Currently trying to run etcd tests on darwin will cause the timeouts to
improperly select timeouts_darwin.go which are stricter than
timeouts_etcd.go. We fix this by always defaulting to timeouts_etcd.go
no matter the platform, and only falling back to timeouts_darwin.go if
the kvdb_etcd tag is not present.
In some tests we moved channeld.db to a temp location in order to
"time travel". This commit extends the existing semantics by moving all
files, including embedded etcd db too besides the channeld.db file.
We add a GitHub workflow that is triggered whenever a new version tag is
pushed. It will trigger a docker image build for that version and
automatically push it to the specified repo.
Previously, the verbose output of listsweeps would fail if we did not
find some sweeps in our wallet's listtransactions output. This could be
the case for sweeps that were rbf-ed, so the endpoint would fail. This
commit also updates the listsweeps endpoint to always check against the
wallet, so that we do not return these discarded sweeps that never
confirmed.
Similar to the previous commit, we fix a bug resulting in the wrong
commit weight being calculated when an HTLC just above the remote's
duslimit was added from the remote. This was a result of using the
successFee instead of the timeoutFee when checking whether it was dust,
making us consider it dust when it shouldn't have been.
In this commit we fix a bug resulting in the wrong commit weight being
calculated when an HTLC just below the remote's duslimit was added. This
was a result of using the timeoutFee instead of the successFee when
checking whether it was dust, making us consider it non-dust when it
should have been.
As of go version 1.15.x, the darwin-386 architecture is no longer
supported. Because we use that go version on Travis to assert all
architectures can be built successfully, we have to remove this
architecture from the list.
Because we now have conditionally compiled code that depends on the
architecture it is built for, we want to make sure we can build all
architectures that we also release. Since GitHub builds are very fast,
we can easily do this instead of only compiling for certain select
architectures.
This commit adds the compaction feature of the bbolt compact to our bolt
backend. This will try to open the DB in read-only mode and create a
compacted copy in a temporary file. Once the compaction was successful,
the temporary file and the old source file are swapped atomically.
With this commit we rename the existing AvailableDiskSpace function to
its correct name AvailableDiskSpaceRatio as it only returns a ratio. We
then go ahead and add a new function that returns the actual number of
free bytes available on a file system.
This also fixes some comments and always returns an error instead of
panicking.