1. Rename memleak_enter_allocations to memleak_find_allocations.
2. Unify scanning for pointers into memleak_remove_region / memleak_remove_pointer.
3. Document the functions.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We promised this in 0.8.1!
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Removed: Plugin: Relative plugin paths are not relative to startup (deprecated v0.7.2.1)
Changelog-Removed: JSON API: The hook `db_write` can no longer return `true` (deprecated in 0.8.1)
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This is simple, and we now can multifundchannel to every node on testnet
(one simply hangs once we connect).
Changelog-Fixed: Protocol: We now hang up if peer doesn't respond to init message after 60 seconds.
Changelog-Added: JSON-RPC: delpay a new method to delete the payment completed or failed.
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Palazzo <vincenzopalazzodev@gmail.com>
This notification will be raised whenever a channel state changes.
The payload includes the channel and peer identifiers and the
old and the new state.
Example payload:
```
{
"channel_state_changed": {
"peer_id": "03bc9337c7a28bb784d67742ebedd30a93bacdf7e4ca16436ef3798000242b2251",
"channel_id": "a2d0851832f0e30a0cf778a826d72f077ca86b69f72677e0267f23f63a0599b4",
"short_channel_id" : "561820x1020x1",
"old_state": "CHANNELD_NORMAL",
"new_state": "AWAITING_UNILATERAL"
}
}
```
Changelog-Added: Plugins: channel_state_changed notification
As the cmd gets freed on a received error, the node id in which we iterate in `process_check_funding_broadcast`
may gets freed while we are using it.
Signed-off-by: Antoine Poinsot <darosior@protonmail.com>
Fixing the following error by changing 'enum feerate' to int.
lightningd/bitcoind.c:183:29: error: result of comparison of constant
8 with expression of type 'enum feerate' is always true [-Werror,
-Wtautological-constant-out-of-range-compare]
for (enum feerate f = 0; f < NUM_FEERATES; f++) {
Changelog-Fixed: compile error on macos
Greatly simplify the changeset API. Instead of 'diff' we simply generate
the changes.
Also pulls up the 'next message' method, as at some point the
interactive tx protocol will be used for other things as well
(splices/closes etc)
Suggested-By: @rustyrussell
dual funding needs the max-witness-len and utxo fields set for every
input. we should add them when we create a 'fundpsbt', so that every
psbt that c-lightning generates is dual-funding ready
v2 of channel establishment, in the accpeter case, now sends 2 messages
to our peer after saving the information to disk (our commitment
signatures and our funding transaction signatures)
v2 channel open uses a different method to derive the channel_id, so now
we save it to the database so that we dont have to remember how to
derive it for each.
includes a migration for existing channels
Too trivial a fix to really list in Changelog, but I noticed that we
specified "wumbo" twice. We should really just use the proper name
in listconfigs.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Deprecated: plugin: `bcli` replacements should note that `sendrawtransaction` now has a second required Boolean argument, `allowhighfees`, which if `true`, means ignore any fee limits and just broadcast the transaction. Use `--deprecated-apis` to use older `bcli` replacement plugins that only support a single argument.
We defer the notification to gossipd till the end of the spends. By itself not
a huge change, but it allows us to later migrate to doing updates blindly and
using the DB as our ground truth. It also allows us to simplify the
`wallet_outpoint_spend` semantics to not return two values in the next commit.
We're going to want this for bolt13 formation as well.
As a result of reworking the logic into "candidate selection" then
"route hint selection", we need to change the way round-robin works.
We use a simple incrementing index now.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
It's now only needed by devtools/mkfunding, so include a reduced one
there, and this also means we remove tx_spending_utxos().
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This removes the reservation cleanup at startup, too, now they're all
using 'reserved_til'.
This changes test_withdraw, since it asserted that outputs were marked
spent as soon as we broadcast a transaction: now they're reserved until
it's mined. Similarly, test_addfunds_from_block assumed we'd see funds
as soon as we broadcast the tx.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Changed: JSON-RPC: `withdraw` now randomizes input and output order, not BIP69.
This avoids overwriting the ones in git, and generally makes things neater.
