This commit uses the new coop-close-target-confs value as the default to
use for a nodes self initiated channel closures if the conf-target flag
for the channel closure is not set. The defaults for both these options
is 6 so this shouldnt change current behaviour.
When we either don't use macaroons (because the global --no-macaroons
flag is set) or don't need them (for the wallet unlocker commands), we
don't try to read the file at all to avoid running into an error if the
file doesn't exist (which it doesn't in those two cases).
This commit enables lnd to request and renew a Let's Encrypt
certificate. This certificate is used both for the grpc as well as the
rest listeners. It allows clients to connect without having a copy of
the (public) server certificate.
Co-authored-by: Vegard Engen <vegard@engen.priv.no>
Due to a misunderstanding about how the entities/actions are encoded
inside the macaroon, only the first action was printed per entity.
Even though we add them as separate pairs in the macaroon service (for
example "offchain:read" and "offchain:write"), they are grouped in the
serialized macaroon ("offchain:read,write").
A profile file can contain multiple profile entries. Each
entry has a name, a set of default options to use and an optional list
of macaroons in a jar. The profile file can be
serialized/deserialized to and from JSON.
This commit adds a shutdown logger which will send a request for
shutdown on critical errors. It uses the signal package to request safe
shutdown of the daemon. Since we init our logs in config validation,
we add a started channel to the signal package to prevent the case where
we have a critical log after the ShutdownLogger has started but before
the daemon has started listening for intercepts. In this case, we just
ignore the shutdown request.
The new table format for the pay command started to use the
`Millisecond()` method on `time.Duration`. However, this method was only
added in Go 1.13, so this breaks the build for Go 1.12. We replace this
by manual division. `time.Duration` "natively" is in nanoseconds, so we
covert to milli seconds by dividing my `time.Millisecond`, which is
1,000,000.