I have a proposal: Protocol >= 70016 cease to send or process VERACK, and instead use HANDSHAKEACK, which is completed after feature negotiation. This should make everyone happy/unhappy, as in a new protocol number it's fair game to change these semantics to be clear that we're acking more than version. I don't care about when or where these messages are sequenced overall, it seems to have minimal impact. If I had free choice, I slightly agree with Eric that verack should come before feature negotiation, as we want to divorce the idea that protocol number and feature support are tied. But once this is done, we can supplant Verack with HANDSHAKENACK or HANDSHAKEACK to signal success or failure to agree on a connection. A NACK reason (version too high/low or an important feature missing) could be optional. Implicit NACK would be disconnecting, but is discouraged because a peer doesn't know if it should reconnect or the failure was intentional. ------ AJ: I think I generally do prefer to have a FEATURE wrapper as you suggested, or a rule that all messages in this period are interpreted as features (and may be redundant with p2p message types -- so you can literally just use the p2p message name w/o any data). I think we would want a semantic (which could be based just on message names, but first-class support would be nice) for ACKing that a feature is enabled. This is because a transcript of: NODE0: FEATURE A FEATURE B VERACK NODE1: FEATURE A VERACK It remains unclear if Node 1 ignored B because it's an unknown feature, or because it is disabled. A transcript like: NODE0: FEATURE A FEATURE B FEATURE C ACK A VERACK NODE1: FEATURE A ACK A NACK B VERACK would make it clear that A and B are known, B is disabled, and C is unknown. C has 0 support, B Node 0 should support inbound messages but knows not to send to Node 1, and A has full bilateral support. Maybe instead it could a message FEATURE SEND A and FEATURE RECV A, so we can make the split explicit rather than inferred from ACK/NACK. ------ I'd also propose that we add a message which is SYNC, which indicates the end of a list of FEATURES and a request to send ACKS or NACKS back (which are followed by a SYNC). This allows multi-round negotiation where based on the presence of other features, I may expand the set of features I am offering. I think you could do without SYNC, but there are more edge cases and the explicitness is nice given that this already introduces future complexity. This multi-round makes it an actual negotiation rather than a pure announcement system. I don't think it would be used much in the near term, but it makes sense to define it correctly now. Build for the future and all... -- @JeremyRubin