In this commit, we modify the mockGraphSource's `AddEdge`
method to set the capacity of the edge it's adding to be a large
capacity.
This will enable us to test the validation of each ChannelUpdate's
max HTLC, since future validation checks will ensure the specified
max HTLC is less than total channel capacity.
In this commit, we add a field to the ChannelUpdate
denoting the maximum HTLC we support sending over
this channel, a field which was recently added to the
spec.
This field serves multiple purposes. In the short
term, it enables nodes to signal the largest HTLC
they're willing to carry, allows light clients who
don't verify channel existence to have some guidance
when routing HTLCs, and finally may allow nodes to
preserve a portion of bandwidth at all times.
In the long term, this field can be used by
implementations of AMP to guide payment splitting,
as it becomes apparent to a node the largest possible
HTLC one can route over a particular channel.
This PR was made possible by the merge of #1825,
which enables older nodes to properly retain and
verify signatures on updates that include new fields
(like this new max HTLC field) that they haven't yet
been updated to recognize.
In addition, the new ChannelUpdate fields are added to
the lnwire fuzzing tests.
Co-authored-by: Johan T. Halseth <johanth@gmail.com>
In this commit, we fix the problem where it's annoying to parse a
bitfield printed out in decimal by writing a String method for the
ChanUpdate[Chan|Msg]Flags bitfield.
Co-authored-by: Johan T. Halseth <johanth@gmail.com>
In this commit:
* we partition lnwire.ChanUpdateFlag into two (ChanUpdateChanFlags and
ChanUpdateMsgFlags), from a uint16 to a pair of uint8's
* we rename the ChannelUpdate.Flags to ChannelFlags and add an
additional MessageFlags field, which will be used to indicate the
presence of the optional field HtlcMaximumMsat within the ChannelUpdate.
* we partition ChannelEdgePolicy.Flags into message and channel flags.
This change corresponds to the partitioning of the ChannelUpdate's Flags
field into MessageFlags and ChannelFlags.
Co-authored-by: Johan T. Halseth <johanth@gmail.com>
In this commit, we modify GetTestTxidAndScript to generate new P2PKH
scripts. This is needed to properly test confirmations and spends of
unique scripts on-chain within the set of interface-level test cases.
In this commit, we extend the NeutrinoNotifier to support registering
scripts for spends notifications. Once the script has been detected as
spent within the chain, a spend notification will be dispatched through
the Spend channel of the SpendEvent returned upon registration.
For scripts that have been spent in the past, the rescan logic has been
modified to match on the script rather than the outpoint. A concurrent
queue for relevant transactions has been added to proxy notifications
from the underlying rescan to the txNotifier. This is needed for
scripts, as we cannot perform a historical rescan for scripts through
`GetUtxo`, like we do with outpoints.
For scripts that are unspent, a filter update is sent to the underlying
rescan to ensure that we match and dispatch on the script when
processing new blocks.
Along the way, we also address an issue where we'd miss detecting that
an outpoint/script has been spent in the future due to not receiving a
historical dispatch request from the underlying txNotifier. To fix this,
we ensure that we always request the backend to notify us of the spend
once it detects it at tip, regardless of whether a historical rescan was
detected or not.
In this commit, we extend the BitcoindNotifier to support registering
scripts for spends notifications. Once the script has been detected as
spent within the chain, a spend notification will be dispatched through
the Spend channel of the SpendEvent returned upon registration.
For scripts that have been spent in the past, the rescan logic has been
modified to match on the script rather than the outpoint. This is done
by re-deriving the script of the output a transaction input is spending
and checking whether it matches ours.
For scripts that are unspent, a request to the backend will be sent to
alert the BitcoindNotifier of when the script was spent by a
transaction. To make this request we encode the script as an address, as
this is what the backend uses to detect the spend. The transaction will
then be proxied through the txUpdates concurrent queue, which will hand
it off to the underlying txNotifier and dispatch spend notifications to
the relevant clients.
Along the way, we also address an issue where we'd miss detecting that
an outpoint/script has been spent in the future due to not receiving a
historical dispatch request from the underlying txNotifier. To fix this,
we ensure that we always request the backend to notify us of the spend
once it detects it at tip, regardless of whether a historical rescan was
detected or not.
In this commit, we extend the BtcdNotifier to support registering
scripts for spends notifications. Once the script has been detected as
spent within the chain, a spend notification will be dispatched through
the Spend channel of the SpendEvent returned upon registration.
For scripts that have been spent in the past, the rescan logic has been
modified to match on the script rather than the outpoint. This is done
by encoding the script as an address.
