In this commit, we wrap up the prior ones and introduce config
settings, as well as proper generation for a new invoice-only macaroon.
All prior invoice path rules are also properly enforced of this new
invoice.macaroon.
Before previous commits were squashed into this commit, zombie
reservations were cleaned up individually when they timed out.
However, this made the code more complex because each reservation
had its own individual timer and thus it would have required the
timer being cancelled any time the reservation was cancelled,
which would have been harder to maintain. With this commit,
zombie reservations are cleaned up by a zombie sweeper that is
set off by a ticker instead, to make the code more maintainable.
In this commit, we update lnd to now access the deterministic
keychain.KeyRing struct in order to obtain our identity public key.
With this change, if the user recovers their wallet with the same seed,
then they’ll have access to the same prior node identity. This change
also makes it easy for us to support node key rotation in the future by
bumping up our requested index.
In this commit, we extend the initial wallet creation set up case with
the goal of giving the user the ability to restore a prior wallet from
seed, or obtain the mnemonic for a newly generated wallet.
As the WalletUnlocker has been extended to allow passing a user source
of entropy, if this is detected, then we’ll use BIP39 to covert it into
an HD wallet seed. Otherwise, we’ll generate our own entropy, then
convert that into the wallet seed.
In order to make this change, we’ll now manually create the default
wallet ourselves. In the case that the user didn’t provide their own
seed, we’ll send the seed we generated back to the user. This will allow
frontends to display the newly generated seed to the end user.
In this commit, we modify our initial cert generation to *only* generate
and advertise cipher suites that purely use ECC. We do this is as
switching to ECC results in much faster startup time for a fresh
installation, and is also more modern crypto. # Please enter the commit
message for your changes. Lines starting
This commit adds wallet_best_block_timestamp to the gRPC interface.
This is done in order to allow clients to calculate progress while
lnd syncs to the blockchain. wallet_best_block_timestamp is exposed
via the GetInfo() rpc call. Additionally, IsSynced() returns the
WalletBestBlockTimestamp as the second value in the tuple
that is returned, providing additional detail when querying about the
status of the sync. The BtcWallet interface has also been updated
accordingly.
This commit was created to support the issue to
[Add progress bar for chain sync] (lightninglabs/lightning-app#10) in
lightning-app
In this commit, we modify our initialization of neutrino to also pass
in the custom dialer and name resolver function. With this change, if
lnd is configured to use Tor, then neutrino will as well. This means
that *both* the Bitcoin P2P as well as the Lightning P2P traffic will
be proxied over Tor.
This commit adds the `tlsextraip` flag to the cli to add an
ip to the generated certificate. This is usefull when using
a loadbalancer to access the node.
In this commit, we fix an existing bug that would result in some
payments getting “stuck”. This would happen if one side restarted
before the channel was fully locked in. In this case, since upon
re-connection, the link will get added to the switch with a *short
channel ID of zero*. If A then tries to make a multi-hop payment
through B, B will fail to forward the payment, as it’ll mistakenly
think that the payment originated from a local-subsystem as the channel
ID is zero. A short channel ID of zero is used to map local payments
back to their caller.
With fix this by allowing the funding manager to dynamically update the
short channel ID of a link after it discovers the short channel ID.
In this commit, we fix a second instance of reported “stuck” payments
by users.
In this commit, we remove a server shutdown statement that was executed
after we obtained the wallet’s password from the user over RPC. This
was unnecessary as we already close the listener below. Before this
commit, users would see a weird benign error message. With these code
deletion, the message disappears.
This commit reworks the macaroon authentication framework to use the
v2 macaroon format and bakery API. It also replaces the code in each
RPC method which calls the macaroon verifier with interceptors which
call the macaroon verifier instead. In addition, the operation
permissions are reworked to fit the new format of "allow" commands
(specifically, entity/operation permissions instead of method
permissions).
We no longer need to hand off new channels that come online as the
chainWatcher will be persistent, and always have an active signal for
the entire lifetime of the channel.
This commit removes the `peerport` and `rpcport` config options and
adds `listen`, `rpclisten`, and `restlisten` options to allow setting
one or multiple interfaces to listen on for incoming connections.
It also adds a `nolisten` option to allow disabling the listener for
incoming peer connections.
This commit factors out the btcd and ltcd options into their own sections
similar to neutrino, and adds a bitcoind section as well. Now, you specify
node options similarly to:
--ltcd.rpchost=...
or
--btcd.rpcuser=...
or
--bitcoind.zmqpath=...
