Incoming htlcs that are timed out or failed (invalid htlc or invoice
condition not met), save a single on chain resolution because we don't
need to take any actions on them ourselves (we don't need to worry
about 2 stage claims since this is the success path for our peer).
Our current set of reports contain much of the information we will
need to persist contract resolutions. We add a function to create
resolver reports from our exiting set of resolutions.
To allow us to write the outcome of our resolver to disk, we add
optional resolver reports to the CheckPoint function. Variadic params
are used because some checkpoints may have no reports (when the resolver
is not yet complete) and some may have two (in the case of a two stage
resolution).
Previously it wasn't possible to store a preimage in the invoice
database and signal that a payment should not be settled right away. The
only way to hold a payment was to insert the magic UnknownPreimage value
in the invoice database. This commit introduces a distinct flag to
signal that an invoice is a hold invoice and thereby allows the preimage
to be present in the database already.
Preparation for (key send) hodl invoices for which we already know the
preimage.
Add label parameter to PublishTransaction in WalletController
interface. A labels package is added to store generic labels that are
used for the different types of transactions that are published by lnd.
To keep commit size down, the two endpoints that require a label
parameter be passed down have a todo added, which will be removed in
subsequent commits.
This adds a test to the commit sweeper resolver to ensure it behaves
properly if the local node breaches a channel.
In this situation the remote party is expected to sweep the breached
output to itself and therefore the local party won't be able to recover
any funds.
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.
In this commit, we add some additional logging of the commitments at
play when we detect a channel closure on-chain. This should help to
debug things more in the future as we don't log the full commitments
anywhere. We also now also print the type of commitment as well, as a
follow up from the recent anchor outputs work. In the near future, as we
implement a dynamic commitments update protocol, always logging the
commitment type as well will likely be useful for debugging purposes.
Sweeping anchors and being able to bump the fee was already added in a
previous commit. This commit extends anchor sweeping with an anchor
resolver object that becomes active after the commitment tx confirms.
At that point, the anchors do not serve the purpose of getting the
commitment tranaction confirmed anymore. It is however still possible to
reclaim some of their value if using a low fee rate.
Preparation for anchor resolver. The recovered anchor amount should
still be included in the pending channel report even after it has been
resolved.
This also fixes an existing bug that in some cases caused the recovered
amount from an htlc resolver not to be included in the total.
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.
Prior to this change, the trigger height for closed channels was set to
the current best block height. As this height is in some cases used as a
height hint, the spend may have been missed.
We use the fact that we can tell whether the commit is local or remote
by inspecting the witness script. We cannot use the maturity delay
anymore, as we can have delayed to_remote outputs also now.
Co-authored-by: Joost Jager <joost.jager@gmail.com>
This commit adds two new channel statuses which indicate the party that
initatited closing the channel. These statuses are set in conjunction
with the existing commit broadcast status so that we do not need to
migrate existing logic to handle multiple types of closes. This status
is set for locally initiated force closes in this commit because they
follow a similar pattern to cooparative closes, marking the commitment
broadcast then proceeding with tx broadcast. Remote force closes are
added in the following commit, as they are handled differently.
This commit enables the user to specify he is not interested in
automatically close channels with pending payments that their
corresponding htlcs have timed-out.
By requiring a configurable grace period uptime of our node
before closing such channels, we give a chance to the other node to
properly cancel the htlc and avoid unnecessary on-chain transaction.
In mobile it is very important for the user experience as otherwise
channels will be force closed more frequently.
This commit repalces the htlcResolution struct with an interface.
This interface is implemeted by failure, settle and accept resolution
structs. Only settles and fails are exported because the existing
code that handles htlc resolutions uses a nil resolution to indicate
that a htlc was accepted. The accept resolution is used internally
to report on the resolution result of the accepted htlc, but a nil
resolution is surfaced. Further refactoring of all the functions
that call NotifyExitHopHtlc to handle a htlc accept case (rather than
having a nil check) is required.
This commit changes the shouldGoOnChain signature to get the htlc
as parameter. I will allow the function to take decisions based on
whether the htlc is Incoming or Outgoing.
Based on the current channel type, we derive the script used for the
to_remote output. Currently only the unencumbered p2wkh type is used,
but that will change with upcoming channel types.
We abstract away how keys are generated for the different channel types
types (currently tweak(less)).
Intention is that more of the logic that is unique for each commitment
type lives in commitment.go, making the channel state machine oblivious
to the keys and outputs being created on the commitment tx for a given
channel state.