We have convenience headers wire/peer_wire.h and wire/onion_wire.h to
avoid most #ifdefs: simply include those.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This will make the `openchannel_hook` chainable. Logic is as follows:
- The first plugin that rejects terminates the chain
- If more than one plugin uses the `close_to` parameter, take the first
value and log_unusual for the others.
Changelog-Added: openchannel_hook is now chainable
PR #3957 improved performance considerably, however we still look over the
entire message for the message separator. If instead we just look in the
incrementally read data, we remove the quadratic behavior for large messages.
This is safe since we then loop over the messages which would drain any
message separator from the buffer before we attempt the next read.
Changelog-Fixed: bcli: Significant speedups for block synchronization
We're not going to mutate transactions in a block, so computing the txids
every time we need them is a waste, let's compute them upfront and use them
afterwards.
And document exactly what it does: insist that an HTLC can pass of
this value (module assumptions of feerate).
Note that we remove the "is_opener" test from the capacity calculation
for anchor fees: it doesn't matter which side it is, someone has to pay
for anchor fees to it deducts from capacity.
This change breaks the test, which we rewrite.
Changelog-Changed: config: `min-capacity-sat` is now stricter about checking usable capacity of channels.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We create ALL_PROGRAMS, ALL_TEST_PROGRAMS, ALL_C_SOURCES and
ALL_C_HEADERS. Then the toplevel Makefile knows which are
autogenerated (by wildcard), so it can have all the rules to clean
them or check the source as necessary.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
It's actually not possible to currently tell if you're using anchor_outputs
with a peer (since it depends on whether you both supported it at *channel open*).
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-added: JSON-RPC: `listpeers` shows `features` list for each channel.
Note that other directories were explicitly depending on the generated
file, instead of relying on their (already existing) dependency on
$(LIGHTNINGD_HSM_CLIENT_OBJS), so we remove that.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This means some files get renamed, and I took the opportunity to clarify
our naming (the *d* is important!)
1. channeld/channel_wire.csv -> channeld/channeld_wire.csv
2. channeld/gen_channel_wire.h -> channeld/channeld_wiregen.h
3. enum channel_wire_type -> enum channeld_wire
4. WIRE_CHANNEL_FUNDING_DEPTH -> WIRE_CHANNELD_FUNDING_DEPTH.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
You can't pay them anyway, and at least one person used 0 instead of "any".
Closes: #3808
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Changed: JSON-RPC: `invoice` no longer accepts zero amounts (did you mean "any"?)
As per https://github.com/lightningnetwork/lightning-rfc/pull/785
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Changed: config: the default CLTV expiry is now 34 blocks, and final expiry 18 blocks as per new BOLT recommendations.
time lightning-cli -R --network=regtest --lightning-dir /tmp/ltests-k8jhvtty/test_pay_stress_1/lightning-1/ listpays > /dev/null
Before:
real 0m42.741s
user 0m0.149s
sys 0m0.016s
After:
real 0m13.674s
user 0m0.131s
sys 0m0.024s
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Fixed: JSON-RPC: significant speedups for plugins which create large JSON replies (e.g. listpays on large nodes).
The jsmn parser is a beautiful piece of code. In particular, you can parse
part of a string, then continue where you left off.
We don't take advantage of this, however, meaning for large JSON objects
we parse them multiple times before finally having enough to complete.
Expose the parser state and tokens through the API, so the caller can pass
them in repeatedly. For the moment, every caller is allocates each time
(except the unit tests).
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This also means we subtract 660 satoshis more everywhere we subtract
the base fee (except for mutual close, where the base fee is still
used).
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This is best done by passing `struct bitcoin_signature` around instead
of raw signatures. We still save raw sigs to the db, and of course the
wire protocol uses them.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
HTLC fees increase (larger weight), and the fee paid by the opener
has to include the anchor outputs (i.e. 660 sats).
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This is what txsend does, only we have a psbt so we have
to change the db interface to take a wally_tx.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Suggested-by: Rusty Russell <@rustyrussell>
Changelog-Deprecated: JSON-RPC: `listsendpays` will no longer add `null` if we don't know the `amount_msat` for a payment.
This lets us handle it the same way we handle builtin commands, and also
lets us warn if they use deprecated apis and allow-deprecated-apis=false.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Added: Plugins: can now mark their options and commands deprecated.
This allows plugins to choose how to present things in getmanifest.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Added: plugins: `getmanifest` may now include "allow-deprecated-apis" boolean flag.