For Bitcoin, you specify an alternate back-end to btcd as follows:
--bitcoin.node=bitcoind
or
--bitcoin.node=neutrino
You can also specify the default option:
--bitcoin.node=btcd
For Litecoin, only `btcd` mode is valid, and corresponds to the `ltcd`
section. For example:
--litecoin.node=btcd
--ltcd.rpchost=...
The new code also attempts to read the correct options and auth info
from bitcoin.conf just as it does from btcd.conf/ltcd.conf.
This commit makes the value returned fomr NumRequiredConfs
and RequiredRemoteDelay used during the funding process scale
linearly with the channel size. This is done to ensure that
in cases there are more at stake in a channel, we have more
time to react to reorgs, or unilateral closes.
If the user explicitly specified values for these two at
startup, we return those instead, without doing the scaling.
Early in the lifetime of the project here were a few files we either
copied entirely, or used as the basis for code within lnd. Before this
PR, this was not recognized by retaining the original copyright. With
this commit, we remedy that by explicitly noting the copyright in the
relevant files.
Fixes#423.
In this commit we ensure the behavior of lnd with the —noencryptwallet
command line option heaves as it did before user initiated wallet
encryption was implemented. We do this by modifying the
waitForWalletPassword method to instead return two pass phrases: one
public and one private. The default wallet public passphrase is then
restarted back to the value which was used stoically in the codebase
before the latest merged PR.
This commit makes use of the UnlockerService within lnd, waiting
for the user to provide a wallet encryption passord over RPC at
startup. When the passoword is received, startup continues as
normal, either using the passowrd to create the wallet for first
time use, or unlocking an existing wallet database.
This can be skipped by setting the --noencryptwallet flag, causing
the wallet database to be encypted using the default passoword.
In this commit we add a new option to lnd, cpuprofile. With this option
we add additional telemetry hooks into and, allowing users to generate
CPU profiling files to measure hot spots within the daemon.
The fundingManager will register with the server to get notified
when the targetted peer comes online, in case of a failed send
of the fundingLocked message. This is necessary because if the
peer is not connected yet (or was disconnected while we were
waiting for the funding tx to confirm), we cannot continue the
the opening process before the peer successfully has received
the fundingLocked.
This commit modifies the way that we create the macaroon database, and
also create the initial macaroons themselves. Rather than creating a
new macaroon DB for each chain, we instead create a single instance for
all chains. Additionally, if the datadir has been modified, and the
macaroon paths haven’t been modified, the macaroons are now scoped to
those paths.
Persists the state of a channel opening process after funding
transaction is confirmed. This tracks the messages sent to
the peer such that the process can be continued in case of a
restart. Also introduces that the receiver side forgets about
channel if funding transaction is not confirmed in 48hrs.
Make the fundingmanager send an updated node announcement
each time it opens a new channel. This is to make sure
our node announcement is propagated in the network, since
peers will ignore our node announcements if we haven't
opened any channels yet.
This commit adds a new command line option that allows clients to
specify a default value to use when responding to a new channel funding
request. In a future change, a pure mapping will be added, with the
command line option having higher precedence.
The btclog package has been changed to defining its own logging
interface (rather than seelog's) and provides a default implementation
for callers to use.
There are two primary advantages to the new logger implementation.
First, all log messages are created before the call returns. Compared
to seelog, this prevents data races when mutable variables are logged.
Second, the new logger does not implement any kind of artifical rate
limiting (what seelog refers to as "adaptive logging"). Log messages
are outputted as soon as possible and the application will appear to
perform much better when watching standard output.
Because log rotation is not a feature of the btclog logging
implementation, it is handled by the main package by importing a file
rotation package that provides an io.Reader interface for creating
output to a rotating file output. The rotator has been configured
with the same defaults that btcd previously used in the seelog config
(10MB file limits with maximum of 3 rolls) but now compresses newly
created roll files. Due to the high compressibility of log text, the
compressed files typically reduce to around 15-30% of the original
10MB file.
This commit overhauls the way that lnd is created with the goal of
ensuring the chain backends are fully synced up before the daemon
itself starts. The rpcServer has been slightly decoupled from the
server itself s.t we can start the rpcServer independently of the
server. This is required as we’ll now wait (unless we’re in simnet
mode) for the chain to fully sync up before we even _start_ any of the
server’s goroutines.
This commit finishes up the implementation of newChainControlFromConfig
in order to properly initiate the members of the chainControl struct
when the new light client mode (neutrino). With this lnd is now able to
switch over to either mode with a simple configuration change.
This commit adds the FeeEstimator interface, which can be used for
future fee calculation implementations. Currently, there is only the
StaticFeeEstimator implementation, which returns the same fee rate for
any transaction.
