This commit adds the feature bit and additional fields
required in `open_channel` and `accept_channel` wire
messages for `option_upfront_shutdown_script`.
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 ensure that when we read node aliases from the wire,
we ensure that they're valid. Before this commit, we would read the raw
bytes without checking for validity which could result in us writing in
invalid node alias to disk. We've fixed this, and also updated the
quickcheck tests to generate valid strings.
In this commit, we export the ReadElements and WriteElements functions.
We do this as exporting these functions makes it possible for outside
packages to define serializations which use the BOLT 1.0 wire format.
Modifies the behavior of the quick test for
MsgQueryShortChanIDs, such that the generated
slice of expected short chan ids is always nil
if no elements are returned. This mimics the
behavior of the zlib decompression, where
elements are appended to the slice, instead of
assigning to preallocated slice.
In this commit, we replace all instances of *btcec.PublicKey within the
announcement messages with a simple [33]byte. We do this as usually we
don’t need to immediately validate an announcement, therefore we can
avoid the scalar multiplications during decoding.
In this commit, we add a new type to the lnwire package:
ChanUpdateFlag. This type represent the bitfield that’s used within the
ChannelUpdate message to give additional details as how the message
should be interpreted.
In this commit, we add support within lnwire for the optional dataloss
fields in ChannelReestablish. With these fields, it’s possible to:
verify that the remote node really knows of the state of our prior
local commitment, and also that they’ve sent us the current commitment
point for their current state.
In the event of dataloss, it’s possible for the party which lost data
to claim their commitment output in the remote party’s commitment if
they broadcast their current commitment transaction.
In this commit, we begin implementing the latest spec change to reduce
the attack surface on online channels. In this commit, we introduce a
distinct HTLC base point which will be used to sign the second-level
HTLC transactions for each active HLTC on the commitment transaction of
the remote node. With this, we allow the commitment key to remain
offline, as it isn’t needed in routine channel updates, unless we need
to go to chain.
In this commit the reestablish message have been added, which serves as
channel state synchronization message. Before exchanging the messages
for particular channel peers have to send it to each other as the
first message in order to be sure that non of the updates have been
lost because of the previous disconnect.
In this commit we add a new type to the lnwire package: FundingFlag.
This type will serve as an enum to describe the possible flags that can
be used within the ChannelFlags field in the OpenChannel struct.
We also define the first assigned flag: FFAnnounceChannel, which
indicates if the initiator of the funding flow wishes to announce the
channel to the greater network.
This commit fixes an existing deviation in the way we encode+decode the
addresses within the NodeAnnouncement message with that of the
specification. Prior to this commit, we would encode the _number_ of
addresses, rather than the number of bytes it takes to encode all the
addresses.
In this commit, we fix this mistake by properly writing out the total
number of bytes, modifying our parsing to take account of this new
encoding.
This corrects the fuzz test in TestLightningWireProtocol for
MsgCommitSig to avoid creating an empty slice since the decoded message
only creates a slice when there are greater than zero signatures and an
empty slice is not considered equal to a nil slice under reflection.
This can be tested by running the TestLightningWireProtocol 1000 times
in a loop with and without this change.
This commit modifies the NodeAnnouncement message to ensure that it
matches the current spec ordering. The spec was recently modified to
place the feature vector first to allow for future changes to the
fields to be forwards compatible.
In this commit BOLT#4 specification message have been added to the
lnwire package. This messsage is needed in order to notify payment
sender that forwarding node unable to parse the onion blob.
This commit modifies ReadMessage to no longer return the total bytes
read as this value will now be calculated at a higher level. The
io.Reader that’s passed to ReadMessage is expected to contain the
_entire_ message rather than be a pointer into a stream that contains
the message itself.
This commit does away with all the old manual message equality tests
and replace it with a single property-based test that uses the
testing/quick package. This test uses a single scenario which MUST hold
for all the messages type and all possible messages generated for those
types. As a result we are able to do away with all the prior manually
generated test data as the fuzzer to scan the input space looking for a
message that violates the scenario.
Change the name of fields of messages which are belong to the discovery
subsystem in a such way so they were the same with the names that are
defined in the specification.
This commit modifies address handling in the NodeAnnouncement struct,
switching from net.TCPAddr to []net.Addr. This enables more flexible
address handling with multiple types and multiple addresses for each
node. This commit addresses the first part of issue #131 .
This commit modifies the login of sent/recv’d wire messages in trace
mode in order utilize the more detailed, and automatically generated
logging statements using pure spew.Sdump.
In order to avoid the spammy messages due to spew printing the
btcec.S256() curve paramter within wire messages with public keys, we
introduce a new logging function to unset the curve paramter to it
isn’t printed in its entirety. To insure we don’t run into any panics
as a result of a nil pointer defense, we now copy the public keys
during the funding process so we don’t run into a panic due to
modifying a pointer to the same object.
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.
We now enforce that the site of all revocation pre-images+hashes (used
for HTLC’s) are now 32-bytes.
Additionally, all payment pre-images are now required to be 32-bytes
not he wire. There also exists a Script level enforcement of the
payment pre-image size at a lower level.
This commit serves to unify the sizes of all hashes/pre-images across
the codebase.