Changelog-Deprecated: plugins: `getmanifest` without any parameters; plugins should accept any parameters for future use.
If allow-deprecated-apis=false, don't mention them at all (we already
disallow calling them in that case). Otherwise, note that they're
deprecated in the help msg.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
It's not all that rare to do these operations, and requiring annotations
for it is a little painful.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Added: New option `--important-plugin` loads a plugin is so important that if it dies, `lightningd` will exit rather than continue. You can still `--disable-plugin` it, however, which trumps `--important-plugin` and it will not be started at all.
We were basing the 2016 block timeout on the blockchain height that we had
processed at the time completed the funding, which could lag considerably
behind the network-wide blockheight. For example this could happen if we
started with `--rescan` from a low height, taking some time to catch up.
This means that we could end up forgetting channels even before reaching the
network blockheight. This patch instead uses the headercount reported by the
backend plugin if we aren't caught up yet. While the chances of this happening
are still there, the window it might happen are much reduced, since headers
can be synced in a couple of minutes.
Reported-by: Riccardo Masutti
Changelog-Changed: Funding timeout is now based on the header count reported by the bitcoin backend instead of our current blockheight which might be lower.
Changelog-Changed: JSON-RPC: `delinvoice` will now report specific error codes: 905 for failing to find the invoice, 906 for the invoice status not matching the parameter.
we're about to add a migration that requires access to the bip32_key
in order to calculate missing scriptpubkeys.
prior to this patch, we don't have access to the bip32 key in the db
migration, as it's set on the wallet but after the db migrations are
run.
here we patch it through so that every migration can access it
While not directly necessary, it still feeds the `listpays` result, and so we
should pass it along if we can, so we don't have to rely solely on the
`amount_sent` field, which includes the fees.
Reported-by: Rusty Russell <@rustyrussell>
There were no channel updates in my log; because sendonion doesn't know the
actual node_ids or channel_ids, we can't tell gossipd what node/channel it was
so it can no longer remove them on PERM errors.
However, we can tell it the error message so it can apply the update.
Fixes: #3877
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
And document the partid arg.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Added: JSON-RPC: `sendonion` has a new optional `bolt11` argument for when it's used to pay an invoice.
Reduces VALGRIND=1 node_factory.line_graph(5) time on my laptop from 42s to 36s.
This is simply because forking all the subdaemons just to check the
version is very expensive under valgrind.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
The test had part 1 and 2 backward, but still worked. When I copied that to
*after* the test had succeeded, it complained. It should always complain,
to catch bugs.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This wasn't important before, but now we have MPP it's good to enforce.
Reported-by: Christian Decker
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
`listconfigs` calls were setting the description twice and was using the
pointer to the boolean value as the boolean value, resulting in always
returning `true`.
This happens to be an edge case with the way we use `sendonion` in
MPP. `sendonion` does not attempt to recover the route even if we supply the
shared secrets (it'd require us to map forwarding channels to the nodes etc),
so `failnode` will always be unset, unless it is the first hop, which gets
stored. This is not a problem if it weren't for the fact that we don't store
the partial route, consisting solely of the channel leading to the first hop,
therefore the assertion that either both are NULL or both aren't fails on the
first hop.
This went unnoticed since with MPP we have more concurrent payments in flight,
increasing the chances of a exhausted first hop considerably.
Technically an API break, but nobody relies on these I hope!
Note that the feerates warning was buried inside the style object:
it should be top-level.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This is the only place outside the wallet code where we create
a 'struct utxo', so it makes sense for us to move that logic inside
the wallet.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
These are pulled from wallet/wallet.c, with the fix now that we grind sigs.
This reduces the fees we pay slightly, as you can see in the coinmoves changes.
I now print out all the coin moves in suitable format before we match:
you only see this if the test fails, but it's really helpful.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Our existing coin_moves tracking logic assumed that any tx we had an
input in belonged to *all* of our wallet (not a bad assumption as long
as there was no way to update a tx that spends our wallets)
Now that we've got `signpsbt` implemented, however, we need to be
careful about how we account for withdrawals. For now we do a best guess
at what the feerate is, and lump all of our spent outputs as a
'withdrawal' when it's impossible to disambiguate
Changelog-Changed: `fundchannel_cancel` will now succeed even when executed while a `fundchannel_complete` is ongoing; in that case, it will be considered as cancelling the funding *after* the `fundchannel_complete` succeeds.
