lnd.xprv/routing/result_interpretation.go
Joost Jager 45dacd0df1
routing: isolate failure interpretation from mission control
This commit moves the payment outcome interpretation logic into a
separate file. Also, mission control isn't updated directly anymore, but
results are stored in an interpretedResult struct. This allows the
mission control state to be locked for a minimum amount of time and
makes it easier to unit test the result interpretation.
2019-08-17 10:23:59 +02:00

276 lines
9.6 KiB
Go

package routing
import (
"github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/channeldb"
"github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/lnwire"
"github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/routing/route"
)
// interpretedResult contains the result of the interpretation of a payment
// outcome.
type interpretedResult struct {
// nodeFailure points to a node pubkey if all channels of that node are
// responsible for the result.
nodeFailure *route.Vertex
// pairResults contains a map of node pairs that could be responsible
// for the failure. The map values are the minimum amounts for which a
// future penalty should be applied.
pairResults map[DirectedNodePair]lnwire.MilliSatoshi
// finalFailureReason is set to a non-nil value if it makes no more
// sense to start another payment attempt. It will contain the reason
// why.
finalFailureReason *channeldb.FailureReason
// policyFailure is set to a node pair if there is a policy failure on
// that connection. This is used to control the second chance logic for
// policy failures.
policyFailure *DirectedNodePair
}
// interpretResult interprets a payment outcome and returns an object that
// contains information required to update mission control.
func interpretResult(rt *route.Route, failureSrcIdx *int,
failure lnwire.FailureMessage) *interpretedResult {
i := &interpretedResult{
pairResults: make(map[DirectedNodePair]lnwire.MilliSatoshi),
}
final, reason := i.processFail(rt, failureSrcIdx, failure)
if final {
i.finalFailureReason = &reason
}
return i
}
// processFail processes a failed payment attempt.
func (i *interpretedResult) processFail(
rt *route.Route, errSourceIdx *int,
failure lnwire.FailureMessage) (bool, channeldb.FailureReason) {
var failureSourceIdxInt int
if errSourceIdx == nil {
// If the failure message could not be decrypted, attribute the
// failure to our own outgoing channel.
//
// TODO(joostager): Penalize all channels in the route.
failureSourceIdxInt = 0
failure = lnwire.NewTemporaryChannelFailure(nil)
} else {
failureSourceIdxInt = *errSourceIdx
}
var failureVertex route.Vertex
if failureSourceIdxInt > 0 {
failureVertex = rt.Hops[failureSourceIdxInt-1].PubKeyBytes
} else {
failureVertex = rt.SourcePubKey
}
log.Tracef("Node %x (index %v) reported failure when sending htlc",
failureVertex, errSourceIdx)
// Always determine chan id ourselves, because a channel update with id
// may not be available.
failedPair, failedAmt := getFailedPair(
rt, failureSourceIdxInt,
)
switch failure.(type) {
// If the end destination didn't know the payment hash or we sent the
// wrong payment amount to the destination, then we'll terminate
// immediately.
case *lnwire.FailIncorrectDetails:
// TODO(joostjager): Check onionErr.Amount() whether it matches
// what we expect. (Will it ever not match, because if not
// final_incorrect_htlc_amount would be returned?)
return true, channeldb.FailureReasonIncorrectPaymentDetails
// If we sent the wrong amount to the destination, then we'll exit
// early.
case *lnwire.FailIncorrectPaymentAmount:
return true, channeldb.FailureReasonIncorrectPaymentDetails
// If the time-lock that was extended to the final node was incorrect,
// then we can't proceed.
case *lnwire.FailFinalIncorrectCltvExpiry:
// TODO(joostjager): Take into account that second last hop may
// have deliberately handed out an htlc that expires too soon.
// In that case we should continue routing.
return true, channeldb.FailureReasonError
// If we crafted an invalid onion payload for the final node, then we'll
// exit early.
case *lnwire.FailFinalIncorrectHtlcAmount:
// TODO(joostjager): Take into account that second last hop may
// have deliberately handed out an htlc with a too low value. In
// that case we should continue routing.
return true, channeldb.FailureReasonError
// Similarly, if the HTLC expiry that we extended to the final hop
// expires too soon, then will fail the payment.
//
// TODO(roasbeef): can happen to to race condition, try again with
// recent block height
case *lnwire.FailFinalExpiryTooSoon:
// TODO(joostjager): Take into account that any hop may have
// delayed. Ideally we should continue routing. Knowing the
// delaying node at this point would help.
return true, channeldb.FailureReasonIncorrectPaymentDetails
// If we erroneously attempted to cross a chain border, then we'll
// cancel the payment.
case *lnwire.FailInvalidRealm:
return true, channeldb.FailureReasonError
// If we get a notice that the expiry was too soon for an intermediate
// node, then we'll prune out the node that sent us this error, as it
// doesn't now what the correct block height is.
case *lnwire.FailExpiryTooSoon:
i.nodeFailure = &failureVertex
return false, 0
// If we hit an instance of onion payload corruption or an invalid
// version, then we'll exit early as this shouldn't happen in the
// typical case.
