chatochi_notes/lightning_node_management.md
2022-01-23 19:03:41 +01:00

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# Lightning Node Management
My umbrel node is almost in sync with the blockchain so soon I will be able to
put my new lightning node into use. These past days I have been consuming a lot
of material on how to prepare the lightning node, with the idea in mind of
making a successful routing node.
These are the topics that I have in mind:
- UPS for uptime
- Channel opening strategy
- Channel rebalancing strategy
- Pricing strategy
## UPS for uptime
I have learnt through different sources that it is important to have a "good
reputation" in order to have more chances of peers connecting to my node. Now,
reputation is rather fuzzy, and varies from simply people observing your node
on 1ML or similar pages, to a variety of rankings and scores such as BOS,
Lightning Terminal Tiers, 1ML node rank, etc.
One of the components of most of these scores, and more fundamentally, a strong
signal of node quality, is uptime. Plain and simple, never go down, and if you
do, don't spend much time down.
In order to ensure that my node does a good job in terms of availability, I
have been studying the possiblity of using a UPS. In general terms, an outage
is the only relevant (as in both probable and impactful) event that could put
my node down.
I have been reading up a bit on UPS. By design, they are designed to only
provide a few minutes of availability to securely put services down in the
machine that is going to go dry. But since both Banky and my router are super
low consumption devices, I'm actually hoping that a decent UPS could provide a
handful of hours of activity if needed. Notice I'm also including the router in
the equation because, obviously, if the internet connection goes down, keeping
Banky on is not enough.
So I need to:
- Decide what UPS I should get. The main points here are:
- Price
- Battery capacity
- That it has two sockets.
- Confirm that, in the event of a house-level power outage, the router still
keeps connecting to WAN as long as it has electricity. It would also be good
to check with a building/street level outage, but I think simulating that
goes beyond my current capacities.
- Measure empirically how long does the setup last until the node disconnects.
---
After a couple of conversations with people that roughly knew what they were
talking about, I have concluded that indeed, a decent UPS should be able to
keep banky + the home router up and running for more than an hour. Calculting
the specifics is pretty irrelevant, since there are a lot of real world factors
that will change results and it's not all that important.
I'll simply buy a nice one from pccomponentes and that's it.
## Channel Opening Strategy
Once I get funds in my lightning node, I need to start opening channels. As I
do it, they will all be unbalanced, with all the funds sitting in the local
side. I'll have to compensate for that since I don't expect anyone opening
towards me initially (I'm not gonna showcase myself all over the place to get
people's attention). But I'll discuss that in another section.
So, I need to open channels to people. The key questions are:
- With who?
- How many sats to put into each channel?
Regarding channel size: generally, the larger, the better. It helps reduce the
impact of onchain fees, offers more opportunities for keeping things balanced
and also enables larger transactions to go through. The downside of making one
channel large is the opportunity cost of having a few smaller channels, which
increase the variety of nodes.
From what I've been reading, anything smaller than 1M sats gives yields more
trouble than benefit. So I will keep that as a minimum size for the channels I
open. Question is, how big should the bigger channels be?
I'm copying a table from the statistics page in 1ML, on 13/01/22:
| Percentile | Capacity in Satoshis |
| --- |----------------------|
| 1 | __.__2.000 |
| 5 | __._24.900 |
| 25 | __.200.000 |
| 50 | _1.000.000 |
| 75 | _3.000.000 |
| 95 | 14.995.600 |
| 99 | 50.000.000 |
So, it's clear that going above 0.1 BTC is a pretty rare exercise. I'm planning
on allocating 0.2 BTC in total during my first experiments, so I think I will
distribute them in the following way:
| How many channels | Capacity per channel |
|-------------------|----------------------|
| 1 | 5.000.000 |
| 3 | 2.500.000 |
| 7 | 1.000.000 |
| 11 | 19.500.000 |
The missing half-million will be used as petty cash for fees.
The next question is: who to connect to?
Intuitively, the goal of any routing node intending to place itself in the
network should be to find a place in the graph that's poorly connected but has
a big demand for moving funds. Since reading the future is impossible, and
there is no history of transactions available for anyone to make forecasts on,
it's impossible to assess the demand.
Thus, the only thing one can try is to put itself between different nodes that
are relevant in terms of traffic, but are not properly connected. This means
that simply connecting to the largest nodes won't work, because they are
already very well connected between themselves. I think that, instead, I should
try to connect to both some of the large nodes, but also to a few smaller ones.
