comes to maintaining testnet nodes, if it would be
> >>> possible to automatically remove things from the UTXO set, then
> >>> it would make Initial Blockchain Download easier, just because
> >>> new nodes wouldn't need to synchronize everything, if old coins
> >>> would be automatically invalidated. In practice, all nodes could
> >>> be just running in pruned mode all the time, and everything
> >>> beyond the pruning point, could be simply ignored on consensus
> >>> level (which would also prevent the UTXO set from exploding). And
> >>> then, if we would keep for example the last 2,016 blocks, then
> >>> the whole chain would never take more than 2016 * 4 MB = 8.064 GB
> >>> of storage, and that's all we would need to send during Initial
> >>> Blockchain Download to other nodes.
> >>>
> >>> poniedziałek, 31 marca 2025 o 22:50:27 UTC+2 Antoine Poinsot
> >>> napisał(a):
> >>>
> >>>> Good point on not having the flag day on a holiday. One or two
> >>>> weeks sounds good to me.
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> On Monday, March 24th, 2025 at 8:25 AM, Murch <mu...@murch•one>
> >>>> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> >
> >>>> >
> >>>> > Errr, I wrote the same date as you, but I meant a week later,
> >>>> 2026-01-08
> >>>> > instead.
> >>>> >
> >>>> > -Murch
> >>>> >
> >>>> > On 2025-03-21 14:20, Murch wrote:
> >>>> >
> >>>> > > Hey Antoine and everyone,
> >>>> > >
> >>>> > > What you suggest makes sense to me. Since the 20-minute
> >>>> > > difficulty exception is now exploited perpetually, it
> >>>> > > doesn’t serve its
> >>>> intended
> >>>> > > purpose of allowing developers to mine themselves a few coins
> >>>> easily or
> >>>> > > confirm their own non-standard transactions. In that case,
> >>>> > > it would
> >>>> be
> >>>> > > better to not have it at all.
> >>>> > >
> >>>> > > On 2025-03-18 07:29, 'Antoine Poinsot' via Bitcoin
> >>>> > > Development
> >>>> Mailing
> >>>> > > List wrote:
> >>>> > >
> >>>> > > > I propose to fix this by removing the difficulty reset
> >>>> > > > rule from testnet4 through a flag day hard fork on
> >>>> > > > 2026-01-01.
> >>>> > >
> >>>> > > I would suggest to pick a date that’s not a holiday in many
> >>>> > > places
> >>>> to
> >>>> > > avoid disrupting people’s holiday, how about 2026-01-01
> >>>> > > instead?
> >>>> > >
> >>>> > > Cheers,
> >>>> > > Murch
> >>>> >
> >>>> >
> >>>> > --
> >>>> > You received this message because you are subscribed to the
> >>>> > Google
> >>>> Groups "Bitcoin Development Mailing List" group.
> >>>> > To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from
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> >>>> send an email to bitcoindev+...@googlegroups•com.
> >>>> > To view this discussion visit
> >>>> https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/bitcoindev/7c6800f0-7b77-4aca-a4f9-2506a2410b29%40murch.one.
> >>>>
> >>>>
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> >>> .
> >>>
> >>
>
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prev parent reply other threads:[~2025-04-29 14:15 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 24+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2025-03-18 14:29 'Antoine Poinsot' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2025-03-18 21:34 ` Melvin Carvalho
2025-03-19 7:01 ` [bitcoindev] " Garlo Nicon
2025-03-19 7:56 ` [bitcoindev] " Sjors Provoost
2025-03-19 8:43 ` Garlo Nicon
2025-03-19 8:32 ` Sjors Provoost
2025-03-19 9:11 ` Melvin Carvalho
2025-03-19 17:03 ` bitcoin-dev-ml.void867 via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2025-03-20 18:58 ` Melvin Carvalho
2025-03-21 21:20 ` Murch
2025-03-24 7:00 ` Garlo Nicon
2025-03-31 7:32 ` Saint Wenhao
2025-03-24 12:25 ` Murch
2025-03-24 13:57 ` 'Antoine Poinsot' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2025-04-27 11:44 ` Saint Wenhao
2025-04-27 22:49 ` Jameson Lopp
2025-04-28 6:11 ` Saint Wenhao
2025-04-28 10:45 ` Jameson Lopp
2025-04-28 11:59 ` 'emsit' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2025-04-28 12:47 ` Sjors Provoost
2025-04-28 13:33 ` Saint Wenhao
2025-04-28 18:15 ` Saint Wenhao
2025-04-28 18:50 ` Sjors Provoost
[not found] ` <20250428110655.D4A1C7C0AE9@smtp.postman.i2p>
2025-04-28 11:48 ` pithosian [this message]
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