Give the external subservers the possibility to also use their own
validator to check any macaroons attached to calls to their registered
gRPC URIs.
This allows them to have their own root key ID database and permission
entities.
When dealing with online events, we actually need to track our events
by peer, not by channel. All we need to track channels is to have a
set of online events for a peer which at least contain those events.
This change refactors chanfitness to track by peer.
We currently query the store for uptime and lifespan individually. As
we add more fields, we will need to add more queries with this design.
This change combines requests into a single channel infor request so
that we do not need to add unnecessary boilerplate going forward.
As a convenience method for users to look up what RPC method URIs exist
and what permissions they require, we add a new ListPermissions call
that simply returns all registered URIs (including internal and external
subservers) and their required permissions.
To make sure we can use the abandonchannel RPC for getting rid of
externally funded channels who's funding transaction was never
published, we allow the RPC to be used on non-dev builds for externally
funded and pending channels only.
This commit adds the same CORS functionality that's currently in the main gRPC proxy to the WalletUnlocker proxy. This ensures the CORS configuration is carried through all API endpoints
To avoid the scenario where the user tries to force close a channel too
early that was restored through SCB, we check the channel status in the
RPC server already. If a restored channel cannot connect to its peer and
mark it as local data loss the channel arbitrator would try to publish
the commitment TX it does not have and crash.
This commit removes the activeNetParams global in chainparams.go. This
is necessary to isolate code from the lnd package so we can import it
for use in tests, other projects, etc.
In this commit, we split the database storage into two classes: remote
and local data. If etcd isn't active, then everything is actually just
local though we use two pointers everywhere. If etcd is active, then
everything but the graph goes into the remote database.
This is useful when we wish to have a channel frozen for a specific
amount of blocks after its confirmation. This could also be done with an
absolute thaw height, but it does not suit cases where a strict block
delta needs to be enforced, as it's not possible to know for certain
when a channel will be included in the chain. To work around this, we
add a relative interpretation of the field, where if its value is below
500,000, then it's interpreted as a relative height. This approach
allows us to prevent further database modifications to account for a
relative thaw height.
In this commit we add the ability to intercept forwarded htlc packets
straight from the RPC layer. The RPC layer handles a bidrectional stream
that comminucates to the client the intercepted packets and handles its
response by coordinating with the interceptable switch.