Methods on failure message types used to be defined on value receivers.
This allowed assignment of a failure message to ForwardingError both as
a value and as a pointer. This is error-prone, especially when using a
type switch.
In this commit the failure message methods are changed so that they
target pointer receivers.
Two instances where a value was assigned instead of a reference are
fixed.
In this commit, we fix a lingering TOOD statement in the channel arb.
Before this commitment, we would simply wipe our our local HTLC set of
the HTLC set that was on the remote commitment transaction on force
close. This was incorrect as if our commitment transaction had an HTLC
that the remote commitment didn't, then we would fail to cancel that
back, and cause both channels to time out on chain.
In order to remedy this, we introduce a new `HtlcSetKey` struct to track
all 3 possible in-flight set of HTLCs: ours, theirs, and their pending.
We also we start to tack on additional data to all the unilateral close
messages we send to subscribers. This new data is the CommitSet, or the
set of valid commitments at channel closure time. This new information
will be used by the channel arb in an upcoming commit to ensure it will
cancel back HTLCs in the case of split commitment state.
Finally, we start to thread through an optional *CommitSet to the
advanceState method. This additional information will give the channel
arb addition information it needs to ensure it properly cancels back
HTLCs that are about to time out or may time out depending on which
commitment is played.
Within the htlcswitch pakage, we modify the `SignNextCommitment` method
to return the new set of pending HTLCs for the remote party's commitment
transaction and `ReceiveRevocation` to return the latest set of
commitment transactions on the remote party's commitment as well. This
is a preparatory change which is part of a larger change to address a
lingering TODO in the cnct.
Additionally, rather than just send of the set of HTLCs after the we
revoke, we'll also send of the set of HTLCs after the remote party
revokes, and we create a pending commitment state for it.
This commit is the final step in making the link unaware of invoices. It
now purely offers the htlc to the invoice registry and follows
instructions from the invoice registry about how and when to respond to
the htlc.
The change also fixes a bug where upon restart, hodl htlcs were
subjected to the invoice minimum cltv delta requirement again. If the
block height has increased in the mean while, the htlc would be canceled
back.
Furthermore the invoice registry interaction is aligned between link and
contract resolvers.
In this commit, we start the first phase of fixing an existing bug
within the switch. As is, we don't properly convert
`UpdateFailMalformedHTLC` to regular `UpdateFailHTLC` messages that are
fully encrypted. When we receive a `UpdateFailMalformedHTLC` today,
we'll convert it into a regular fail message by simply encoding the
failure message raw. This failure message doesn't have a MAC yet, so if
we sent it backwards, then the destination wouldn't be able to decrypt
it. We can recognize this type of failure as it'll be the same size as
the raw failure message max size, but it has 4 extra bytes for the
encoding. When we come across this message, we'll mark is as needing
conversion so the switch can take care of it.
In this commit, we fix a bug that would cause a node with a hodl HTLC to
cancel back the HTLC upon restart if the invoice has been settled, but
the HTLC is still present on the commitment transaction. A fix for the
HTLC still being present (not triggering a new commitment) has been
fixed recently. However, for older nodes with a lingering HTLC, on
restart it would be failed back.
In this commit, we make the check stricter by only performing these
checks for HTLCs that are in the open state. This ensures that we'll
only check this constraints the first time around, before the HTLC has
been transitioned to the accepted state.
This commit adds a brief delay when sending our channel reestablish
message if the link contains a restored channel to ensure we first have
a stable connection. Sending the message will cause the remote peer to
force close the channel, which currently may not be resumed reliably if
the connection is being torn town simultaneously. This delay can be
removed after the force close is reliable, but in the meantime it
improves the reliability of successfully closing out the channel and
allows the `channel_backup_restore/restore_during_creation` to pass
reliably.
In this commit, we modify the starting link logic to always send the
chan sync message to the remote peer in a synchronous manner. Otherwise,
it's possible that we fail very quickly below this block, and don't ever
send the message to the remote peer.
The idea of the batch counter is to increase it for commit tx updates,
so that if the commit tx cannot be updated immediately (revocation
window exhausted), the batch ticker makes sure it happens later.
The batch counter was increased for forwarded htlcs, but not for exit hop
resolutions.
This lead to the situation where the commitment tx would not be updated,
even though the htlc was settled locally. When no other changes happen
on the channel, the htlc eventually reaches its expiry and the channel
is force closed.
This commits exposes the various parameters around going to chain and
accepting htlcs in a clear way.
In addition to this, it reverts those parameters to what they were
before the merge of commit d1076271456bdab1625ea6b52b93ca3e1bd9aed9.
This commit increase the expiry grace delta to a value above the
broadcast delta. This prevents htlcs from being accepted that would
immediately trigger a channel force close.
A correct delta is generated in server.go where there is access to
the broadcast delta and passed via the peer to the links.
