In this commit, we extend the `BuildRoute` method and RPC on the router
sub-server to accept a raw payment address which will be included as
part of an MPP payload for the finla hop. This change actually also
allows users to craft their own MPP paths using BuildRoute+SendToRoute.
Our primary goal however, was to fix some broken itests since we now
require the payAddr to be present for ALL payments other than key send
payments.
In this commit, we move to start rejecting any normal payments that
aren't keysend, if they don't also include the MPP invoice payload. With
this change, we require that some sort of e2e secret (either the payment
addr or the keysend pre-image) is present in a payload before we'll
accept the payment.
The second portion of the commit also updates all current tests in the
package. We kept the base `TestSettleInvoice` test in-tact as it still
exercises some useful behavior. However, we've removed all cases that
allow an overpayment, as the new MPP logic doesn't allow overpayment for
various reasons. In addition to this, some of the returned errors are
slightly different, tho the actual behavior is equivalent.
In this commit, we add a new RequiresFeature method to the feature
vector struct. This method allows us to check if the set of features
we're examining *require* that the even portion of a bit pair be set.
This can be used to check if new behavior should be allowed (after we
flip new bits to be required) for existing contexts.
In this commit, we move to start requiring the payment addr feature bit
in the invoices we produce. With this change, if a user attempts to pay
one of our invoices (assuming they're also an lnd node), then they'll
receive an error when they attempt to pay. At this point, *most* lnd
nodes should be on v0.11 at this point, and this change will notify any
lagging wallet authors to update, as these payments are generally more
secure.
To finally end the discussion what Dockerfile should be used for what
and whether we should build from local source or check out from git, we
place both Dockerfiles next to each other and explicitly document their
purpose.
Since it turned out borking channels on every received error could cause
us to bork channels in case of a sync error with C-lightning, we revert
this for now.
Now that inputs might have accompanied outputs to be added to the sweep
tx, we add them to the sweep transaction first, and account for it when
calculating the change amount.
If inputs require outputs to be added at the same time, this will
change the weight and amount calculations, so we must account for that.
We wait to get the weight estimator for the sweep tx until needed,
such that we can easily choose whether to include a change output or not
in the estimate. This is needed for the case where the second level
transactions can pay for their own fee, so no change output is needed.
Currently trying to run etcd tests on darwin will cause the timeouts to
improperly select timeouts_darwin.go which are stricter than
timeouts_etcd.go. We fix this by always defaulting to timeouts_etcd.go
no matter the platform, and only falling back to timeouts_darwin.go if
the kvdb_etcd tag is not present.
In some tests we moved channeld.db to a temp location in order to
"time travel". This commit extends the existing semantics by moving all
files, including embedded etcd db too besides the channeld.db file.
We add a GitHub workflow that is triggered whenever a new version tag is
pushed. It will trigger a docker image build for that version and
automatically push it to the specified repo.