package lncfg import ( "os" "os/user" "path/filepath" "strings" ) const ( // DefaultConfigFilename is the default configuration file name lnd // tries to load. DefaultConfigFilename = "lnd.conf" // DefaultMaxPendingChannels is the default maximum number of incoming // pending channels permitted per peer. DefaultMaxPendingChannels = 1 // DefaultIncomingBroadcastDelta defines the number of blocks before the // expiry of an incoming htlc at which we force close the channel. We // only go to chain if we also have the preimage to actually pull in the // htlc. BOLT #2 suggests 7 blocks. We use a few more for extra safety. // Within this window we need to get our sweep or 2nd level success tx // confirmed, because after that the remote party is also able to claim // the htlc using the timeout path. DefaultIncomingBroadcastDelta = 10 // DefaultFinalCltvRejectDelta defines the number of blocks before the // expiry of an incoming exit hop htlc at which we cancel it back // immediately. It is an extra safety measure over the final cltv // requirement as it is defined in the invoice. It ensures that we // cancel back htlcs that, when held on to, may cause us to force close // the channel because we enter the incoming broadcast window. Bolt #11 // suggests 9 blocks here. We use a few more for additional safety. // // There is still a small gap that remains between receiving the // RevokeAndAck and canceling back. If a new block arrives within that // window, we may still force close the channel. There is currently no // way to reject an UpdateAddHtlc of which we already know that it will // push us in the broadcast window. DefaultFinalCltvRejectDelta = DefaultIncomingBroadcastDelta + 3 // DefaultOutgoingBroadcastDelta defines the number of blocks before the // expiry of an outgoing htlc at which we force close the channel. We // are not in a hurry to force close, because there is nothing to claim // for us. We do need to time the htlc out, because there may be an // incoming htlc that will time out too (albeit later). Bolt #2 suggests // a value of -1 here, but we allow one block less to prevent potential // confusion around the negative value. It means we force close the // channel at exactly the htlc expiry height. DefaultOutgoingBroadcastDelta = 0 // DefaultOutgoingCltvRejectDelta defines the number of blocks before // the expiry of an outgoing htlc at which we don't want to offer it to // the next peer anymore. If that happens, we cancel back the incoming // htlc. This is to prevent the situation where we have an outstanding // htlc that brings or will soon bring us inside the outgoing broadcast // window and trigger us to force close the channel. Bolt #2 suggests a // value of 0. We pad it a bit, to prevent a slow round trip to the next // peer and a block arriving during that round trip to trigger force // closure. DefaultOutgoingCltvRejectDelta = DefaultOutgoingBroadcastDelta + 3 ) // CleanAndExpandPath expands environment variables and leading ~ in the // passed path, cleans the result, and returns it. // This function is taken from https://github.com/btcsuite/btcd func CleanAndExpandPath(path string) string { if path == "" { return "" } // Expand initial ~ to OS specific home directory. if strings.HasPrefix(path, "~") { var homeDir string u, err := user.Current() if err == nil { homeDir = u.HomeDir } else { homeDir = os.Getenv("HOME") } path = strings.Replace(path, "~", homeDir, 1) } // NOTE: The os.ExpandEnv doesn't work with Windows-style %VARIABLE%, // but the variables can still be expanded via POSIX-style $VARIABLE. return filepath.Clean(os.ExpandEnv(path)) } // NormalizeNetwork returns the common name of a network type used to create // file paths. This allows differently versioned networks to use the same path. func NormalizeNetwork(network string) string { if strings.HasPrefix(network, "testnet") { return "testnet" } return network }