Let me introduce the concept of "Sequential Consistency":
All operations on parallel processes form a single total order agreed upon by all processes.
So for example, suppose we have parallel invocations of `fundchannel_complete` and `fundchannel_cancel`:
+--[fundchannel_complete]-->
|
--[fundchannel_start]-+
|
+--[fundchannel_cancel]---->
What "Sequential Consistency" means is that the above parallel operations can be serialized as a single total order as:
--[fundchannel_start]--[fundchannel_complete]--[fundchannel_cancel]-->
Or:
--[fundchannel_start]--[fundchannel_cancel]--[fundchannel_complete]-->
In the first case, `fundchannel_complete` succeeds, and the `fundchannel_cancel` invocation also succeeds, sending an `error` to the peer to make them forget the chanel.
In the second case, `fundchannel_cancel` succeeds, and the succeeding `fundchannel_complete` invocation fails, since the funding is already cancelled and there is nothing to complete.
Note that in both cases, `fundchannel_cancel` **always** succeeds.
Unfortunately, prior to this commit, `fundchannel_cancel` could fail with a `Try fundchannel_cancel again` error if the `fundchannel_complete` is ongoing when the `fundchannel_cancel` is initiated.
This violates Sequential Consistency, as there is no single total order that would have caused `fundchannel_cancel` to fail.
This commit is a minimal patch which just reschedules `fundchannel_cancel` to occur after any `fundchannel_complete` that is ongoing.
We passed below the floor when the user specified `1000perkb`.
Matt Whitlock says :
I was withdrawing with feerate=1000perkb, which should be the minimum-allowed fee rate. Indeed, bitcoin-cli getmempoolinfo reports:
{
"loaded": true,
"size": 15097,
"bytes": 9207924,
"usage": 32831760,
"maxmempool": 64000000,
"mempoolminfee": 0.00001000,
"minrelaytxfee": 0.00001000
}
Changelog-fixed: rpc: The `feerate` parameters now correctly handle the standardness minimum when passed as `perkb`.
Signed-off-by: Antoine Poinsot <darosior@protonmail.com>
Reported-by: Matt Whitlock
We're going to use the hsm for a migration, so we need to set up the HSM
before we get to the wallet migration code.
All that this requires is removing the places in HSM init that we touch
the database struct -- easy enough to accomplish by passing the required
field back out from init, and then associating it onto the wallet after
it's been initialized.
For the moment it's a complete tx, but in future designs we might only
be given the specific input which closes the channel.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
It returns NULL, so you can simply `return fromwire_fail(...)`
if you want to return NULL in this case. Use that more.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We did not take the value of --commit-fee into account : this removes
the unused option from lightningd and instead registers it in bcli,
where we set the actual feerate of commitment transactions. This also
corrects the documentation.
Changelog-Fixed: config: we now take the --commit-fee parameter into account.
Signed-off-by: Antoine Poinsot <darosior@protonmail.com>
Since we now over-write the wally malloc/free functions, we need to do
so for tests as well. Here we pull up all of the common setup/teardown
logic into a separate place, and update the tests that use libwally to
use the new common_setup core
Changelog-None
This moves the notification for our coin spends from when it's
successfully submited to the mempool to when they're confirmed in a
block.
We also add an 'informational' notice tagged as `spend_track` which
can be used to track which transaction a wallet output was spent in.
Previously we were annotating every movement with the blockheight of
lightningd at notification time. Which is lossy in terms of info, and
won't be helpful for reorg reconciliation. Here we switch over to
logging chain moves iff they've been confirmed.
Next PR will fix this up for withdrawals, which are currently tagged
with a blockheight of zero, since we log on successful send.
On node start we replay onchaind's transactions from the database/from
our loaded htlc table. To keep things tidy, we shouldn't notify the
ledger about these, so we wrap pretty much everything in a flag that
tells us whether or not this is a replay.
There's a very small corner case where dust transactions will get missed
if the node crashes after the htlc has been added to the database but
before we've successfully notified onchaind about it.
