This commit modifies the login of sent/recv’d wire messages in trace
mode in order utilize the more detailed, and automatically generated
logging statements using pure spew.Sdump.
In order to avoid the spammy messages due to spew printing the
btcec.S256() curve paramter within wire messages with public keys, we
introduce a new logging function to unset the curve paramter to it
isn’t printed in its entirety. To insure we don’t run into any panics
as a result of a nil pointer defense, we now copy the public keys
during the funding process so we don’t run into a panic due to
modifying a pointer to the same object.
This commit adds a new paramter to the initial channel creation:
‘PushSatoshis’. This new field allows the funder of a channel to push
over a certain amount to the responder as part of the initial channel
state. This ability creates a new streamlined UX of finalizing a
payment as a part of the channel creation.
This commit adds a new HTLC error type: IncorrectValue. This error type
is to be used when an HTLC that’s extended to the final destination
does not match the expectation of the destination.
This commit adds a new field to the CancelHTLC message which describes
the event that led to an HTLC being cancelled up stream.
A new enum has been added which describers the “why” concerning the
cancellation of the HTLC. Currently the encoding and back propagation
of the errors aren’t properly implemented as defined within the spec.
As a result the current error types provide to privacy as the error are
in plain-site rather doing being properly encrypted.
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 modifies the SingleFundingOpen message to include the
compact channel ID of the finalized transaction rather than a “fake”
SPV proof. This change is a stop-gap which allows us to implement
portions of BOLT07 without yet fully implementing all parts of BOLT[02,
03].
This commit removes the older routing/discovery messages from the
unwire package, as we’ll be converging towards BOLT07 in the near-term.
In the mid to far term we’ll be revisiting integrating Flare into the
newer scheme in order to take advantage of its scaling characteristics.
This commit removes the previous test cases which excised the proper
validation of graph announcements on the network. As full generation of
the authenticated messages has not yet been implemented, these tests
aren’t currently applicable.
In a future commit, these tests will be replicated on the new discovery
package which will handle producing the channel proofs and also fully
validating them.
This commit modifies the Alias type to only hold the non-zero portion
of the alias as encoded on the wire. Previously the entire 32-bytes
would be read and stored, including the zeroes at the end used as
padding. Within the constructor, we now parse the alias properly,
discarding the trailing zeroes within the passed byte slice.
Additionally, the .String() method of Alias will now also only print
the non-zero prefix of the decoded alias.
This commit temporarily disables the signature validation for all
announcement related messages which should be authenticated by one or
many parties. This feature is being disabled as we don’t yet generate
valid signatures for our advertisements and the validation of the
messages should be placed in the layer 3 discovery service rather than
within within the message parsing layer.
This commit separates out the ChannelID into a new file, with
additional helper methods for conversion and formatting. With this
commit, the struct is now more general purpose and can be used in the
new routing package, database, and other related sub-systems.
This commit modifies the encoding of signatures on the wire to use
a fixed-size 64-byte format. This change is required as the current spec
draft dictates that all signatures be encoded as `R` and `S` as 32-byte
big-endian integers. With this, signatures are now always a _fixed_ size
slice of bytes on the wire, which is nice to have.
Fixes#83.
Use [33]byte for graph vertex representation.
Delete unneeded stuff:
1. DeepEqual for graph comparison
2. EdgePath
3. 2-thread BFS
4. Table transfer messages and neighborhood radius
5. Beacons
Refactor:
1. Change ID to Vertex
2. Test use table driven approach
3. Add comments
4. Make graph internal representation private
5. Use wire.OutPoint as EdgeId
6. Decouple routing messages from routing implementation
7. Delete Async methods
8. Delete unneeded channels and priority buffer from manager
9. Delete unneeded interfaces in internal graph realisation
10. Renamed ID to Vertex
This commit adds Ping and Pong messages to the suite of lnwire
messages. The usage of these messages within the daemon are similar to
the usage of Bitcoin’s ping/pong messages. Pings are to be sent
periodically with a random nonce to check connection activity and also
to gauge latency. Pong’s are to be sent in reply to ping messages,
echo’ing the same nonce used.
This commit modifies lnwire.NetAddress by adding a .Network() method.
With this added method the struct now implements the net.Addr interface
meaning that it can now be transparently passed into any context where
a net.Addr is requested.
This change paves the way to integration of btcd’s new connmgr into the
daemon to handle establishing persistent connections to all channel
counter parties.
This commit modifies both the Sphinx packet generation and processing
for recent updates to the API.
With the version 1 Sphinx specification, the payment hash is now
included in the MACs in order to thwart any potential replay attacks.
As a result, any attempts to replay previous HTLC packets MUST re-use
the same payment hash, meaning that the first-hop node can simply
settle the HTLC immediately, thwarting the attacker.
Additionally, within the Sphinx packet, each hop now gets a per-hop
payload which contains the necessary details (CTLV value, fee, etc) for
the node to successfully forward the payment. This per-hop payload is
protected by a packet-wide MAC.
This commit adds a few workarounds in order to concurrently support the
REST proxy as well as the regular gRPC interface. Additionally,
concrete support for the following RPC calls has been added:
GetTransactions, SubscriptTransactions, SubscribeInvoices, and
NewWitnessAddress.
This commit removes the previous HTLC timeout in message in favor of a
HTLC cancel message. Within the protocol, a timeout message would never
be sent backwards along the route as in the case of an HTLC timeout
before/after the grace period, the course of action taken would be to
broadcast the current commitment transaction unilaterally on-chain.