For scripts that are unspent, a request to the backend will be sent to
alert the BtcdNotifier of when the script was spent by a transaction. To
make this request we encode the script as an address, as this is what
the backend uses to detect the spend. The transaction will then be
proxied through the txUpdates concurrent queue, which will hand it off
to the underlying txNotifier and dispatch spend notifications to the
relevant clients.
Along the way, we also address an issue where we'd miss detecting that
an outpoint/script has been spent in the future due to not receiving a
historical dispatch request from the underlying txNotifier. To fix this,
we ensure that we always request the backend to notify us of the spend
once it detects it at tip, regardless of whether a historical rescan was
detected or not.
In this commit, we extend the NeutrinoNotifier to support registering
scripts for confirmation notifications. Once the script has been
detected as confirmed within the chain, a confirmation notification will
be dispatched to through the Confirmed channel of the ConfirmationEvent
returned upon registration.
For scripts that have confirmed in the past, the `historicalConfDetails`
method has been modified to determine whether the script has been
confirmed by locating the script in an output of a confirmed
transaction.
For scripts that have yet to confirm, a filter update is sent to the
underlying rescan to ensure that we match and dispatch on the script
when processing new blocks.
Along the way, we also address an issue where we'd miss detecting that a
transaction/script has confirmed in the future due to not receiving a
historical dispatch request from the underlying txNotifier. To fix this,
we ensure that we always update our filters to detect the confirmation
at tip, regardless of whether a historical rescan was detected or not.
In this commit, we extend the BitcoindNotifier to support registering
scripts for confirmation notifications. Once the script has been
detected as confirmed within the chain, a confirmation notification will
be dispatched to through the Confirmed channel of the ConfirmationEvent
returned upon registration.
For scripts that have confirmed in the past, the `historicalConfDetails`
method has been modified to skip the txindex and go straight to scanning
the chain manually if confirmation request is for a script. When
scanning the chain, we'll determine whether the script has been
confirmed by locating the script in an output of a confirmed
transaction.
For scripts that have yet to confirm, they will be properly tracked
within the TxNotifier.
In this commit, we extend the BtcdNotifier to support registering
scripts for confirmation notifications. Once the script has been
detected as confirmed within the chain, a confirmation notification will
be dispatched to through the Confirmed channel of the ConfirmationEvent
returned upon registration.
For scripts that have confirmed in the past, the `historicalConfDetails`
method has been modified to skip the txindex and go straight to scanning
the chain manually if confirmation request is for a script. When
scanning the chain, we'll determine whether the script has been
confirmed by locating the script in an output of a confirmed
transaction.
For scripts that have yet to confirm, they will be properly tracked
within the TxNotifier.
In this commit, we add the current chain parameters to the
BitcoindNotifier. This will be used in a future commit in order to
convert outputs scripts into addresses. This is needed since the
bitcoind backend uses these addresses to detect whether the script
encoded within it was spent by a transaction in the chain.
In this commit, we add the current chain parameters to the BtcdNotifier.
This will be used in a future commit in order to convert outputs scripts
into addresses. This is needed since the btcd backend uses these
addresses to detect whether the script encoded within it was spent by a
transaction in the chain.
In this commit, we refactor the TxNotifier's ProcessRelevantSpendTx to
also detect script spends. This can easily be done as the transaction
filtering logic was refactored into its own method in a previous commit.
In this commit, we modify the TxNotifier's ConnectTip method to also
detect whether a registered script has been confirmed or spent on-chain
by a transaction in the connected block. Once detected, notifications
for them will be queued up for dispatch as with txids/outpoints.
We've also refactored the ConnectTip method into smaller and reusable
methods, which will serve useful later.
In this commit, we refactor the HeightHintCache and its underlying
interfaces to be able to manipulate hints for ConfRequests and
SpendRequests. By doing so, we'll be able to manipulate hints for
scripts if the request includes either a zero hash or a zero outpoint.
These structs allow us to request notifications for either
txids/outpoints or output scripts. We'll be using these in later commits
to index confirmation and spend requests within the TxNotifier.
This commit defines a new heuristic WeightedCombAttachment that takes a
set of sub-heuristics, and produces a final node score by querying the
sub-heuristics and combining the scores from them according to their
weights.
This way it will look like a regular, single heuristic to the autopilot
agemnt, but can be a more complex combination of several.
To prepare for combinning scores from multiple heuristics, we require the
scores returned from the NodeSores API to be in the range [0.0, 1.0].
The prefAttach heuristic is altered to scale the returned scores such
that the most connected node in the grpah is given a score of 1.0.
When Tor is enabled, this change allows manual hidden service
configuration by defaulting to listening for p2p connections on
the loopback address. It also allows overriding this manually
for situations where the Tor daemon is running on another machine,
such as when using Whonix or OnionPi-like systems.