This change was inspired by #1984 - the underlying call to
ListUnspent supports a (min, max) range so it makes sense that
the WalletController interface can also support this; a
default no-maximum can be expressed using a MaxInt32 value.
Due to a recent change within the codebase to return estimated fee rates
in sat/kw, this commit ensures that we use this fee rate properly by
calculing a transaction's fees using its weight. This includes all of
the different transactions that are created within lnd (funding, sweeps,
etc.). On-chain transactions still rely on a sat/vbyte fee rate since it's
required by btcwallet.
This commit moves the responsibility for publishing the funding tx to
the network from the wallet to the funding manager. This is done to
distinguish the failure of completing the reservation within the wallet
and failure of publishing the transaction.
Earlier we could fail to broadcast the transaction, which would cause us
to fail the funding flow. This is not something we can do directly,
since the CompeteReservation call will mark the channel IsPending in the
databas.e
In this commit, we add a precautionary assertion at the end of
createCommitmentTx. This assertion is meant to ensure that we don't
accept or propose a commitment transaction that attempts to send out
more than it was funded with.
In this commit, we modify the way we generate the secrets for
revocation roots to be fully deterministic. Rather than use a special
key and derive all sub-roots from that (mixing in some “salts”), we’ll
use the proper keychain.KeyFamily instead. This ensures that given a
static description of the channel, we’re able to re-derive our
revocation root properly.
In this commit, we modify the funding flow process to obtain all keys
necessary from the keychain.KeyRing interface. This ensure that all
keys we generate are fully deterministic.
Before this commit, if the remaining change was small enough, then it
was possible for us to generate a non-std funding transaction. This is
an issue as the txn would fail to propagate, meaning funds could
potentially be stuck in limbo if users didn't manually drop their
transaction history.
To avoid this scenario, we won't create a change output that is dusty.
Instead, we'll add these as miner fees.
Fixes#690.
In this PR, we entirely remove the closeObserver from the channel state
machine. It was added very early on before most of the other aspects of
the daemon were built out. This goroutine was responsible for
dispatching notifications to outside parties if the commitment
transaction was spent at all. This had several issues, since it was
linked to the *lifetime* of the channel state machine itself. As a
result of this linkage, we had to do weird stuff like hand off in
memory pointers to the state machine in order to ensure notifications
were properly dispatched.
This commit fixes a lingering bug that could at times cause
incompatibilities with other implementations when attempting a
cooperative channel close. Before this commit, we would use a pointer
to the funding txin everywhere. As a result, each time we made a new
state, or verified one, we would modify the sequence field of the main
txin of the commitment transaction. Due to this if we updated the
channel, then went to do a cooperative channel closure, the sequence of
the txin would still be set to the value we used as the state hint.
To remedy this, we now copy the txin each time when making the
commitment transaction, and also the cooperative closure transaction.
This avoids accidentally mutating the txin itself.
Fixes#502.
Before this commit, during a reservation, we wouldn’t ever specify our
minHTL value. We don’t yet fully validate all channel constrains, but
doing this now serves to ensure that once those features are merged,
we’ll actually be setting a valid value for minHTLC.
In this commit, we modify the funding reservation workflow slightly to
allow callers to specify their own custom fee when initialization a
funding workflow. This gives power-users the ability to control exactly
how much in fees are paid for each new funding transaction.
In this commit, we move the FeeEstimator interface into a distinct file
as follow up commits will begin to flesh out the interface with
additional implementations.
Fix wrong calculation of overshot amount which causes coin select
function to go into infinite loop. If overshoot amount is calculated
by subtraction of totalSatoshis and amtNeeded than on the second
iteration of loop amtNeeded already include required fee inside, which
causes continuation of the coin selection loop.
The fee estimation for funding transactions now properly accounts for
different types of UTXOs spent, whereas previously it assumed all
inputs were spending native P2WKH outputs.
In this commit, we extend the help message for `newaddress`
to indicate which address types can be used when directly
funding channels. Additionally, we add some additional text
to the insufficient funding error to detail that we don't have
enough witness outputs.
This commit fixes an existing w.r.t the way that we constructed all
commitment transactions. We were computing the hash that the obfsucator
was derived form correctly, but we were using the first 6-bytes, rather
than the last 6 bytes.
We no longer attach the RPC client to the lnwallet logging instance as
it can generate a ton of spam in trace mode as it’ll dump the entire
hex encoded blocks, transactions, etc.