This commit adds the icase name to the log filename, to make it simpler
to find problematic tests. Additionally after this commit we'll restart
Alice and Bob (the base harness nodes) before each icase to start with a
clean state.
To make sure the test that takes the longest overall time is always
started first, independent of the number of test tranches we run, we
move it to the beginning of the list. Because that test involves a lot
of waiting, it allows us to play around with the number of tranches more
efficiently.
Updating the fee of the mock estimator _after_ starting carol turned out
to be flaky and could lead to the new fee not being picked up in time
for the force close. That lead to carol not cpfp'ing the force closed
transaction.
To allow running multiple test tranches in parallel, we need a way to
make sure the TCP ports don't collide. We'll work with offsets for the
ports, using a different offset for each tranche.
This fixes tests that were surfaced as flaky. Usually these tests had
an off-by-one error when mining blocks while waiting for a
CSV-encumbered output.
As a preparation to fix an issue with the mempool wait, we clean up the
multi-hop itests a bit. We fix the formatting, use the require library
for assertions consistently and simplify some of the wait predicates.
Commonly used code is also extracted into functions.
In some cases the router isn't yet fully aware of all newly opened
channels. We need to give it some time to process the updates. Therefore
we add a wait for sending payments to give it a few more changes to
catch up.
This fixes itest flakes that happen when a payment is attempted that
ends up causing a channel closure.
completePaymentRequests() attempts to monitor the open channels after a
payment is attempted in order to identify that payment was actually
dispatched to a remote node before returning.
However, when the payment actually causes a channel closure (for
example, because the receiver sent an incorrect preimage) this logic
fails in that the channel will no longer the found in the list of open
channels. This could cause a flake when there was enough time for the
channel to close before performing the check.
One example of such a flaky test is failing_link.
This fixes the issue by also checking whether the total number of
channels was reduced, which indicates (assuming itest operations are
being executed serially) that one of the attempted payments affected at
least one channel.
This ensures the Carol and Dave nodes created in the single_hop series
of tests are synced to the latest chain tip generated by the miner
before creating the route that will eventually be used for payments.
This prevents a flake during CI tests where slow processing of blocks by
Carol could cause the generated route to have a final CLTV delta too
short for Dave to accept.
While at it, we switch the test to use the default CLTV delta provided
by QueryRoutes which is now the global default CLTV.
We create a new build flag for running the bitcoind tests without the
txindex enabled. We don't want this to be the default so we use a
negated build flag.
Now that we have all functions that we need to complete the whole
PSBT channel funding flow, we change the itest to use Dave's wallet
to fund the channel from Carol to Dave through a PSBT.
We fix all linter issues except for the 'lostcontext' and 'unparam' ones
as those are too numerous and would increase the diff even more.
Therefore we silence them in the itest directory for now.
Because the linter is still not build tag aware, we also have to silence
the unused and deadcode sub linters to not get false positives.
In this commit, we modify our build tag set up to allow the main test
files to be buildable w/o the current rpctest tag. We do this so that
those of us that use extensions which will compile live files like
vim-go can once again fix compile errors as we go in our editors.
In order to do this, we now make an external `testsCases` variable, and
have two variants: one that's empty (no build tag), and one that's fully
populated with all our tests (build tag active). As a result, the main
file will now always build regardless of if the build tag is active or
not, but we'll only actually execute tests if the `testCases` variable
has been populated.
As sample run w/ the tag off:
```
=== RUN TestLightningNetworkDaemon
--- PASS: TestLightningNetworkDaemon (0.00s)
PASS
ok github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/lntest/itest 0.051s
```
For unconfirmed commit tx anchors, supply the sweeper with cpfp info and
a confirmation target fee estimate.
The sweeper will try to pay for the parent commit tx as long as the
current fee estimate exceeds the pre-signed commit tx fee rate.
As we already create two channels in our PSBT funding flow itest we can
easily just submit the final transaction for the second channel in the
raw wire format to test this new functionality.
- let users specify their MAXIMUM WUMBO with new config option which sets the maximum channel size lnd will accept
- current implementation is a simple check by the fundingManager rather than anything to do with the ChannelAcceptor
- Add test cases which verify that maximum channel limit is respected for wumbo/non-wumbo channels
- use --maxchansize 0 value to distinguish set/unset config. If user sets max value to 0 it will not do anything as 0 is currently used to indicate to the funding manager that the limit should not be enforced. This seems justifiable since --maxchansize=0 doesn't seem to make sense at first glance.
- add integration test case to ensure that config parsing and valiation is proper. I simplified the funding managers check electing to rely on config.go to correctly parse and set up either i) non wumbo default limit of 0.16 BTC OR ii) wumbo default soft limit of 10 BTC
Addresses: https://github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/issues/4557
Previously the chainbackend connected to the miner using a permanent
connection, which would retry the connection when it’s disconnected.