Notably, most of the obtrusive updates to onchaind wrappings are due to
the fact that we record dust (ignored outputs) before we receive
confirmation of its confirmation.
These are incoming from onchaind, so the result of any transactions
we've created or outputs we own as a result of a channel closure. These
go into the 'wallet' account.
HTLCs trigger a coin movement only when their final form (state) is
reached. This prevents us from needing to concern ourselves with
retries, as well as being the absolutely most correct in terms of
answering the question 'when has the money irrevocably changed hands'.
All coin movements should pass this bar, for ultimate accounting
correctness
Adds a new plugin notification for getting information about coin
movements. Also includes two 'helper' notification methods that can be
called from within lightningd. Separated from the 'common' set because
the lightningd struct is required to finalize the blockheight etc
Changelog-Added: Plugins: new notification type 'coin_movement'
The current plan for coin movements involves tagging
origination/destination htlc's with a separate tag from 'routed' htlcs
(which pass through our node). In order to do this, we need a persistent flag on
incoming htlcs as to whether or not we are the final destination.
`lightningd` passes in all the known penalty_bases when starting a new
`channeld` instance, which tracks them internally, eventually matching them
with revocations and passing them back to `lightningd` so it can create the
penalty transaction. From here it is just a small step to having `channeld`
also generate the penalty transaction if desired.
When we have only a single member in a TLV (e.g. an optional u64),
wrapping it in a struct is awkward. This changes it to directly
access those fields.
This is not only more elegant (60 fewer lines), it would also be
more cache friendly. That's right: cache hot singles!
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
There's no reason to assign the plugin vars inside the callback, so do
that outside, and the tal_steal() is redundant (the plugin is already
the conn parent).
And reduce duplication by making plugin_conn_finish call plugin_kill:
just make sure we don't call plugin_conn_finish again if plugin_kill
is called externally.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
The previous implementation was a bit lazy: in particular, since we didn't
remember the disabled plugins, we would load them on rescan.
Changelog-Changed: config: the `plugin-disable` option works even if specified before the plugin is found.
1. Make the destructor call check_plugins_resolved(),
unless it was uninitialized (`opt_disable_plugin`).
2. Remove redundant list_del (destructor already does it).
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
That's more convenient for most callers, which don't need a fmt.
Fixed-by: Darosior <darosior@protonmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This is what I expected from plugin_kill, and now all the callers do the
equivalent anywat, it's easy.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Instead of calling plugin_kill() and returning, have them
uniformly return an error string or NULL, and have the top
level (plugin_read_json) do the plugin_kill() call.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This means we now clean up options in startup plugins (that was only
done by dynamic code!), and now they both share the 60 second timeout
instead of 20 seconds for dynamic.
For the dynamic case though, it's 60 seconds to both complete
getmanifest and init, which seems fair.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This will allow the dynamic starting code to use them too.
Also lets us move dev_debug_subprocess under #if DEVELOPER.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This will let us unify the startup and runtime-started infrastructure.
Note that there are two kinds of notifications:
1. Starting a single plugin (i.e. `plugin start`)
2. Starting multiple plugins (i.e. `plugin rescan` or `plugin startdir`).
In the latter case, we want the command to complete only once *all*
the plugins are dead/finished.
We also call plugin_kill() in all cases, and correctly return afterwards
(it matters once we use the same paths for dynamic plugins, which don't
cause a fatal error if they don't startup).
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Now we know whether the command completed or not, we can correctly
call command_still_pending() if it didn't complete.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
The symptom (under heavy load and valgrind) in test_plugin_command:
lightningd: common/json_stream.c:237: json_stream_output_: Assertion `!js->reader' failed.
This is because we try to call `getmanifest` again on `pay` which has not yet
responded to init.
The minimal fix for this is to keep proper state, so we can tell the
difference between "not yet called getmanifest" and "not yet finished
init".
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
I noticed the following in logs for tests/test_connection.py::test_feerate_stress:
```
DEBUG 022d223620a359a47ff7f7ac447c85c46c923da53389221a0054c11c1e3ca31d59-chan#1: Failing HTLC 18446744073709551615 due to peer death
DEBUG 022d223620a359a47ff7f7ac447c85c46c923da53389221a0054c11c1e3ca31d59-chan#1: local_routing_failure: 8194 (WIRE_TEMPORARY_NODE_FAILURE)
```
This is because it reports the (transient) node_failure error, because
our channel_failure message is incomplete. Fix this wart up.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Previously we've used the term 'funder' to refer to the peer
paying the fees for a transaction; v2 of openchannel will make
this no longer true. Instead we rename this to 'opener', or the
peer sending the 'open_channel' message, since this will be universally
true in a dual-funding world.