LIGHT-131, LIGHT-140, LIGHT-138
`lncli showroutingtable` may output routing table as image.
Use graphviz for graph rendering.
Add explicit version dependency for tools. Add error checking.
LIGHT-138, LIGHT-141. Due to some issues in sending/receiving parts of lnd,
messages with zero length are not sent. So added some mock content to
NeighborAck. Moved sender/receiver from routing message to wrap message
which contains lnwire routing message.
LIGHT-133, LIGHT-138 Make output of `lncli showrouting table` in
two different formats: table and json.
Instead of sending serialized routing table send list of channels.
This commit integrates BitFury's current routing functionality into lnd. The
primary ochestration point for the routing sub-system in the routingMgr. The
routingMgr manages all persistent and volatile state related to routing within
the network.
Newly opened channels, either when the initiator or responder are inserted into
the routing table once the channel is fully open. Once new links are inserted
the routingMgr can then perform path selection in order to locate an "optimal"
path to a target destination.
With this commit a revocation message now carries 3 items:
1. A pre-image revoking the lowest unrevoked commitment transaction
in the commitment chain.
2. A new key which extends the current revocation window by 1. This
key is to be used for new commitment transactions.
3. A new hash which also extends the current revocation window by 1.
This hash is to be used for new HTLC revocation hashes.
This commit updates the CommitSignature message to match the latest
version of the state-machine protocol. The log index specifies up to
which index in the receiver’s HTLC log the sender’s signature covers.
We now enforce that the site of all revocation pre-images+hashes (used
for HTLC’s) are now 32-bytes.
Additionally, all payment pre-images are now required to be 32-bytes
not he wire. There also exists a Script level enforcement of the
payment pre-image size at a lower level.
This commit serves to unify the sizes of all hashes/pre-images across
the codebase.
This commit updates the messages sent during a single funder workflow
to utilize revocation keys rather than revocation hashes. This now
matches the latest updates to the commitment transaction.
The changes to the workflow are as follows:
* the response message now carries the responder’s revocation key
* the complete message now carries the initiator’s revocation key
Once the initiator receives the response message, it can construct both
versions of the commitment transaction as it now knows the responder’s
commitment key. The initiator then sends their initial revocation key
over to the responder allowing it to construct the commitment
transactions and give the initiator a sig for their version.
This commit modifies most of the wire messages to uniquely identify any
*active* channels by their funding output. This allows the wire
protocol to support funding transactions which open several channels in
parallel.
Any pending channels created by partial completion of the funding
workflow are to be identified by a uint64 initialized by both sides as
follows: the initiator of the connection starts from 0, while the
listening node starts from (1 << 63). These pending channel identifiers
are expected to be monotonically increasing with each new funding
workflow between two nodes. This identifier is volatile w.r.t to each
connection initiation.
This commit adds some cursory documentation along wit minor field
modifications to all messages which deal with adding HTLC’s, or
updating remote commitment transactions.
The messages for dual funding of channel is left purposefully
undocumented as all initial negotiations will be single funder by
default.
A revamp of the testing infrastructure of lnwire will be committed in
the near future.
The SFOP is the final message sent during the single funding channel
negotiation protocol. Once Alice sends the SFOP message to Bob, Bob
will then commit resources to watching and updating the newly created
channel with Alice.
This commit adds some additional documentation in the form of comments
to the start of the revised single funder workflow.
A primary change lies in the introduction of the exchange of Channel
Derivation Points (CDP’s) for both sides. Using CDP’s we can derive
channel authentication proofs which are both unforgettable and binding.
This commit adds the SingleFundingSignComplete message to the single
funder transaction workflow. This marks the second to last message sent
in the workflow. The message transports Bob’s signature for the
commitment transaction, allowing Alice to broadcast the funding
transaction as she can now refund her inputs.
This commit adds the SingleFundingComplete message to the single funder
channel workflow. This is the 3rd message sent in the workflow,
traveling from Alice to Bob once Alice is able to construct the final
commitment transaction.
* Added description in lnwire/README.md for state machine
* Figured out mutex stuff...
* Started the State Machine (using dummy functions for net/db)
* Minor corrections in wire protocol (changed some names/types)
- Renamed StagingID to HTLCKey of type HTLCKey (uint64)
* Structs and wire messages for HTLCs
* Wire protocol for a state machine with no blocking(!!!)
(I will write the state machine)
TL;DR: Can do multiple HTLC modifications in-flight, dead simple wire
protocol. Both sides can update their Commitments unliaterally without
waiting for the other party's signature. Will have basic/preliminary
notes in the README
* Added **swp to .gitignore because of vim annoyances
* FundingSignAccept and FundingSingComplete had *[]btcec.Signature and
instead it's now []*btcec.Signature to match other slice types.
* Refactored lnwire's when doing readElement/writeElement on slices
* Added field
* Renamed FundingAmount and ReserveAmount to specify in FundingRequest
and FundingResponse that it is for RequesterFundingAmount or
ResponderFundingAmount
* Added PaymentAmount field to FundingRequest
* Added MinDepth field to FundingRequest and FundingResponse
* Fixed .Serialize() to show inputs/etc. only if there are fields
available (prevents trying to dereference nil value)
* Add a bunch of Validate() conditions
* MASSIVE REFACTOR of tests (removed tons of redundancy)
Running "go test -v" will show the serialization and deserialization.
Doing the rest of the wire stuff should be *much* faster since I figured
everything out...