//
// TODO(joostjager): Take into account that the previous hop may have
// tampered with the onion. Routing should continue using other paths.
case *lnwire.FailInvalidOnionVersion:
return true, channeldb.FailureReasonError
case *lnwire.FailInvalidOnionHmac:
return true, channeldb.FailureReasonError
case *lnwire.FailInvalidOnionKey:
return true, channeldb.FailureReasonError
// If we get a failure due to violating the minimum amount, we'll apply
// the new minimum amount and retry routing.
case *lnwire.FailAmountBelowMinimum:
i.policyFailure = &failedPair
i.pairResults[failedPair] = 0
return false, 0
// If we get a failure due to a fee, we'll apply the new fee update, and
// retry our attempt using the newly updated fees.
case *lnwire.FailFeeInsufficient:
i.policyFailure = &failedPair
i.pairResults[failedPair] = 0
return false, 0
// If we get the failure for an intermediate node that disagrees with
// our time lock values, then we'll apply the new delta value and try it
// once more.
case *lnwire.FailIncorrectCltvExpiry:
i.policyFailure = &failedPair
i.pairResults[failedPair] = 0
return false, 0
// The outgoing channel that this node was meant to forward one is
// currently disabled, so we'll apply the update and continue.
case *lnwire.FailChannelDisabled:
i.pairResults[failedPair] = 0
return false, 0
// It's likely that the outgoing channel didn't have sufficient
// capacity, so we'll prune this edge for now, and continue onwards with
// our path finding.
case *lnwire.FailTemporaryChannelFailure:
i.pairResults[failedPair] = failedAmt
return false, 0
// If the send fail due to a node not having the required features, then
// we'll note this error and continue.
case *lnwire.FailRequiredNodeFeatureMissing:
i.nodeFailure = &failureVertex
return false, 0
// If the send fail due to a node not having the required features, then
// we'll note this error and continue.
case *lnwire.FailRequiredChannelFeatureMissing:
i.nodeFailure = &failureVertex
return false, 0
// If the next hop in the route wasn't known or offline, we'll only the
// channel which we attempted to route over. This is conservative, and
// it can handle faulty channels between nodes properly. Additionally,
// this guards against routing nodes returning errors in order to
// attempt to black list another node.
case *lnwire.FailUnknownNextPeer:
i.pairResults[failedPair] = 0
return false, 0
// If the node wasn't able to forward for which ever reason, then we'll
// note this and continue with the routes.
case *lnwire.FailTemporaryNodeFailure:
i.nodeFailure = &failureVertex
return false, 0
case *lnwire.FailPermanentNodeFailure:
i.nodeFailure = &failureVertex
return false, 0
// If we crafted a route that contains a too long time lock for an
// intermediate node, we'll prune the node. As there currently is no way
// of knowing that node's maximum acceptable cltv, we cannot take this
// constraint into account during routing.
//
// TODO(joostjager): Record the rejected cltv and use that as a hint
// during future path finding through that node.
case *lnwire.FailExpiryTooFar:
i.nodeFailure = &failureVertex
return false, 0
// If we get a permanent channel or node failure, then we'll prune the
// channel in both directions and continue with the rest of the routes.
case *lnwire.FailPermanentChannelFailure:
i.pairResults[failedPair] = 0
i.pairResults[failedPair.Reverse()] = 0
return false, 0
// Any other failure or an empty failure will get the node pruned.
default:
i.nodeFailure = &failureVertex
return false, 0
}
}
// getFailedPair tries to locate the failing pair given a route and the pubkey
// of the node that sent the failure. It will assume that the failure is
// associated with the outgoing channel set of the failing node. As a second
// result, it returns the amount sent between the pair.
func getFailedPair(route *route.Route, failureSource int) (DirectedNodePair,
lnwire.MilliSatoshi) {
// Determine if we have a failure from the final hop. If it is, we
// assume that the failing channel is the incoming channel.
//
// TODO(joostjager): In this case, certain types of failures are not
// expected. For example FailUnknownNextPeer. This could be a reason to
// prune the node?
if failureSource == len(route.Hops) {
failureSource--
}
// As this failure indicates that the target channel was unable to carry
// this HTLC (for w/e reason), we'll return the _outgoing_ channel that
// the source of the failure was meant to pass the HTLC along to.
if failureSource == 0 {
return NewDirectedNodePair(
route.SourcePubKey,
route.Hops[0].PubKeyBytes,
), route.TotalAmount
}
return NewDirectedNodePair(
route.Hops[failureSource-1].PubKeyBytes,
route.Hops[failureSource].PubKeyBytes,
), route.Hops[failureSource-1].AmtToForward
}