Certain checks were implemented with Errorf, which only logs the
failure. This results in the test harness panicking further down. We go
further ahead and convert all calls in this file to use require.
With the new btcd version we can specify our own listen address
generator function for any btcd nodes. This should reduce flakiness as
the previous way of getting a free port was based on just picking a
random number which lead to conflicts.
We also double the default values for connection retries and timeouts,
effectively waiting up to 4 seconds in total now.
To avoid the "Error outside of test" log and to properly terminate the
test if a sub test fails, we need to correctly invoke them using the
RunTestCase method.
In this commit, we extend the `BuildRoute` method and RPC on the router
sub-server to accept a raw payment address which will be included as
part of an MPP payload for the finla hop. This change actually also
allows users to craft their own MPP paths using BuildRoute+SendToRoute.
Our primary goal however, was to fix some broken itests since we now
require the payAddr to be present for ALL payments other than key send
payments.
Currently trying to run etcd tests on darwin will cause the timeouts to
improperly select timeouts_darwin.go which are stricter than
timeouts_etcd.go. We fix this by always defaulting to timeouts_etcd.go
no matter the platform, and only falling back to timeouts_darwin.go if
the kvdb_etcd tag is not present.
In some tests we moved channeld.db to a temp location in order to
"time travel". This commit extends the existing semantics by moving all
files, including embedded etcd db too besides the channeld.db file.
Previously, the verbose output of listsweeps would fail if we did not
find some sweeps in our wallet's listtransactions output. This could be
the case for sweeps that were rbf-ed, so the endpoint would fail. This
commit also updates the listsweeps endpoint to always check against the
wallet, so that we do not return these discarded sweeps that never
confirmed.
This commit adds the icase name to the log filename, to make it simpler
to find problematic tests. Additionally after this commit we'll restart
Alice and Bob (the base harness nodes) before each icase to start with a
clean state.
To make sure the test that takes the longest overall time is always
started first, independent of the number of test tranches we run, we
move it to the beginning of the list. Because that test involves a lot
of waiting, it allows us to play around with the number of tranches more
efficiently.
Updating the fee of the mock estimator _after_ starting carol turned out
to be flaky and could lead to the new fee not being picked up in time
for the force close. That lead to carol not cpfp'ing the force closed
transaction.
To allow running multiple test tranches in parallel, we need a way to
make sure the TCP ports don't collide. We'll work with offsets for the
ports, using a different offset for each tranche.
This fixes tests that were surfaced as flaky. Usually these tests had
an off-by-one error when mining blocks while waiting for a
CSV-encumbered output.
As a preparation to fix an issue with the mempool wait, we clean up the
multi-hop itests a bit. We fix the formatting, use the require library
for assertions consistently and simplify some of the wait predicates.
Commonly used code is also extracted into functions.
In some cases the router isn't yet fully aware of all newly opened
channels. We need to give it some time to process the updates. Therefore
we add a wait for sending payments to give it a few more changes to
catch up.
This fixes itest flakes that happen when a payment is attempted that
ends up causing a channel closure.
completePaymentRequests() attempts to monitor the open channels after a
payment is attempted in order to identify that payment was actually
dispatched to a remote node before returning.
However, when the payment actually causes a channel closure (for
example, because the receiver sent an incorrect preimage) this logic
fails in that the channel will no longer the found in the list of open
channels. This could cause a flake when there was enough time for the
channel to close before performing the check.
One example of such a flaky test is failing_link.
This fixes the issue by also checking whether the total number of
channels was reduced, which indicates (assuming itest operations are
being executed serially) that one of the attempted payments affected at
least one channel.
This ensures the Carol and Dave nodes created in the single_hop series
of tests are synced to the latest chain tip generated by the miner
before creating the route that will eventually be used for payments.
This prevents a flake during CI tests where slow processing of blocks by
Carol could cause the generated route to have a final CLTV delta too
short for Dave to accept.
While at it, we switch the test to use the default CLTV delta provided
by QueryRoutes which is now the global default CLTV.
We create a new build flag for running the bitcoind tests without the
txindex enabled. We don't want this to be the default so we use a
negated build flag.