Co-authored-by: Jim Posen <jim.posen@gmail.com>
Previously there was no minimum remaining blocks requirement on
forwarded htlcs, which may cause channel arbitrator to force
close the channel directly after forwarding the htlc.
Co-authored-by: Jim Posen <jim.posen@gmail.com>
This commit modifies the invoice registry to handle invoices for which
the preimage is not known yet (hodl invoices). In that case, the
resolution channel passed in from links and resolvers is stored until we
either learn the preimage or want to cancel the htlc.
This commit detaches signaling the invoice registry that an htlc was
locked in from the actually settling of the htlc.
It is a preparation for hodl invoices.
Previously it could happen that an invoice was open at the time of the
LookupInvoice call, the htlc was settled because of that, but when the
SettleInvoice call was made eventually, it would fail because the
invoice was canceled in the mean time. The htlc would then be settled,
but the invoice not marked as such.
In this commit, we set a default max HTLC in the forwarding
policies of newly open channels.
The ForwardingPolicy's MaxHTLC field (added in this commit)
will later be used to decide whether an HTLC satisfies our policy before
forwarding it.
To ensure the ForwardingPolicy's MaxHTLC default matches the max HTLC
advertised in the ChannelUpdate sent out for this channel, we also add
a MaxPendingAmount() function to the lnwallet.Channel.
This commit makes use of the batched AddWitness
method of the WitnessCache, in order to avoid
performing one write for each accepted preimage.
Additionally, this fixes an existing hole in the
consistency guarantees since the batched writes
are now guaranteed to take place before accepting
the next CommitSig. Previously, these writes were
processed in an unsynchronized go routine that
could be delayed arbitrarily long before being
executed.
With this change, the async_payments_benchmarks
actually shows a slight improvement in
performance, presumably because we no longer do
an individual write per preimage, even though
the execution is now explicitly in the critical
path. There is likely also a marginal performance
improvement from the reduction in goroutine
overhead.
In this commit, we modify the WitnessCache's
AddPreimage method to accept a variadic number
of preimages. This enables callers to batch
preimage writes in performance critical areas
of the codebase, e.g. the htlcswitch.
Additionally, we lift the computation of the
witnesses' keys outside of the db transaction.
This saves us from having to do hashing inside
and blocking other callers, and limits extraneous
blocking at the call site.
This function will be used in the switch to retrieve the channel point for a link,
allowing the switch to retrieve individual channels from the database.
This commit is a step to split the lnwallet package. It puts the Input
interface and implementations in a separate package along with all their
dependencies from lnwallet.
In this commit, we deprecate the `IncorrectHtlcAmount` onion error.
We'll still decode this error to use when retrying paths, but we'll no
longer send this ourselves. The `UnknownPaymentHash` error has been
amended to also include the value of the payment as well. This allows us
to worry about one less error.
This commit adds conversion between the lnwire.UpdateFee message and the
new FeeUpdate PaymentDescriptor. We re-purpose the existing Amount field
in the PaymentDescriptor stuct to hold the feerate.
This commit is a preparation for the addition of new invoice
states. A database migration is not needed because we keep
the same field length and values.
In this commit, we fix a minor discrepancy with the spec. We should
return a FinalFailExpiryTooSoon error, rather than a
FinalFailIncorrectCltvExpiry error, when the last HTLC of a route (exit
hop) has an expiration height that is deemed too soon by the final
destination of the HTLC.
In this commit, we remove the per channel `sigPool` within the
`lnwallet.LightningChannel` struct. With this change, we ensure that as
the number of channels grows, the number of gouroutines idling in the
sigPool stays constant. It's the case that currently on the daemon, most
channels are likely inactive, with only a hand full actually
consistently carrying out channel updates. As a result, this change
should reduce the amount of idle CPU usage, as we have less active
goroutines in select loops.
In order to make this change, the `SigPool` itself has been publicly
exported such that outside callers can make a `SigPool` and pass it into
newly created channels. Since the sig pool now lives outside the
channel, we were also able to do away with the Stop() method on the
channel all together.
Finally, the server is the sub-system that is currently responsible for
managing the `SigPool` within lnd.
In this commit we add a check to HtlcSatifiesPolicy to verify that the
time lock for the outgoing htlc that is requested in the onion packet
isn't too far in the future.
Without this check, anyone could force an unreasonably long time lock on
the forwarding node.
This commit removes the concept of "circuit deletion
forgivness" from the link. This was originally
implemented due to the strict semantics of the original
DeleteCircuit implementation, which would fail if we tried
to delete unknown circuits. Forgivness is used on startup
to ignore this error in case the circuits had already been
deleted before shutting down.
Now that the circuit deletion has been relaxed, this
behavior is no longer necessary, as requests to delete
unknown (or previously deleted) circuits will be ignored.
This is necessary for future changes regarding switch
cleanup, which may attempt to cleanup already deleted
circuits.