This is needed for invoice, which can be asked to commit to giant descriptions
(though that's antisocial!).
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au
Changelog-Added: Plugins: `commando` a new builtin plugin to send/recv peer commands over the lightning network, using runes.
Previously we wouldn't notify when a channel moves into state
"CHANNELD_AWAITING_LOCKIN", as this is the original state (so there's
no movement btw states). This meant that it's impossible to track when a
channel's commitment txs have been exchanged and we're waiting for
onchain confirmation.
It's useful to have notice of this initialization though, all in one
place so that the `channel_state_changed` notification can successfully
track the entire lifecycle of a channel, from inception to close.
Note that for v2 "dual-funded" channels, we already notify at the same place, at
"DUALOPEND_AWAITING_LOCKIN" (the initial state for a dualopend channel
is "DUALOPEND_OPEN_INIT" -- this is the only state we don't get notified
at now...)
Changelog-Added: Plugins: `channel_state_changed` now triggers for a v1 channel's initial "CHANNELD_AWAITING_LOCKIN" state transition (from prior state "unknown")
We were waiting for the start to timeout waiting for the "public key"
message. Instead, start manually.
Before, this took (with TIMEOUT=30) 97 seconds, after 8 seconds.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Some flakes are caused by weird races in this code. Plus, if we
get things to write straight to files, we might see things in
there on post-mortem which happen after the python runner exits.
It's a bit less efficient, but much simpler. Let's see if it helps!
Some tests need a rework now, since we don't get a failure (except
eventual timeout), but they're simpler.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Over time, it has cost us more developer cycles than it has gained.
It has hidden intermittant bugs, and allowed cruft to accumulate:
when we eventually tried to figure out what was going wrong, the
actual change which caused it was now stale and forgotten.
This was a particular bane during the connectd rewrite, and I
worked through some issues which had occurred before, but were not
more likely.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This changes many fields: in non-deprecated mode, they're now raw integers.
This was always the intention, but the transition was never completed.
Suggested-By: @ShahanaFarooqui
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Changed: JSON-RPC: "_msat" fields can be raw numbers, not "123msat" strings (please handle both!)
Changelog-Deprecated: JSON-RPC: "_msat" fields as "123msat" strings (will be only numbers)
We should be using amount_msat always. Many tests were not. Plus,
deprecating it simplifies the code.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Deprecated: JSONRPC: `sendpay` `route` elements `msatoshi` (use `amount_msat`)
This is consistent with our output changes, and increases consistency.
It also keeps future sanity checks happy, that we only use JSON msat
helpers with '_msat' fields.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Changed: JSON-RPC: `invoice`, `sendonion`, `sendpay`, `pay`, `keysend`, `fetchinvoice`, `sendinvoice`: `msatoshi` argument is now called `amount_msat` to match other fields.
Changelog-Deprecated: JSON-RPC: `invoice`, `sendonion`, `sendpay`, `pay`, `keysend`, `fetchinvoice`, `sendinvoice` `msatoshi` (use `amount_msat`)
The new msat fields are turned into Millisatoshi, so handle that correctly
too in tests too.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Deprecated: Plugins: `coin_movement` notification: `balance`, `credit`, `debit` and `fees` (use `balance_msat`, `credit_msat`, `debit_msat` and `fees_msat`)
We had json_add_amount_msat_only(), which was designed to be used to
print out msat fields, if we had sats.
However, we misused it, so split it into the three different cases:
1. json_add_amount_sat_msat: We are using it correctly, with a field called
xxx_msat.
2. json_add_amount_sats_deprecated: We were using it wrong, so deprecate
the old field and create a new one which does end in _msat.
3. json_add_sats: we were using it to hand sats as a JSON parameter to an
interface, where "XXXsat".
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Deprecated: Plugins: `rbf_channel` and `openchannel2` hooks `their_funding` (use `their_funding_msat`)
Changelog-Deprecated: Plugins: `openchannel2` hook `dust_limit_satoshis` (use `dust_limit_msat`)
Changelog-Deprecated: Plugins: `openchannel` hook `funding_satoshis` (use `funding_msat`)
Changelog-Deprecated: Plugins: `openchannel` hook `dust_limit_satoshis` (use `dust_limit_msat`)
Changelog-Deprecated: Plugins: `openchannel` hook `channel_reserve_satoshis` (use `channel_reserve_msat`)
Changelog-Deprecated: Plugins: `channel_opened` notification `amount` (use `funding_msat`)
Changelog-Deprecated: JSON-RPC: `listtransactions` `msat` (use `amount_msat`)
Changelog-Deprecated: Plugins: `htlc_accepted` `forward_amount` (use `forward_msat`)
Before this fix, there was the situation where a DEVELOPER=1 node would
announce non-public addresses on mainnet if detected. Since there
are some nodes on the internet that falsely report local addresses
we move this 'testing feature' to 'dev-allow-locahost' nodes.
Changelog-None
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Added: JSON-RPC: `pay` has `description` parameter, will be required if bolt11 only has a hash.
Changelog-Deprecated: JSON-RPC: `pay` for a bolt11 which uses a `description_hash`, without setting `description`.
This is what LND does, and it's better for upper layers than trying to
twist our maxfeepercent / exemptfee heuristics to suit.
