To fix the compiler of some IDEs complaining about types and functions
it cannot find, we rename all files that contain tests back to lnd_xxx_test.go to make
sure they are compiled correctly.
This commit moves all localized instances of mock implementations of
the Signer interface to the lntest/mock package. This allows us to
remove a lot of code and have it housed under a single interface in
many cases.
We change the external funding test to now test two more things: First
that we can open multiple externally funded channels without needing to
lift the default --maxpendingchannels setting. Then we test that we can
use the safer pending_funding_shim_only flag of the AbandonChannel RPC
to get rid of the never confirming external channels.
As a preparation to test accepting multiple externally funded channels
at the same time, we extract the deriveFundingShim function from the
external funding integration test.
Follow up labelling of external transactions with labels for the
transaction types we create within lnd. Since these labels will live
a life of string matching, a version number and rigid format is added
so that string matching is less painful. We start out with channel ID,
where available, and a transaction "type". External labels, added in a
previous PR, are not updated to this new versioned label because they
are not lnd-initiated transactions. Label matching can check this case,
then check for a version number.
This reduces the flakiness of the CPFP test by asserting the wallet has
seen the unspent output before attempting to perform the walletkit's
BumpFee method.
Previously the attempt to bump the fee of the target transaction could
be made before the wallet had had a chance to fully process the
transaction, causing a flaky error.
This switches a few call sites that used a different timeout when
openening channels to the correct openChannelTimeout, which better deal
with flakes in the CI.
This replaces an outstanding sleep for a check for a specific state
during the test for watchtower use: specifically, that the backup has
been sent to the watchtower prior to shutting down Dave.
This reduces flakiness in the test that could occur if the Dave shutdown
without the backup being comitted to the watchtower, causing the rest of
the test to fail.
This changes the wait during node connection to check both for the
existance as well as for the validity of the tls cert and macaroon
files.
This ensures that nodes in the process of starting up don't inadvertedly
cause a connection error due to not yet having written the entire file.
During the channel_backup_restore/restore_during_unlock itest, the node
is restored from seed and immediately restarted. Depending on specific
timing of the machine, the test harness might not have had the graph
subscription processed before the node shuts down, causing the harness
to trigger a panic.
Reducing this to a synchronous subscription attempt means node
initialization necessarily waits until the subscription is done before
attempting to restart, reducing flakiness and ensuring correct behavior.
This forces the Dial attempt to succeed or fail before proceeding with
node setup.
We also log on the node a failure to establish the graph subscription
before panicking so that we can more easily find issues.
This improves the error reporting for the harness' CloseChannel so that
the exact step where closure fails can be better indicated.
This is to help debug some flaky failures in the CI.
In this commit, we split off the protocol options into a normal and
legacy sub-config. The legacy sub-config protected by a built tag, and
will only be populated if thet tag is set. Legacy options now have a
`legacy` prefix. So `--protocol.legacyonion` is now `--protocol.onion`,
and `--protocol.committweak`, is now `--protocol.legacy.committweak`.
We also create a new experimental protocol feature sub-config for newer
features that may not yet been fully complete, so they require a build
tag.
This is useful when we wish to have a channel frozen for a specific
amount of blocks after its confirmation. This could also be done with an
absolute thaw height, but it does not suit cases where a strict block
delta needs to be enforced, as it's not possible to know for certain
when a channel will be included in the chain. To work around this, we
add a relative interpretation of the field, where if its value is below
500,000, then it's interpreted as a relative height. This approach
allows us to prevent further database modifications to account for a
relative thaw height.
In this commit we add the ability to intercept forwarded htlc packets
straight from the RPC layer. The RPC layer handles a bidrectional stream
that comminucates to the client the intercepted packets and handles its
response by coordinating with the interceptable switch.
As part of the preparation to the switch interceptor feature, this
function is changed to return error instead of error channel that
is closed automatically.
Returning an error channel has become complex to maintain and
implement when adding more asynchronous flows to the switch.
The change doesn't affect the current behavior which logs the
errors as before.
This commit extends the link with a new synchronous delivery point for
local UpdateAddHTLC messages. The switch method SendHTLC is updated to
use this delivery point and thereby becomes a synchronous call.
For MPP payments, synchronous hand-off is important. Otherwise the next
pathfinding round could start without the channel balance updated yet.
This fixes an issue where the contract court could leave a completely
swept commit tx unresolved if it was swept by the remote party.
This could happen if (our) commit tx just published was actually a
previously revoked state, in which case the remote party would claim the
funds via a justice transaction.
This manifested itself in the testRevokedCloseRetribution integration
test where at the end of the test Bob was left with a pending channel
that never resolved itself.
The message in the response stream changed. Rename the calls themselves,
to prevent older applications from getting decode errors. Especially
troublesome is the case where the request is executed (send payment),
but the application can't read the outcome (payment sent or not?)
This commit fixes the inconsistency between the payment state as
reported by routerrpc.SendPayment/routerrpc.TrackPayment and the main
rpc ListPayments call.
In addition to that, payment state changes are now sent out for every
state change. This opens the door to user interfaces giving more
feedback to the user about the payment process. This is especially
interesting for multi-part payments.
This commit removes the overflowQueue from the link. We do so in order
to promote better UX for senders, so that HTLCs are failed faster when
the commitment is full. This gives the sender the opportunity to try
another, more open path, rather than perceive the HTLC as being stuck.
At the same time, we remove the total number of active goroutines in lnd
by a factor of N where N is the number of active channels.
This is mainly motivated by a now fixed bug in the wallet in which
change addresses could at times be created outside of the default key
scopes. Recovery only used to be performed on the default key scopes, so
ideally this test case would've caught the bug earlier.
Move enum out of CloseSummary struct for more general use. This does
not change the encoding of the enum, and will only cause compile time
errors for existing clients. This enum has not been included in a
release yet, so we can make this move without much disruption.
In #4130, OpenChannel was changed to assert that the wallet is fully
synced before allowing a channel open. This introduced flakes on travis,
which are resolved here by using a wait predicate when calling
OpenChannel.
Note there is one existing call that was not converted, because it is
interested in the returned error. This call does not have a wait
predicate surrounding it, but this shouldn't cause a flake because other
channels are opened earlier in the test that will have already waited
for the wallet to sync up.
testSendToRouteMultiPath tests that we are able to successfully route a
payment using multiple shards across different paths, by using SendToRoute.
Co-authored-by: Joost Jager <joost.jager@gmail.com>
In preparation for MPP we return the terminal errors recorded with the
control tower. The reason is that we cannot return immediately when a
shard fails for MPP, since there might be more shards in flight that we
must wait for. For that reason we instead mark the payment failed in the
control tower, then return this error when we inspect the payment,
seeing it has been failed and there are no shards in flight.
These tests exercise the different ways of sweeping a commitment, so
we'll cover the modified scripts used for anchor commitments and
spending the anchor itself by both parties.
Co-authored-by: Johan T. Halseth <johanth@gmail.com>
Fixes a subtle bug where the outer scope predErr was hidden when the
return value of findForceClosedChannel was stored in a newly
defined variable with the same name.
Start anchor sweep attempts immediately after the commitment transaction
has been published. This makes the anchor known to the sweeper and
allows the user to bump the fee on it to get their commitment
transaction confirmed in case the fee committed too is insufficient for
timely confirmation.
In this commit, we extend the current SCB recovery tests to also cover
the new anchor commitment type. We only add a single test that covers
the most common case to avoid needing to tests all cases for all
commitment types which is being done in a follow up PR.