This in addition removes the init fixed timeout hack.
Changelog-fixed: We now *always* die if our Bitcoin backend failed unexpectedly.
Signed-off-by: Antoine Poinsot <darosior@protonmail.com>
Commit 9aedb0c61f changed this from allocating off `c` to allocating
off NULL, knowing that it's tal_steal() in the callback. But before
that, it can be detected as a mem leak:
```
@pytest.fixture
def teardown_checks(request):
"""A simple fixture to collect errors during teardown.
We need to collect the errors and raise them as the very last step in the
fixture tree, otherwise some fixtures may not be cleaned up
correctly. Require this fixture in all other fixtures that need to either
cleanup before reporting an error or want to add an error that is to be
reported.
"""
errors = TeardownErrors()
yield errors
if errors.has_errors():
# Format a nice list of everything that went wrong and raise an exception
request.node.has_errors = True
> raise ValueError(str(errors))
E ValueError:
E Node errors:
E Global errors:
E - Node /tmp/ltests-iz9y1chb/test_hsmtool_secret_decryption_1/lightning-1/ has memory leaks: [
E {
E "backtrace": [
E "ccan/ccan/tal/tal.c:442 (tal_alloc_)",
E "lightningd/jsonrpc.c:848 (parse_request)",
E "lightningd/jsonrpc.c:941 (read_json)",
E "ccan/ccan/io/io.c:59 (next_plan)",
E "ccan/ccan/io/io.c:407 (do_plan)",
E avis/build/ElementsProject/lightning/lightningd/../plugins/pay
```
Reported-by: @niftynei
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
The plugin can basically return whatever it thinks the preimage is, but we
weren't handling the case in which it doesn't actually match the hash. If it
doesn't match now we just return an error claiming we don't have any matching
invoice.
We use the new function `plugins_free` to define the correct deallocation
order on shutdown, since under normal operation the allocation tree is
organized to allow plugins to terminate and automatically free all dependent
resources. During shutdown the deallocation order is under-defined since
siblings may get freed in any order, but we implicitly rely on them staying
around.
One is called on every plugin return, and tells us whether to continue;
the other is only called if every plugin says ok.
This works for things like payload replacement, where we need to process
the results from each plugin, not just the final one!
We should probably turn everything into a chained callback next
release.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
They callback must take ownership of the payload (almost all do, but
now it's explicit).
And since the payload and cb_arg arguments to plugin_hook_call_() are
always identical, make them a single parameter.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We have several of these, and they're not always called obvious things like
"delete" or "free". `STEALS` provides a strong hint here.
I only added it to a couple I knew about off the top of my head.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This makes testing easier, and makes sense: lightningd might not
*know* about other connected channels, depending on gossip, but if the
user specifies it we should obey it.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Changed: JSON: `invoice` `exposeprivatechannels` now includes explicitly named channels even if they seem like dead-ends.
This is what actually lets us pay blinded invoices.
Unfortunately, our internal logic assumes every hop in a path has a
next `short_channel_id`, so we have to use a dummy. This is
sufficient for testing, however.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This will be used when we want to specify these in a route. But for now, they
only alter gossipd, which always sets them to NULL.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Note that it's channeld which calculates the shared secret, too. This
minimizes the work that lightningd has to do, at cost of passing this
through.
We also don't yet save the blinding field(s) to the database.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This requires us to call ecdh() in the corner case where the blinding seed
is in the TLV itself (which is the case for the start of a blinded route).
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We now track all pending RPC passthrough calls, and terminate them with an
error if the plugin dies.
Changelog-Fixed: JSON-RPC: Pending RPC method calls are now terminated if the handling plugin exits prematurely.
Use `LC_ALL=C sort` instead of `sort` so that mocks get sorted in
the same way on all developers' environments.
Re-record the result of `make update-mocks`.