(I don't remember who complained about this, sorry!)
I'm doing this now because I want to add YA parameter next!
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Added: JSON-RPC: `pay` has new parameter `maxfee` for setting absolute fee (instead of using `maxfeepercent` and/or `exemptfee`)
Generally this means converting a lazy "peer_active_channel(peer)" call
into an explicit iteration.
1. notify_feerate_change: call all channels (ignores non-active ones anyway).
2. peer_get_owning_subd remove unused function.
3. peer_connected hook: don't save channel, do lookup and iterate channels.
4. In json_setchannelfee "all" remove useless call to peer_active_channel
since we check state anyway, and iterate.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
When compiled without DEVELOPER this will now filter out `remote_addr` that
come from localhost. The testcase checks for DEVELOPER to test for correct
function of `remote_addr`.
Also, I renamed "test_connect" to "test_connect_basic" so it can be started
without all the other tests in that file that start with "test_connect..."
If we fund a channel between two nodes, then mine all the blocks to
announce it, any other nodes may see the announcement before the
blocks, causing CI to complain about "bad gossip":
```
lightningd-4: 2022-01-25T22:33:25.468Z DEBUG 032cf15d1ad9c4a08d26eab1918f732d8ef8fdc6abb9640bf3db174372c491304e-gossipd: Ignoring future channel_announcment for 113x1x1 (current block 112)
lightningd-4: 2022-01-25T22:33:25.468Z DEBUG 032cf15d1ad9c4a08d26eab1918f732d8ef8fdc6abb9640bf3db174372c491304e-gossipd: Bad gossip order: WIRE_CHANNEL_UPDATE before announcement 113x1x1/0
lightningd-4: 2022-01-25T22:33:25.468Z DEBUG 032cf15d1ad9c4a08d26eab1918f732d8ef8fdc6abb9640bf3db174372c491304e-gossipd: Bad gossip order: WIRE_CHANNEL_UPDATE before announcement 113x1x1/1
lightningd-4: 2022-01-25T22:33:25.468Z DEBUG 032cf15d1ad9c4a08d26eab1918f732d8ef8fdc6abb9640bf3db174372c491304e-gossipd: Bad gossip order: WIRE_NODE_ANNOUNCEMENT before announcement 032cf15d1ad9c4a08d26eab1918f732d8ef8fdc6abb9640bf3db174372c491304e
```
Add a new helper for this case, and use it where there are more than 2 nodes.
Cleans up test_routing_gossip and a few other places which did this manually.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
OK, now this test makes more sense! Now we don't ignore errors, we
*will* drop to chain if we reconnect after one side has dropped to
chain.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This test started mostly failing (in non-DEVELOPER mode) after the
next patch, due to timing issues.
Handle both cases for now, and we'll add more enhancements later to
things we should be handling more consistently.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
If we initialized the payment, the fees are the entire fee-chain
(final hop amount - starting hop amount)
If it's a payment we routed, the fees are the diff between the
inbound htlc and the outbound (net gain by this routing)
Added to database so data persists nicely.
We record the amount of fees collected for a routed payment. For
simplicity's sake on the data agg side, we record the fee payment on
*BOTH* the incoming htlc and the outgoing htlc. Note that this results
in double counting if you add up the fees from both an in-routed and
out-routed payment.
Get rid of the 'movement_idx', since we replay events now.
Since we're removing a field from the 'coin_movement' event emission, we
bump the version type.
Changelog-Updated: `coin_movements` events have been revamped and are now on version 2.
The old model of coin movements attempted to compute fees etc and log
amounts, not utxos. This is not as robust, as multi-party opens and dual
funded channels make it hard to account for fees etc correctly.
Instead, we move towards a 'utxo' view of the onchain events. Every
event is either the creation or 'destruction' of a utxo. For cases where
the value of the utxo is not (fully) debited/credited to our account, we
also record the output_value. E.g. channel closings spend a utxo who's
entire value we may not own.
Since we're now tracking UTXOs onchain, we can now do more complex
assertions about the onchain footprint of them. The integration tests
have been updated to now use more 'chain aware' assertions about the
ending state.
The last line of the testcase was checking on the wrong node l3
instead of l1. l3 didn't had the plugins configured that would
produce the log entry we were looking for not to be present.
Changelog-None
It runs 6 nodes: under valgrind this ends up consuming 5.3 GB RSS. By
stopping nodes between, we peak about 1G RSS.
Measured using:
(while true; do echo $(for i in 4 5 6; do ps uh | tr -s ' ' | cut -d\ -f$i | tally; done); sleep 5; done)&
(Which measures my other processes as well, but that's only about 100M).
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This loads up 20MB of plugins temporarily; we seem to be getting OOM
killed under CI and I wonder if this is contributing.
Doesn't significantly reduce runtime here, but I have lots of memory.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We were actually using the last commit tx's size, since we were
setting it in lightningd. Instead, hand the min and desired feerates
to closingd, and (as it knows the weight of the closing tx), and have
it start negotiation from there.
This can be significantly less when anchor outputs are enabled: for
example in test_closing.py, the commit tx weight is 1124 Sipa, the
close is 672 Sipa!
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Changed: Protocol: Use a more accurate fee for mutual close negotiation.