package htlcswitch import ( "encoding/binary" "io" "github.com/lightningnetwork/lightning-onion" "github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/lnwire" ) // NetworkHop indicates the blockchain network that is intended to be the next // hop for a forwarded HTLC. The existnce of this field within the // ForwardingInfo struct enables the ability for HTLC to cross chain-boundaries // at will. type NetworkHop uint8 const ( // BitcoinHop denotes that an HTLC is to be forwarded along the Bitcoin // link with the specified short channel ID. BitcoinHop NetworkHop = iota // LitecoinHop denotes that an HTLC is to be forwarded along the // Litecoin link with the specified short channel ID. LitecoinHop ) // String returns the string representation of the target NetworkHop. func (c NetworkHop) String() string { switch c { case BitcoinHop: return "Bitcoin" case LitecoinHop: return "Litecoin" default: return "Kekcoin" } } var ( // exitHop is a special "hop" which denotes that an incoming HTLC is // meant to pay finally to the receiving node. exitHop lnwire.ShortChannelID ) // ForwardingInfo contains all the information that is necessary to forward and // incoming HTLC to the next hop encoded within a valid HopIterator instance. // Forwarding links are to use this information to authenticate the information // received within the incoming HTLC, to ensure that the prior hop didn't // tamper with the end-to-end routing information at all. type ForwardingInfo struct { // Network is the target blockchain network that the HTLC will travel // over next. Network NetworkHop // NextHop is the channel ID of the next hop. The received HTLC should // be forwarded to this particular channel in order to continue the // end-to-end route. NextHop lnwire.ShortChannelID // AmountToForward is the amount of milli-satoshis that the receiving // node should forward to the next hop. AmountToForward lnwire.MilliSatoshi // OutgoingCTLV is the specified value of the CTLV timelock to be used // in the outgoing HTLC. OutgoingCTLV uint32 // TODO(roasbeef): modify sphinx logic to not just discard the // remaining bytes, instead should include the rest as excess } // HopIterator is an interface that abstracts away the routing information // included in HTLC's which includes the entirety of the payment path of an // HTLC. This interface provides two basic method which carry out: how to // interpret the forwarding information encoded within the HTLC packet, and hop // to encode the forwarding information for the _next_ hop. type HopIterator interface { // ForwardingInstructions returns the set of fields that detail exactly // _how_ this hop should forward the HTLC to the next hop. // Additionally, the information encoded within the returned // ForwardingInfo is to be used by each hop to authenticate the // information given to it by the prior hop. ForwardingInstructions() ForwardingInfo // EncodeNextHop encodes the onion packet destined for the next hop // into the passed io.Writer. EncodeNextHop(w io.Writer) error } // sphinxHopIterator is the Sphinx implementation of hop iterator which uses // onion routing to encode the payment route in such a way so that node might // see only the next hop in the route.. type sphinxHopIterator struct { // nextPacket is the decoded onion packet for the _next_ hop. nextPacket *sphinx.OnionPacket // processedPacket is the outcome of processing an onion packet. It // includes the information required to properly forward the packet to // the next hop. processedPacket *sphinx.ProcessedPacket } // A compile time check to ensure sphinxHopIterator implements the HopIterator // interface. var _ HopIterator = (*sphinxHopIterator)(nil) // Encode encodes iterator and writes it to the writer. // // NOTE: Part of the HopIterator interface. func (r *sphinxHopIterator) EncodeNextHop(w io.Writer) error { return r.nextPacket.Encode(w) } // ForwardingInstructions returns the set of fields that detail exactly _how_ // this hop should forward the HTLC to the next hop. Additionally, the // information encoded within the returned ForwardingInfo is to be used by each // hop to authenticate the information given to it by the prior hop. // // NOTE: Part of the HopIterator interface. func (r *sphinxHopIterator) ForwardingInstructions() ForwardingInfo { fwdInst := r.processedPacket.ForwardingInstructions var nextHop lnwire.ShortChannelID switch r.processedPacket.Action { case sphinx.ExitNode: nextHop = exitHop case sphinx.MoreHops: s := binary.BigEndian.Uint64(fwdInst.NextAddress[:]) nextHop = lnwire.NewShortChanIDFromInt(s) } return ForwardingInfo{ Network: BitcoinHop, NextHop: nextHop, AmountToForward: lnwire.MilliSatoshi(fwdInst.ForwardAmount), OutgoingCTLV: fwdInst.OutgoingCltv, } } // OnionProcessor is responsible for keeping all sphinx dependent parts inside // and expose only decoding function. With such approach we give freedom for // subsystems which wants to decode sphinx path to not be dependable from // sphinx at all. // // NOTE: The reason for keeping decoder separated from hop iterator is too // maintain the hop iterator abstraction. Without it the structures which using // the hop iterator should contain sphinx router which makes their creations in // tests dependent from the sphinx internal parts. type OnionProcessor struct { router *sphinx.Router } // NewOnionProcessor creates new instance of decoder. func NewOnionProcessor(router *sphinx.Router) *OnionProcessor { return &OnionProcessor{router} } // DecodeHopIterator attempts to decode a valid sphinx packet from the passed io.Reader // instance using the rHash as the associated data when checking the relevant // MACs during the decoding process. func (p *OnionProcessor) DecodeHopIterator(r io.Reader, rHash []byte) (HopIterator, lnwire.FailCode) { onionPkt := &sphinx.OnionPacket{} if err := onionPkt.Decode(r); err != nil { switch err { case sphinx.ErrInvalidOnionVersion: return nil, lnwire.CodeInvalidOnionVersion case sphinx.ErrInvalidOnionKey: return nil, lnwire.CodeInvalidOnionKey default: return nil, lnwire.CodeTemporaryChannelFailure } } // Attempt to process the Sphinx packet. We include the payment hash of // the HTLC as it's authenticated within the Sphinx packet itself as // associated data in order to thwart attempts a replay attacks. In the // case of a replay, an attacker is *forced* to use the same payment // hash twice, thereby losing their money entirely. sphinxPacket, err := p.router.ProcessOnionPacket(onionPkt, rHash) if err != nil { switch err { case sphinx.ErrInvalidOnionVersion: return nil, lnwire.CodeInvalidOnionVersion case sphinx.ErrInvalidOnionHMAC: return nil, lnwire.CodeInvalidOnionHmac case sphinx.ErrInvalidOnionKey: return nil, lnwire.CodeInvalidOnionKey default: return nil, lnwire.CodeTemporaryChannelFailure } } return &sphinxHopIterator{ nextPacket: sphinxPacket.NextPacket, processedPacket: sphinxPacket, }, lnwire.CodeNone } // DecodeOnionObfuscator takes an io.Reader which should contain the onion // packet as original received by a forwarding node and creates an Obfuscator // instance using the derived shared secret. In the case that en error occurs, // a lnwire failure code detailing the parsing failure will be returned. func (p *OnionProcessor) DecodeOnionObfuscator(r io.Reader) (Obfuscator, lnwire.FailCode) { onionPkt := &sphinx.OnionPacket{} if err := onionPkt.Decode(r); err != nil { switch err { case sphinx.ErrInvalidOnionVersion: return nil, lnwire.CodeInvalidOnionVersion case sphinx.ErrInvalidOnionKey: return nil, lnwire.CodeInvalidOnionKey default: return nil, lnwire.CodeTemporaryChannelFailure } } onionObfuscator, err := sphinx.NewOnionObfuscator(p.router, onionPkt.EphemeralKey) if err != nil { switch err { case sphinx.ErrInvalidOnionVersion: return nil, lnwire.CodeInvalidOnionVersion case sphinx.ErrInvalidOnionHMAC: return nil, lnwire.CodeInvalidOnionHmac case sphinx.ErrInvalidOnionKey: return nil, lnwire.CodeInvalidOnionKey default: return nil, lnwire.CodeTemporaryChannelFailure } } return &FailureObfuscator{ OnionObfuscator: onionObfuscator, }, lnwire.CodeNone }