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.
In this commit, we fix a minor deviation in our implementation from the
specification. Before if we encountered an unknown error type, we would
disconnect the peer. Instead, we’ll now just continue along parsing the
remainder of the messages. This was flared up recently by some
c-lightning related incompatibilities that emerged on main net.
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 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 is a very simple bug that go-fuzz found. If length of an address
within CloseSigned is greater than 34, a runtime error: slice bounds out
of range happens. An error should be returned instead.
This commit adds a new type to the lnwire package: MilliSatoshi. A
milli-satoshi is simply 1/1000th of a satoshi, and will be used for all
internal accounting when sending payments, calculating fees, updating
commitment state, etc. Two helper methods are added: ToBTC(), and
ToSatoshis() to make manipulation of the values easy.
This commit modifies the readElement and writeElement functions to add
the capability of reading/writing a slice of btcec.Signature. This new
case is required for the upcoming commit which will modify the
CommitSig message to include a field which houses signatures of reach
HTLC on the commitment transaction.
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 implements the new ping/pong messages along with their new
behavior. The new set of ping/pong messages allow clients to generate
fake cover traffic as the ping messages tells the pong message how many
bytes to included and can also be padded itself.
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 creates a distint type for the opaque failure reason within
the UpdateFailHTLC message. This new type is needed as this is the only
variable length byte slice within the protocol and therefore requires a
length prefix in order to serialize/deserialize properly.
This commit morphs the prior CancelHTLC into the new UpdateFailHTLC
message and also gets rid of the obsolete HLTCAddReject message while
we’re at it.
The primary change from the CancelHTLC message to the UpdateFailHTLC
message is that the CancelReason is now simply called Reason and that
it’s now an opaque encrypted set of bytes. With this update the failure
messages are now more flexible (they can even carry new
ChannelUpdate’s) and also don’t reveal the exact cause of failure to
intermediate nodes.
'init' message is the first message reveals the features supported or required
by this node. Nodes wait for receipt of the other's features to simplify error
diagnosis where features are incompatible. This message will help negotioate the
the features which are supported by both sides.
This commit adds a new field to the CancelHTLC message which describes
the event that led to an HTLC being cancelled up stream.
A new enum has been added which describers the “why” concerning the
cancellation of the HTLC. Currently the encoding and back propagation
of the errors aren’t properly implemented as defined within the spec.
As a result the current error types provide to privacy as the error are
in plain-site rather doing being properly encrypted.
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.
This commit removes the older routing/discovery messages from the
unwire package, as we’ll be converging towards BOLT07 in the near-term.
In the mid to far term we’ll be revisiting integrating Flare into the
newer scheme in order to take advantage of its scaling characteristics.