Given the channel capacity strategy that I present above, it naturally follows
that to have a few, large channels for large nodes and many, smaller channels
for smaller nodes.
Ok, this is as far as my intuition goes. Now I'm going to do a bit of research
to try to find out if there are any other factors I'm missing in my thinking.
----
I came
across [this brilliant post by Jameson Lopp](https://blog.lopp.net/lightning-network-liquidity-management-guide/)
. Awesome stuff, as it tends to be when he writes it. In it, it gives a
thorough explanation of his own experience trying to run a routing lightning
node. There is plenty of knowledge to get from it, but the main points I'm
keeping in mind for now are:
- Avoid channels smaller than 1M sats completely. If possible, do larger than
10M sats.
- The rebalance tool by carsten otto works nicely, but only if you don't also
have an automatic fee setter (or if you do, just make sure that rebalancing
and fee setting happen not so frequently and with time between both).
- The swaps on [lightningnetwork.plus](https://lightningnetwork.plus) are a
good idea and not some random internet scam, so I should look into how to use
that.
A few links to interesting stuff that I got from Lopp's post:
- [An article by Alex Bosworth](https://github.com/alexbosworth/run-lnd/blob/master/LIQUIDITY.md)
, with the usual thoughts. One new idea I had not seen anywhere though: using
my own node to make payments on the lightning network is a great way to
rebalance channels that need inbound liquidity.
- [Node match tool](https://moneni.com/nodematch) to find nodes that increase
connectivity of another node (mine, basically).
- [Lightning Terminal page](https://terminal.lightning.engineering/#/) to get
scores on any node. Good for judging candidates for channel opening.
- [Lightning conductor](https://lightningconductor.net/receipt), which offers
liquidity services including a pretty convenient services to open an incoming
channel with an on-chain transaction.
## First night...
I'm writing this as I wait for some channels to open successfully. Finally,
today was the day I started my routing node!
As planned, I moved 0.2 BTC from cold storage to the umbrel wallet. I looked
for a pretty looking node and opened a channel with them and, voila, it worked!
I opened another, smaller one with another smaller node, but Thunderhub didn't
let me. I learned that Thunderhub only allows you to have one pending channel
opening at a time. So I had to wait a bit to create a second one.
Once I successfully opened those two channels, I headed to
lightningnetwork.plus and joined a triangle. It was almost by accident. I was
checking the triangle swap page when I hit the application button and, boom, it
was closed. The page was giving me some instructions on how to proceed and I
kind of just followed through without much thinking. It felt like heaven when I
saw my incoming partner channel opening towards me. This swaps thingy is great!
The only issue I see is that my partners quality is pretty low. One of them is
pretty old, but has almost no capacity. The other one is super new, but is
growing pretty fast. Oh well, I guess it's better than nothing!
I have realised that the fancier swaps are restricted by channel number and
total capacity, so it seems that I should try to step up my game slowly, always
trying to get the best possible partners and then letting my fresh open
channels mature a bit so that I earn some street creed that allows me to get
into more exclusive swaps.
I can already tell it's gonna be quite a few nights of little sleep...
## Plebnet tribe
Plebnet this, plebnet that... I kept reading about the plebs everywhere.
Apparently it's just this bunch of people gathering in telegram to open
channels and help each other out. Old school forum style, like in the P2P
piracy times.
Today I stumbled upon the [plebnet wiki](https://plebnet.wiki/wiki/Main_Page)
and I found quite a few useful things. When reading this and similar resources,
I'm realising that there's a lot of people doing exactly the same discovery
path I am going through with the lightning network. It's very exciting to see
this happening. Will it blow up exponentially? I keep on dreaming awake with
that idea.
Anyways, for the cool stuff:
- I read their hardening page. It seems pretty standard linux security, so I
don't feel I need to take any extra steps in this topic.
- [A small guide](https://plebnet.wiki/wiki/Upgrading_Umbrel_Node) on how to
upgrade umbrel. It seems umbrel is a rather popular choice.
## The self-routing trick...
I was reading a post on the lightningnetwork subreddit when I spotted a
brilliant idea. Like all routing nodes wannabe, I will be having troubles
pretty often with getting remote balance. The only chances to get some are
swaps (which only provides at the beginning), services like LOOP (which come
with a hefty fee) and natural flow of payments (which will only happen with a
lot of time, effort and capital).
