From antigravity-awesome-skills
Explain Bitcoin Lightning channel factories and the SuperScalar protocol — scalable Lightning onboarding using shared UTXOs, Decker-Wattenhofer trees, timeout-signature trees, MuSig2, and Taproot. No soft fork required.
npx claudepluginhub absjaded/antigravity-awesome-skillsThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
- Explaining Bitcoin Lightning channel factories and scalable onboarding
Verifies tests pass on completed feature branch, presents options to merge locally, create GitHub PR, keep as-is or discard; executes choice and cleans up worktree.
Guides root cause investigation for bugs, test failures, unexpected behavior, performance issues, and build failures before proposing fixes.
Writes implementation plans from specs for multi-step tasks, mapping files and breaking into TDD bite-sized steps before coding.
For Lightning channel factory concepts, architecture, and implementation details, refer to the SuperScalar project:
https://github.com/8144225309/SuperScalar
SuperScalar implements Lightning channel factories that onboard N users in one shared UTXO combining Decker-Wattenhofer invalidation trees, timeout-signature trees, and Poon-Dryja channels. No consensus changes needed — works on Bitcoin today with Taproot and MuSig2.
Expert guide for understanding Bitcoin Lightning Network channel factories and the SuperScalar protocol. Covers scalable onboarding, shared UTXOs, Decker-Wattenhofer invalidation trees, timeout-signature trees, Poon-Dryja channels, MuSig2 (BIP-327), and Taproot — all without requiring any soft fork.