Revive: rebalancing off-blockchain payment networks.
OA Location
Author(s)
Khalil, Rami
Gervais, Arthur
Type
Conference Paper
Abstract
Scaling the transaction throughput of decentralized blockchain ledgers such as Bitcoin and Ethereum has been an ongoing challenge. Two-party duplex payment channels have been designed and used as building blocks to construct linked payment networks, which allow atomic and trust-free payments between parties without exhausting the resources of the blockchain.
Once a payment channel, however, is depleted (e.g., because transactions were mostly unidirectional) the channel would need to be closed and re-funded to allow for new transactions. Users are envisioned to entertain multiple payment channels with different entities, and as such, instead of refunding a channel (which incurs costly on-chain transactions), a user should be able to leverage his existing channels to rebalance a poorly funded channel.
To the best of our knowledge, we present the first solution that allows an arbitrary set of users in a payment channel network to securely rebalance their channels, according to the preferences of the channel owners. Except in the case of disputes (similar to conventional payment channels), our solution does not require on-chain transactions and therefore increases the scalability of existing blockchains. In our security analysis, we show that an honest participant cannot lose any of its funds while rebalancing. We finally provide a proof of concept implementation and evaluation for the Ethereum network.
Once a payment channel, however, is depleted (e.g., because transactions were mostly unidirectional) the channel would need to be closed and re-funded to allow for new transactions. Users are envisioned to entertain multiple payment channels with different entities, and as such, instead of refunding a channel (which incurs costly on-chain transactions), a user should be able to leverage his existing channels to rebalance a poorly funded channel.
To the best of our knowledge, we present the first solution that allows an arbitrary set of users in a payment channel network to securely rebalance their channels, according to the preferences of the channel owners. Except in the case of disputes (similar to conventional payment channels), our solution does not require on-chain transactions and therefore increases the scalability of existing blockchains. In our security analysis, we show that an honest participant cannot lose any of its funds while rebalancing. We finally provide a proof of concept implementation and evaluation for the Ethereum network.
Date Issued
2017-10-30
Date Acceptance
2017-10-30
Citation
IACR Cryptol. ePrint Arc, 2017, 2017, pp.823-823
Publisher
ACM
Start Page
823
End Page
823
Journal / Book Title
IACR Cryptol. ePrint Arc
Volume
2017
Copyright Statement
© 2017 Copyright held by the owner/author(s). Publication rights licensed to Association for Computing Machinery.
Identifier
https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/3133956.3134033
Source
CCS '17: Proceedings of the 2017 ACM SIGSAC Conference on Computer and Communications Security
Subjects
Science & Technology
Technology
Computer Science, Information Systems
Computer Science, Theory & Methods
Telecommunications
Computer Science
Blockchain
Payment channels
Off-chain
Ledger
Ethereum
Smart contracts
Start Date
2017-10-30
Finish Date
2017-11-01
Coverage Spatial
Dallas, TX, USA
Date Publish Online
2017-10-30