This commit fixes a prior oversight in the implementation of
SendPayment that could result in tens of thousands of goroutines
OOM’ing an lnd daemon. Previously we didn’t limit the number of
outstanding payments that were allowed by a client. Users on machines
with a small amount of RAM were reporting crashes when sending a very
large number of payments in a consistent stream. This commit fixes this
issue by now using a semaphore to limit the number of outstanding
payments (and therefore) goroutines allowed in the SendPayment method.
This commit slightly modifies the handling of the Connect RPC to allow
users to omit the port when specifying the target node to connect to.
If the port isn’t specified, then the default p2p port will be used in
place.
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 removes all instances of the fastsha256 library and
replaces it with the sha256 library in the standard library. This
change should see a number of performance improvements as the standard
library has highly optimized assembly instructions with use vectorized
instructions as the platform supports.
This commit removes a number of sleeps from the set of current
integration tests by replacing them with a synchronous (w/ a timeout)
block until one or many channels are detected as being open within the
network.
As a result, the tests are now more robust, many flakes have been
eliminated, and finally this shaves a few second off of the integration
testing runs.
This commit modifies the two newly added network announcement hook stop
be at the lightningNode level rather than on the level of the entire
test framework. With this, callers are now able to better utilize the
newly added RPC’s since they can target particular peers and wait for
network messages to be processed rather then depending on a single node
(Alice) for information about the announcements propagated within the
network.
This commit implements the new server-side streaming RPC call within
the current default implementation of the RPC server. With this, the
new functionality can now be used within the integration tests to
achieve a greater degree of synchronization in the tests. As a result,
we should be able to eliminate many of the sleeps lingering within the
tests.
This commit adds a new field to the ListChannels RPC command which
indicates if the peer is currently online or not. This is useful as
UI’s will be able to use this information to communicate the
availability of each channel to an end user.
This commit updates all the RPC’s that deal with querying for data
stored within the graph to the latest version of the public API for the
graph itself.
With the funding manager’s state gaining full durability, it only will
return channels that are currently “pending” as a response to the
PendingChannels RPC call. As a result, the prior edge case where a user
would issue a PendingChannels RPC call mid funding flow is no longer
possible and channels are read from disk rather then from the
fundingMgr’s limbo state.
With the concept of open/pending channels on disk, we now will no
longer show channels under ListChannels that are still pending. This
fixes a slight existing bug wherein channels that weren’t yet open
would be listed in this RPC call since we write to disk immediately
after broadcasting the funding transaction.
In order to facilitate persistence during the funding process, added
the isPending flag to channels so that when the daemon restarts, we can
properly re-initialize the chain notifier and update the state of
channels that were going through the funding process.
github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd master ✗
0m ◒
▶ golint
htlcswitch.go:292:4: should replace numUpdates += 1 with numUpdates++
htlcswitch.go:554:6: var onionId should be onionID
htlcswitch.go:629:7: var onionId should be onionID
lnd_test.go:133:1: context.Context should be the first parameter of a
function
lnd_test.go:177:1: context.Context should be the first parameter of a
function
networktest.go:84:2: struct field nodeId should be nodeID
peer.go:1704:16: should omit 2nd value from range; this loop is
equivalent to `for invoice := range ...`
rpcserver.go:57:6: func newRpcServer should be newRPCServer
github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd master ✗
9m ⚑ ◒ ⍉
▶ go vet
features.go:12: github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/lnwire.Feature
composite literal uses unkeyed fields
fundingmanager.go:380: no formatting directive in Errorf call
exit status 1
Previously, during the channel funding process, peers sent wire
messages using peer.queueMsg. By switching to server.sendToPeer, the
fundingManager is more resilient to network connection issues or system
restarts during the funding process. With server.sendToPeer, if a peer
gets disconnected, the daemon can attempt to reconnect and continue the
process using the peer’s public key ID.
This commit addresses an edge case which has been discovered by testers
of lnd of testnet. When/if channels get out of sync the unilateral
channel closure of a remote node may go undetected, which causes the
local node to lose their ability to purge the now closed channel from
their database state.
With this commit, if we try to force close a channel but detect it as
double-spent due to a prior commitment transaction being broadcast,
then we simply forget the channel as it has already been closed.