It would leave multiple connections between the chainbackend and the
miner, causing difficulties in debugging. Currently, there are two
occasions when disconnection happens. One happens when running the open
channel reorg test, the miner is connected/disconnected multiple times
on purpose. The other happens when the chainbackend receives a
MSG_WITNESS_TX type from the miner, which would be considered as an
invalid type and disconnects the miner. With the latter one being fixed
in btcd, the chainbackend will still be disconnected from the miner if
it reaches the ban score by requesting too many notfound messages in a
short time which is why the `--nobanning` flag is added.
To fix the compiler of some IDEs complaining about types and functions
it cannot find, we rename all files that contain tests back to lnd_xxx_test.go to make
sure they are compiled correctly.
This commit moves all localized instances of mock implementations of
the Signer interface to the lntest/mock package. This allows us to
remove a lot of code and have it housed under a single interface in
many cases.
We change the external funding test to now test two more things: First
that we can open multiple externally funded channels without needing to
lift the default --maxpendingchannels setting. Then we test that we can
use the safer pending_funding_shim_only flag of the AbandonChannel RPC
to get rid of the never confirming external channels.
As a preparation to test accepting multiple externally funded channels
at the same time, we extract the deriveFundingShim function from the
external funding integration test.
Follow up labelling of external transactions with labels for the
transaction types we create within lnd. Since these labels will live
a life of string matching, a version number and rigid format is added
so that string matching is less painful. We start out with channel ID,
where available, and a transaction "type". External labels, added in a
previous PR, are not updated to this new versioned label because they
are not lnd-initiated transactions. Label matching can check this case,
then check for a version number.
This reduces the flakiness of the CPFP test by asserting the wallet has
seen the unspent output before attempting to perform the walletkit's
BumpFee method.
Previously the attempt to bump the fee of the target transaction could
be made before the wallet had had a chance to fully process the
transaction, causing a flaky error.
This switches a few call sites that used a different timeout when
openening channels to the correct openChannelTimeout, which better deal
with flakes in the CI.
This replaces an outstanding sleep for a check for a specific state
during the test for watchtower use: specifically, that the backup has
been sent to the watchtower prior to shutting down Dave.
This reduces flakiness in the test that could occur if the Dave shutdown
without the backup being comitted to the watchtower, causing the rest of
the test to fail.
This changes the wait during node connection to check both for the
existance as well as for the validity of the tls cert and macaroon
files.
This ensures that nodes in the process of starting up don't inadvertedly
cause a connection error due to not yet having written the entire file.
During the channel_backup_restore/restore_during_unlock itest, the node
is restored from seed and immediately restarted. Depending on specific
timing of the machine, the test harness might not have had the graph
subscription processed before the node shuts down, causing the harness
to trigger a panic.
Reducing this to a synchronous subscription attempt means node
initialization necessarily waits until the subscription is done before
attempting to restart, reducing flakiness and ensuring correct behavior.
This forces the Dial attempt to succeed or fail before proceeding with
node setup.
We also log on the node a failure to establish the graph subscription
before panicking so that we can more easily find issues.
This improves the error reporting for the harness' CloseChannel so that
the exact step where closure fails can be better indicated.
This is to help debug some flaky failures in the CI.
In this commit, we split off the protocol options into a normal and
legacy sub-config. The legacy sub-config protected by a built tag, and
will only be populated if thet tag is set. Legacy options now have a
`legacy` prefix. So `--protocol.legacyonion` is now `--protocol.onion`,
and `--protocol.committweak`, is now `--protocol.legacy.committweak`.
We also create a new experimental protocol feature sub-config for newer
features that may not yet been fully complete, so they require a build
tag.
This is useful when we wish to have a channel frozen for a specific
amount of blocks after its confirmation. This could also be done with an
absolute thaw height, but it does not suit cases where a strict block
delta needs to be enforced, as it's not possible to know for certain
when a channel will be included in the chain. To work around this, we
add a relative interpretation of the field, where if its value is below
500,000, then it's interpreted as a relative height. This approach
allows us to prevent further database modifications to account for a
relative thaw height.
In this commit we add the ability to intercept forwarded htlc packets
straight from the RPC layer. The RPC layer handles a bidrectional stream
that comminucates to the client the intercepted packets and handles its
response by coordinating with the interceptable switch.
As part of the preparation to the switch interceptor feature, this
function is changed to return error instead of error channel that
is closed automatically.
Returning an error channel has become complex to maintain and
implement when adding more asynchronous flows to the switch.
The change doesn't affect the current behavior which logs the
errors as before.
This commit extends the link with a new synchronous delivery point for
local UpdateAddHTLC messages. The switch method SendHTLC is updated to
use this delivery point and thereby becomes a synchronous call.
For MPP payments, synchronous hand-off is important. Otherwise the next
pathfinding round could start without the channel balance updated yet.
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.