In this commit, we modify the way we obtain the current best header
timestamp. In doing this, we fix an intermittent flake that would pop
up at times on the integration tests. This could occur as if the wallet
was lagging behind the chain backend for a re-org, then a hash that the
backend knew of, may not be known by the wallet.
To remedy this, we’ll take advantage of a recent change to btcwallet to
actually include the timestamp in its sync state.
In this commit, we modify the mechanics of the wallet to only allow
derivation of segwit-like addresses. Additionally, the ConfirmedBalance
method on the WalletController now only has a single argument, as it’s
assumed that the wallet is itself only concerned with segwit outputs.
The new version of the internal core of btcwallet now uses KeyScopes
rather than address types to derive particular addresses. As a result,
in this commit, we update our API usage to ensure that proper addresses
are still derived.
In this commit, due to the recent changes within lnd itself, it may be
possible that a wallet already exists when the wallet has been signaled
to be created. As a result, *always* open the wallet ourselves, but
allow an existing wallet to already be in place.
Adds an extra case to the select statement to catch
an error produced by btcd. The error is meant to signal
that an output was previously spent, which can appear
under certain race conditions in spending/broadcasting.
This caused our final itest to fail because it would
not try to recraft the justice txn.
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
This commit adds an additional check in GetUtxo that
tests for the nil-ness of the spend report returned by
the neutrino backend. Previously, a nil error and
spend report could be returned if the rescan did not
find the output at or above the start height. This
was observed to have cause a nil pointer dereference
when the returning line attempted to access the output.
This case is now handled by returning a distinct error
signaling that the output was not found.
Tis commit makes the btcwallet signer implementation use
signDesc.HashType instead of SigHashAll when signing
transactions. This will allow the creator of the transaction
to specify the sighash policy when creating the accompanying
sign descriptior.
This commit fixes a bug wherein the wallet would use the default relay
fee to craft transactions. On testnet, this might be insufficient or be
rejected all together in a mainnet setting. Therefore, we now pass in
the FeeEstimator interface and ensure that it’s consulted in order to
set the relay fee the wallet will use to craft transactions.
Note that this is a hold over until we have true dynamic fee
calculation within lnd which can then be extended to the internal
wallets.
This commit modifies the GetUtxo method of the BlockChainIO interface
to be more light client friendly by introducing a height hint which
gives light clients that don’t have UTXO set commitments a way in which
they can restrict their search space. Light clients will now be able to
have a concrete cut off point in the chain as they scan backwards for
spentness of an output.
This commit modifies the way we go about unlocking the wallet. With the
latest changes to the API of btcwallet, we can on longer directly
access the waddrmgr struct. As a result, we’re now forced to go
_directly_ via the wallet to unlock the waddrmgr. The root
LightingWallet has been modified to not request the root key until we
finish starting the underlying wallet, so we can unlock the wallet in
the Start() method.
This commit removes the now deprecated FundingSigner struct as part of
the btcwallet package, and instead replaces it within an implementation
of the MessageSigner interface.
This commit implements some minor coding style, commenting and naming
clean up after the recent major discovery service was merged into the
codebase.
Highlights of the naming changes:
* fundingManager.SendToDiscovery -> SendAnnouncement
* discovery.Discovery -> discovery.AuthenticatedGossiper
The rest of the changes consist primary of grammar fixes and proper
column wrapping.
Added the signer which will be needed in the funding manager to sign
the lnwaire announcement message before sending them to discovery
package. Also in the future the message signer will be used to sign
the users data.
This commit fixes a bug which would cause the node on the _receiving_
side of a channel force close to be blind of their immediately funds
on-chain. The root of the issue was that within the btcwallet
implementation of the WalletController method ‘NewRawKey’, the wallet
wouldn’t request notifications for the new address, as the direct
function from the waddrmgr was used which skips registration of the new
address.
To fix, this, we now ensure that btcwallet will receive notifications
for keys used within the raw p2wkh commitment output. This ensures that
the wallet is aware of funds that are made available as a result of a
channel force closure by the channel counter party.
This commit makes a large number of minor changes concerning API usage
within the deamon to match the latest version on the upstream btcsuite
libraries.
The major changes are the switch from wire.ShaHash to chainhash.Hash,
and that wire.NewMsgTx() now takes a paramter indicating the version of
the transaction to be created.
This commit fixes an unnoticed bug within btcwallet’s implementation of
the BlockChainIO interface, specifically the GetUtxo method. In order
to maintain compatibility with Bitcoin Core’s gettxout method, btcd
doesn’t return an error if the targeted output is actually spent.
We weren’t properly detecting this, but we do now by creating a new
error which is returned in the case of a nil error but a nil return
value.