Changelog-None
This happened on my testnet node because I've been failing to reconnect to
a node which created a channel and never exchanged announcement sigs.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
common/onion is going to need to use this for the case where it finds a blinding
seed inside the TLV. But how it does ecdh is daemon-specific.
We already had this problem for devtools/gossipwith, which supplied a
special hsm_do_ecdh(). This just makes it more general.
So we create a generic ecdh() interface, with a specific implementation
which subdaemons and lightningd can use.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We currently abuse the added_htlc and failed_htlc messages to tell channeld
about existing htlcs when it restarts. It's clearer to have an explicit
'existing_htlc' type which contains all the information for this case.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
It's almost always "their_features" and "our_features" respectively, so
make those names clear.
Suggested-by: @cdecker
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Note that now we check capacity once we've figured out which peer, which
broke a test (we returned "unknown peer" instead of "capacity exceeded"),
so we rework that too.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This is useful in general, but in particular it allows fundchannel to avoid YA
query to figure out if it can wumbo.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Added: JSON: `connect` returns `features` of the connected peer on success.
Shows what features we use in various contexts, including those added
by plugins in getmanifest.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Added: Plugin: `feature_set` object added to `init`
Turns out that unnecessary: all callers can access the feature_set,
so make it much more like a normal primitive.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This cleans up the boutique handling of features, and importantly, it
means that if a plugin says to offer a feature in init, we will now
*accept* that feature.
Changelog-Fixed: Plugins: setting an 'init' feature bit allows us to accept it from peers.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This is to prepare for dynamic features, including making plugins first
class citizens at setting them.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Removed: JSON: `listnodes` `globalfeatures` output (`features` since in 0.7.3).
Changelog-Removed: JSON: `listpeers` `localfeatures` and `globalfeatures` output (`features` since in 0.7.3).
Changelog-Removed: JSON: `peer_connected` hook `localfeatures` and `globalfeatures` output (`features` since in 0.7.3).
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Removed: JSON: `fundchannel` and `fundchannel_start` `satoshi` parameter removed (renamed to `amount` in 0.7.3).
This adapts our fee estimations requests to the Bitcoin backend to the
new semantic, and batch the requests.
This makes our request for fees much simpler, and leaves some more
flexibility for a plugin to do something smart (it could still lie before
but now it's explicit, at least.) as we don't explicitly request
estimation for a specific mode and a target.
Changelog-Changed: We now batch the requests for fee estimation to our Bitcoin backend.
Changelog-Changed: We now get more fine-grained fee estimation from our Bitcoin backend.
We kept track of an URGENT, a NORMAL, and a SLOW feerate. They were used
for opening (NORMAL), mutual (NORMAL), UNILATERAL (URGENT) transactions
as well as minimum and maximum estimations, and onchain resolution.
We now keep track of more fine-grained feerates:
- `opening` used for funding and also misc transactions
- `mutual_close` used for the mutual close transaction
- `unilateral_close` used for unilateral close (commitment transactions)
- `delayed_to_us` used for resolving our output from our unilateral close
- `htlc_resolution` used for resolving onchain HTLCs
- `penalty` used for resolving revoked transactions
We don't modify our requests to our Bitcoin backend, as the next commit
will batch them !
Changelog-deprecated: The "urgent", "slow", and "normal" field of the `feerates` command are now deprecated.
Changelog-added: The fields "opening", "mutual_close", "unilateral_close", "delayed_to_us", "htlc_resolution" and "penalty" have been added to the `feerates` command.
This allows us to set more fine-grained feerate for onchain resolution.
We still give it the same feerate for all types, but this will change as
we move feerates to bcli.
My node crashed as follows:
lightningd: lightningd/peer_control.c:957: peer_connected: Assertion `!peer->uncommitted_channel' failed.
In the logs I found:
Running lightning_openingd: Cannot allocate memory
Which reveals that we're not freeing uc in that path!
Changelog-Fixed: Fix assertion on reconnect if we fail to run openingd.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
For messages, we use the onion but payload lengths 0 and 1 aren't special.
Create a flag to disable that logic.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
also: convert the stored int value from 'int' to 's64'
atoi fails silently, returning a zero. instead we use the more robust
strtoll which will allow us fail with an error.
we also make the parsing for bools stricter, only allowing plausibly
boolean values to parse.