Add ability to filter results by timestamp.
Note that "start_time" is everything *after* that timestamp; and
"end_time" is everything *up to and including* that timestamp.
Prints out the `listincome` events as a CSV formatted file
Current csv_format options:
- koinly
- cointracker
- harmony (https://github.com/harmony-csv/harmony)
- quickbooks*
*Quickbooks expects values in 'USD', whereas we print values out
in <currency> (will be noted in the Description field). This won't work
how you'd expect -> you might need to do some conversion etc before
uploading it.
All amounts emitted as 'btc' w/ *11* decimals.
We issue events for external deposits (withdrawals) before the tx is
confirmed in a block. To avoid double counting these, we don't count
them as confirmed/included until after they're confirmed. We do this
by keeping the blockheight as zero until the withdraw for the input for
them comes through.
Note that since we don't have any way to note when RBF'd withdraws
aren't eligible for block inclusion anymore, we don't really have a good
heuristic to trim them. Which is fine, they *will* show up in account
events however.
onchain fees are weird at channel close because:
- you may be missing an trimmed htlc (which went to fees)
- the balance from close may have been rounded (msats cant land on
chain)
- the close might have been a past state and you've actually
ended up with more money onchain than you had in the channel. wut
This commit accounts for all of this appropriately, with some tests.
channel_close.debit should equal onchain_fee.credit (for that txid)
plus sum(chain_event.credit [wallet/channel_acct]).
In the penalty case, channel_close.debit becomes channel_close.debit +
penalty_adj.debit, i.e.
channel-close.debit + (penalty_adj.debit) =
onchain_fee.credit
+ sum(chain_event.credit [wallet/channel_acct])
Due to the way that onchain channel closes work, there is often a delay
between when the funding output is spent and the channel is considered
'closed'.
Once *every* downstream utxo of a channel has landed on chain, we
annotate the account with the resolving blockheight.
This gives us some insight into whether or not the chain fees etc of a
channel are going to update further and allows for a natural marker to
prune data (at a later date)
Pass in an account id, get out a utxo chain of the channel open and
close (and any other related htlc txs etc).
Note that this prints all wallet deposits that occurred in any of the
tx's that touched this channel.
This is fine and expected for any tx that's not the open; when
considerig the tx open event, the wallet deposit that's present is
typically the change. If there were other channels opened in the same tx
then the change won't match up exactly...
Also note that we might have ignored/missed fees for the channel
closed's spending txid, so we attempt to update those as well.
Backfilling for missed events is a beast.
We need the total output_value, and we can figure this out if we look at
the remote amount also.
We also need to account for the pushed/leased amount, as for leased
channels this really messes with onchain fee calculations.
We copy basically the events that lightningd emits for leased channels:
an open event with the 'lease fee' (pushed?) amount credited to the side
that made the lease/push; then an in-channel event to effectively push
the pushed/leased amount over to the peer it was paid to.
We run the journal entry info after this, so the journal snapshot will
take the pushed amount into account when figuring out what the further
missed in-channel payments were (if any)
We now add chain events for starting channel balances, so print these
out with chain first then channel events.
Makes it less confusing for channel lease fee events.
Prints all the events for the requested account. If no account
requested, prints out all the events. Ordered by timestamp.
Changelog-Added: bookkeeper: new command `listaccountevents`
There's two situations where we're missing info.
One is we get a 'channel_closed' event (but there's no 'channel_open')
The other is a balance_snapshot arrives with information about accounts
that doesn't match what's already on disk. (For some of these cases, we
may be missing 'channel_open' events..)
In the easy case (no channel_open missing), we just figure out what the
When the node starts up, it records missing/updated account balances
to the 'channel' events... which is kinda fucked for wallet + external
events now that i think about it but these are all treated the same
anyway so it's fine.
This is the magic piece that lets your bookkeeping data startup ok on an
already running/established node.