This commit modifies the initialization logic within lnd.go to
recognize which chain was selected by the user and to set the
parameters accordingly. With this commit, lnd is now able to switch
between chains within nothing more than a toggle of config paramters!
This commit modifies the fundingManager config to use the a SignMesage
function rather than two distinct functions for singing one half the
channel announcement proofs. This change unifies the signing of
messages under a single abstraction: the MessageSigner interface.
This commit alters the configuration parsing a bit along with the
documentation to expect the RPCHost configuration paramter to also have
the target port specified. If the port isn’t included, then the default
btcd RPC port for that chain is used.
Additionally, within the integration testing framework, when creating
the lnd nodes, we now use the configuration from the btcd harness to
set the proper RPC host.
This commit unexports the SyncVerions PR, in favor of making it private
and moving it into the .Open() method. With this change, callers no
longer need worry about ensuring the database version is up to sync
before usage, as it will happen automatically once the database is
opened.
This commit also unexports some additional variables within the package
that don’t need be consumed by the public, and exports the
DbVersionNumber attribute on the meta struct. Finally some minor
formatting fixes have neen carried out to ensure the new code more
closely matches the style of the rest of the codebase.
This commit fixes a build error for go 1.6.3. Before go 1.7, the
context package was under the experimental go packages, therefore to
maintain compatibility across our currently supported versions, we must
use the ‘/x/net’ import path.
This commit adds a REST interface to the existing gRPC server by
employing a simple http proxy auto-generated from the existing protobuf
files. Currently full-support for any streaming RPC’s are currently
untested. In addition to auto-generating a REST proxy server, a
swagger.json is also generated which allows for gRPC-like native
objects with higher-level clients, and also for auto-generated
documentation.
Due to limitations with accepting raw byte strings as parameters, some
RPC’s have been modified to take both raw-bytes and string arguments.
Additionally a new RPC has been added ‘NewWitnessAddress’ since the
proxy doesn’t currently support enum-based arguments.
Currently the proxy server is embedded within the daemon as an active
HTTP server, however we may want to package the proxy server as a
separate binary in the future. Similarly, we may want to add additional
configuration information which controls the optional inclusion of the
REST proxy.
Atm, just like the current gRPC interface, the REST API is fully
unauthenticated. Before moving to an initial alpha release after making
the necessary changes to meet the spec drafted in Milan, authentication
of the RPC interfaces will be addressed.
This commit introduces the concept of a manually initiated “force”
closer within the channel state machine. A force closure is a closure
initiated by a local subsystem which broadcasts the current commitment
state directly on-chain rather than attempting to cooperatively
negotiate a closure with the remote party.
A force closure returns a ForceCloseSummary which includes all the
details required for claiming all rightfully owned outputs within the
broadcast commitment transaction.
Additionally two new publicly exported channels are introduced, one
which is closed due a locally initiated force closure, and the other
which is closed once we detect that the remote party has executed a
unilateral closure by broadcasting their version of the commitment
transaction.
This commit modifies the daemon’s initialization within the `lndMain`
method to create an instance of the current default ChainNotifier
outside of the LightningWallet.
At this point, since there are no other implementations of the
ChainNotifier, the current concrete implementation BtcdNotifier is used
by default. In the future, once other ChainNotifier implementations are
in place, config parsing should be fed into a factory function which
creates the proper ChainNotifier implementation.
Finally, several imports have been updated to reflect the change in
package name.
This commit modifies the internal workflow for opening or closing a
channel in order to create a path in which RPC clients can receive
updates. Updates are now communicated via channels from the goroutines
spawned by the RPC server to process the request, and the sub-system
within the daemon that actually executes the request.
With this change clients can now receive updates that the request is
pending (final message has been sent to the target client), or that the
request has been completed. Confirmation related updates have not yet
been implemented as that will require some changes to the ChainNotifier
interface.
This commit adds an option to pass in a raw hex-encoded rpc cert via
lnd’s configuration file. Such a change allows for programmatically
creating lnd nodes which can connect to an existing btcd instance
without requiring a file for the rpc cert to be specified.
Additionally, this commit makes the creation of an integration testing
harness easier.
With this commit, support for changing the target network (testnet,
simnet, etc) has been finalized. Previously a command line option was
present to swap networks, but the RPC port wouldn’t automatically be
updated to reflect the network.
This commit adds a new nested main function “lndMain”, within the
packages’s normal main function. This nesting is required in order to
properly execute all queued defer statements in the case of a forced
exit.
To try uspv, do ./lnd -spv
The remote node is hardcoded in shell.go. If you aren't
running a full node on localhost, specify where to connect to.
Nearby nodes will be much faster but random testnet nodes on the
internet should also work.