* Previously, if the call to SetUp(..) returned an error, then the test
harness would fail to stop the running bcd process, and clean up the
test directories. This would cause any subsequent tests to fail. This
commit remedies this scenario.
Allows us to remove a lot of duplicated code pertaining to wallet
setup. We also gain hooks into the wallet to trigger callbacks once the
wallet is created/opened.
Instead of creating “fake” utxos for bob, and alice. We now employ a
dedicated mining node to hand out utxos, and generate blocks with hand
picked transactions.
A major change for btcwallet adding a new RPC wallet, refactoring parts
of the wallet, and introducing new functionality has been introduced.
This commit updates lnwallet to the API changes. A future commit will
change lnwallet to use some of the new functionality such as the
notification server, etc.
Select over the quit channel in order to shutdown goroutines waiting
for funding txn confirmations. Without this we may leak goroutines
which are blocked forever if the process isn’t exiting when the walet
is signaled to shutdown.
To try uspv, do ./lnd -spv
The remote node is hardcoded in shell.go. If you aren't
running a full node on localhost, specify where to connect to.
Nearby nodes will be much faster but random testnet nodes on the
internet should also work.
Synchronization now seems to work well even with the rapid fire
many inv-block messages that I'm seeing often on testnet3. I'm
not 100% sure measuring the len() of a buffered channel is safe
but it seems to work fine.
Got rid of 'sum' in the TxStore; can be computed from GetAllUtxos()
Might want to merge SCon and TxStore since there's not much going
on in TxStore any more...
pretty much everything is db based now. Still some concurrency issues
when multiple block inv messages come in (which they do) where
we used len(mBlockQueue) as a check for being synched up, which doesn't
quite work. Find a better way to do that...
Sync was non-deterministic because ingest was concurrent.
Now receiving tx messages is blocking, but that's OK, they really need
to be in the right order because the whole point of bitcoin is to put
txs in the right order. SendTx still has a problem that the change address
may not be recognized by ingest.
Seems that merkle blocks can return txs out of sequence, unlike
regular blocks which have to be in temporal/sequential order.
so maybe want to absorb ALL txs from mblock, then expel all?
I'm getting away from having both in-ram and on-disk stores for the transaction store data.
it should all be on disk, it's safer that way. It might be slower but this will not
process many txs / second anyway.
when we get inv messages, txs are easy but blocks are a little tricky
block heigh synchronization is done via os' file system
signing is a bit inelegant (searches through inputs for pkscript matches)
but fast enough in practice