And there comes this guy and says: "you can also get remote balance by spending
your money". Brilliant! It's completely true. If I ever need to pay for
something through the Lightning Network, I can just do it through the node and
afterwards refill it through the main chain with new btc. Since I can do my
grocery shopping with bitrefill, that means I have like 300.000sats of weekly
rebalancing power.
So things would go this way:
1. Buy a 100€ grocery voucher through bitrefill. Pay the invoice through an
unbalanced channel of my node. Now I owe Counterweight LTD 100€.
2. Go grocery shopping with that, cause I need to eat.
3. When I owe Counterweight LTD a reasonable amount, like 500€, get some BTC
with my own money and send it to Counterweight LTD wallet.
4. Done! No debts outstanding and the channels have been rebalanced.
It's just great. Basically, I'm playing LOOP's role with myself, so I get the
same benefit without having to pay their huge fees. Plus, I do my groceries
with btc. How badass is that?
There's a bit of fee paying involved, but it's orders of magnitude inferior to
what I would incurr with the other methods to get liquidity, so not much of a
problem.
I just need to be tidy with keeping track of the balances and that should be
it.
## The funny guy
Quite a random, but fun story. I was checking my node's lightning transactions
when I saw a 10sat one. I was confused at first, and my first thought is
somebody, somehow, for some reason, had charged me a fee (in the lightning
world, it feels like every breath comes with a fee).
But reading more carefully, I realised it was an _incoming_ transactions. Who
the hell sent me 10 sats just because? And then I checked the message field and
it said "Check out my node, Baystar!", together with a public key. Lovely,
this guy is just sending random spam messages to people to get some attention.
The lightning network keeps on feeling like the wild wild west, where funny
things just happen out of the blue.
## A professional knows its price
As I am beginning and trying things out, I haven't paid much attention to the
fees in my channels. I have set all the base fees to 0, following the movement
to support Pickhardt payments, and I have set my fee rates 20ppm, which I have
identified as being relatively low, so that I can check how much flows through
my node.
But at some point, I will want to get more serious about fee management.
Specially, taking into account the impact on balancing. Overall, balanced
channels are desirable since they give more paths to the network, and thus make
the node more capable of routing in different directions. At the entire node
level, it's also important to have a general balance between local and remote,
because that limits the total capacity of the node (i.e. if you have 10M sats
of outbound capacity, but no inbound capacity at all, you can't route anything.
The other way around holds true as well.).
To achieve this, I have been looking into `charge-lnd`. The tool is a small
python script that can read data from `lnd` and modify fees accordingly. There
are some instructions on how to set it up with umbrel, which is awesome. The
tool is configurable through a very simple config file that allows several
policies to exist, so a pretty intelligent behaviour can be achieved with
relatively simple effort.
The link to the tool is: [github](https://github.com/accumulator/charge-lnd)
I also found this example gist showcasing some example policies, which I think
will be very
useful: [the gist](https://gist.github.com/ziggie1984/48a67f3ee3cd0616e40620dc372ac3fe)
Eventually, I need to set this up. But I will still play around manually for a
while to get a feel on the behaviour of flows with different fees.
## My sunday checklist
Keeping an eye on the node is important, but I haven't put much structure into
it. I enjoy messing around with it, but I don't want to develop and addictive
habit of checking on it all day long.
So, I have decided to:
- Set up an automatic monitor with uptime kuma that will trigger warnings if
the service stops working.
- Keep all the node-chores for sunday afternoon and just breeze through them.
To support the second point, here is my checklist of chores:
- Check transactions and forwards. Put any that happened into the accounting
book.
- Buy any grocery vouchers that are needed.
- Send any BTC from other wallets into here that is needed.
- Check the uptime statistics of all my channel peers in thunderhub. Judge if
any of them should be removed because they are behaving like shit.
- Open channels/swaps in lnplus if necessary.
- Check up on 1ml to see how well is the node ranking.
- Check up on lightning terminal to see how is the node being judged.
- Check up on lightning pool to see if it's finally T1.
- Check that uptime kuma is running properly.
- Check if there are any relevant umbrel updates.
- Check the content of the lightningnetwork and umbrel subreddits.
- Put anything relevant in the accounting book again.
- Backup the channel states.