This commit removes the BlockChainIO interface as a dependency to the
LightningChannel struct as the interface is no longer used within the
operation of the LightningChannel.
This commit fixes a potential panic that could arise when one was
attempting to open a channel with the target peer identified by it’s
peerID and an error occurred. In this case, the nodepubKey pointer
would be nil, resulting in a panic when attempting to propagate the
error.
This commit fixes this bug by using a nil byte slice for the node’s
serialized pubkey in the case that the node was identified according to
ti’s peer ID.
This commit moves much of the logic for querying for a potential route,
constructing the HTLC including the Sphinx packet, and sending the
ultimate payment from the rpcServer to the ChannelRouter.
This movement paves the way for muilt-path path finding as well as
adding automatic retry logic to the ChannelRouter. Additionally, by
having the ChannelRouter construct the Sphinx packet, we’ll be able to
also include the proper time-lock and general per-hop-payload
information properly in the future.
This commit slightly optimizes the process of broadcasting a message to
a list of peers, and also sending a set of messages to a target peer.
When broadcasting a message to a set of target peers, we now launch a
goroutine for each send as to not block the ChannelRouter on an
individual send. When sending a set of messages to a target peer, we
now give up the mutex as soon as we’ve access the map, rather than
holding onto it until the sending is complete.
This commit adds a new restriction around funding channels at the
daemon level: lnd nodes will not allow either the initiation or the
acceptance of a channel before the node is fully synced to the best
known chain.
This fixes a class of bug that arises when a new node joins the network
and either attempts to open a channel or has a channel extended to them
before the node is fully synced to the network.
This commit implements the newly added RPC to decode payment requests
passed over the command line or directly via gRPC.
With this tool, users can now examine payment requests they see in the
wild for diagnostic or debugging purposes.
This commit adds a soft-limit for the minimum allowed channel size.
Without this limit a user may inadvertently create an invalid or
unspendable output due to the hard coded fees in a few areas of the
codebase.
This is a temporary measure, and will be removed once we add dynamic
fees into the mix.
This commit augments the server’s response to successful SendPayment
commands by also returning the full path taken in order to fulfill the
payment. With this information, the user now obtains more context about
their payment whcih can be useful when debugging, or just exploring the
capabilities of the daemon.
This commit fixes a slight bug in the interaction between the cli
program and the rpcsever itself. With this commit it’s now again
possible to create a channel with a peer that’s identified by its
peerID, instead of only the pubkey.
This commit modifies the ConnectPeer RPC call and partitions the
behavior of the call into two scenarios: the connection should be
persistent which causes the call to be non-blocking, and the connection
should only attempt to connect once — which causes the call to be
blocking and report any error back to the caller.
As a result, the pendingConnRequest map and the logic around it is no
longer needed.
This commit adds daemon level support for pushing funds as part of the
single funder channel workflow. This new feature allows the user to
open a channel and simultaneously make a channel at the same time which
can improve the UX when setting up a channel for the first time.
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 adds a much needed feature to the daemon, namely the
ability to force close a channel while the source daemon doesn’t have
an active connection to the counter party. Previously this wasn’t
possible as ALL channel closures were routed through the htlcSwitch
which is only able to trigger a channel closure if the peer is online.
To remedy this, if the closure type is “force” then, we now handle the
channel closure and related RPC streaming updates from the call handler
site of the RPC itself. As a result, there are now only two htlcSwitch
channel closure types: breach, and regular. The logic that’s now in the
rpcSever should likely be refactored into a distinct sub-system, but
getting the initial functionality in is important.
Finally, the channel breach integration test has been modified to skip
connection the peers before attempting the forceful channel closure of
a revoked state as the remote peer no longer needs to be online.
This commit modifies the generated response to an “AddInvoice” RPC by
including an encoded payment request in the response. This change gives
callers a new atomic piece of information that they can present to the
payee, to allow completion of the payment in a seamless manner.
This commit slightly refactors the logic for the new outgoing payment
related RPC’s to more closely match the style of the rest of the
codebase. Additionally the tests have been updated to reflect the
changes to the protos of the new RPC’s.