This commit migrates the payments in the database to a new structure
that allows for multiple htlcs per payments. The migration introduces a
new sub-bucket that contains a list of htlcs and moves the old single
htlc into that.
This commit extends the htlc fail info with the full failure reason that
was received over the wire. In a later commit, this info will also be
exposed on the rpc interface. Furthermore it serves as a building block
to make SendToRoute reliable across restarts.
This commit converts the database structure of a payment so that it can
not just store the last htlc attempt, but all attempts that have been
made. This is a preparation for mpp sending.
In addition to that, we now also persist the fail time of an htlc. In a
later commit, the full failure reason will be added as well.
A key change is made to the control tower interface. Previously the
control tower wasn't aware of individual htlc outcomes. The payment
remained in-flight with the latest attempt recorded, but an outcome was
only set when the payment finished. With this commit, the outcome of
every htlc is expected by the control tower and recorded in the
database.
Co-authored-by: Johan T. Halseth <johanth@gmail.com>
If we are the initiator, we check that our starting balance after
subtracting fees are not less than two times the default dust limit.
This commit adds a similar check for the non-initiator case, checking
that the remote party has a starting balance of reasonable size.
We use the fact that we can tell whether the commit is local or remote
by inspecting the witness script. We cannot use the maturity delay
anymore, as we can have delayed to_remote outputs also now.
Co-authored-by: Joost Jager <joost.jager@gmail.com>
We also increase the witness size for these types to account for the 3
extra bytes. The size won't be correct in all cases, but it is just an
upper bound in any case.
To be able to change more than the witness used for each test case, we
extract commit and sweep tx generation into own methods that can be
called from each test case.
We do the same for TestHTLCReceiverSpendValidation
This fixes an error case that wouldn't have been caught, since
vm.Execute applies more rules than the individual steps (most notably
the clean stack rule).
Instead we execute the engine as normal, and only step through if we
decide that the outcome is unexpected.
Since we never attempt to sweep an HTLC we offered with the preimage on
the remote's commitment, we never use the constant
AcceptedHtlcSuccessWitnessSize for weight estimation. Similarly, we
never timout an HTLC offered by the remote on our own commitment, and
don't need the constant OfferedHtlcTimeoutWitnessSize.
Duplicate payments is legacy that we keep alive for accounting purposes.
This commit isolates the deserialization logic for duplicate payments in
its own file, so that regular payment logic and db structure can evolve
without needing to handle/migrate the legacy data.