> On Feb 22, 2021, at 05:16, Anthony Towns wrote: > > If a lockinontimeout=true node is requesting compact blocks from a > lockinontimeout=false node during a chainsplit in the MUST_SIGNAL phase, > I think that could result in a ban. > >> More importantly, nodes on both sides of the fork need to find each other. > > (If there was going to be an ongoing fork there'd be bigger things to > worry about...) I think it should be clear that a UASF-style command line option to allow consensus rule changes in the node in the short term, immediately before a fork carries some risk of a fork, even if I agree it may not persist over months. We can’t simply ignore that. > I think the important specific case of this is something like "if a chain > where taproot is impossible to activate is temporarily the most work, > miners with lockinontimeout=true need to be well connected so they don't > end up competing with each other while they're catching back up". Between this and your above point, I think we probably agree - there is material technical complexity hiding behind a “change the consensus rules“ option. Given it’s not a critical feature by any means, putting resources into fixing these issues probably isn’t worth it. Matt