This is a follow-up to https://github.com/lightning/bolts/pull/1092
that fixes the following issues:
- fix a few typos
- remove non-zero-fee anchors test cases
- remove `remote_pubkey` rotation
Advertized as supported by all but 6 nodes (and those can no longer
route payments since people only send the modern onion these days)
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
These still have names and numbers, since they appear in `channel_type`. They are somewhat tangled with each other, so let's tie them together as assumed.
option_data_loss_protect is advertized by all by 11 nodes(*), and option_static_remotekey all but 16 nodes.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
[* there are 449 three-year old LND nodes which advertize `2200` as their features, which have already been trimmed from most gossip for not having htlc_maximum_msat in their channel_updates]
Prior versions of the v2 dual-funding protocol assumed a 'minimum fee'
payment for any witness stack of any input, as a way to simplify fee
checks.
The suggested min feerate didn't make sense for taproot spend paths etc;
instead we remove this check entirely.
This commit adds the interactive transaction construction protcol, as
well as the first practical example of using it, v2 of channel
establishment.
Note that for v2 we also update the channel_id, which now uses the hash
of the revocation_basepoints. We move away from using the funding
transaction id, as the introduction of RBF* makes it such that a single
channel may have many funding transaction id's over the course of
its lifetime.
*Later, also splicing
The `commitment tx with 3 htlc outputs, 2 offered having the same amount
and preimage` test was not correctly updated after the value of test
htlc 6 was changed to 5000001 and the cltv expiry of test htlc 5 was
changed to 506. This commit updates the anchors test accordingly.
The `commitment tx with 3 htlc outputs, 2 offered having the same amount
and preimage` test was not correctly updated after the value of test
htlc 6 was changed to 5000001 and the cltv expiry of test htlc 5 was
changed to 506. This commit updates the static-remote test accordingly.
The `commitment tx with 3 htlc outputs, 2 offered having the same amount
and preimage` test was not correctly updated after the value of test
htlc 6 was changed to 5000001 and the cltv expiry of test htlc 5 was
changed to 506. This commit updates the legacy test accordingly.
The commitment transaction tests are all meant to use the same funding
transaction which has an amount of 10000000000 msat. The LocalBalance
and RemoteBalance along with the value of any htlcs should always add up
to this amount.
This commit updates the `simple commitment tx with no HTLCs and single
anchor` anchors test to comply with the above.
These are the same test vectors as those found under Appendix F, except
that each HTLC has a zero fee transaction instead, resulting in a
signature change.
The order of operations is now more clearly specified as:
HTLC output amount = (`amount_msat` / 1000) - (fees in satoshis) where all
divisions are rounded down.
This is required to avoid issues in rounding if we were to take
HTLC output amount = (`amount_msat` - (`feerate_per_kw` * weight)) / 1000 and
then rounded down.
This is a minor clarification that the `to_self_delay` is enforced
in a 2nd-stage transaction for HTLCs, while it's directly enforced
in the commit tx for the main output.
And make most places warn or error. Places where we're operating
on a channel tend to be "warn and close connection" since we want to
forget the mistake they just sent, and closing the connection does that.
We now use the same words everywhere:
1. "fail channel" means to go onchain (if necessary).
2. "send `error`" means to send an error message.
3. "send `warning`" means to send a warning message.
4. "close connection" means close the connection.
These are all spelled out explicitly, rather than having "fail channel"
imply sending an error packet, for example.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Since HTLCs below this amount will not appear in the commitment tx, they
are effectively converted to miner fees. The peer could use this to grief
you by broadcasting its commitment once it contains a lot of dust HTLCs.
Add network dust thresholds computation details, as implemented in Bitcoin
Core's default relay policy.
Drop non-segwit support in shutdown: this allows dust limit to go as low
as 354 sats without creating relay issues with default node policies.
We add a requirement that dust limit cannot be lower than 354 sats.
This ensures implementers don't have to figure this subtlety on their own.
Fixes#696 and #905
This commit is intended to fix an ambiguity in the spec that led to a
divergence in the sorting tie breaker between implementations, that can
lead to force closed transaction in practice. BIP 69 operates on the
output level, therefore it examines the _satoshi_ amount of a output
when sorting. The spec however, references BIP 69, but states that an
"identical" HTLC output may have the same `amount_msat` value.
In the wild this led to some implementations checking the _sat_ value of
an HTLC while others checked the _msat_ value. In the scenario where an
pair HTLC has the same _sat_ value, but differing _msat_ values, then
one will fall through to the tie-breaker, while the other while sort
them according to their _msat_ values.
In this commit, we attempt to make this requirement more explicit by
removing the reference to `msat`, and more explicitly describing when an
HTLC pair is to be considered identical.
Add a serialized transactions test vector for the edge case of sorting htlc-timeout-tx
when there are multiple offered htlc with the same amount and preimage.
The test vector reuses previous preimages and creates a case scenario with 1 received htlc
and 2 offered, the two offered will have same scriptPubKey and redeemScript, but different CLTV value.
It is asserted the order in which the htlc transactions should be kept internally
and we assume the same order is used to construct the commitment_signed message.
This complements #491 .
* BOLT#3: use 4 bytes for cltv_expiry in accepted_htlc_script
* BOLT#3: correct success_witness size
* BOLT#3: note HTLC tx weights differ a bit from actual weights
This commit extends the specification with a new commitment format that
adds two anchor outputs to the commitment transaction. Anchor outputs
are a safety feature that allows a channel party to unilaterally increase
the fee of the commitment transaction using CPFP and ensure timely
confirmation on the chain. There is no cooperation required from the
remote party.
It turns out everyone does `P[B / 8] ^= (1 << (P % 8))`,
which is not what the spec says to do (it implies you
would treat P as a bitstring numbered 255 to 0).
See this stackoverflow question:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49928131/lightning-secret-generation-from-seed
Reported-by: Janus Troelsen @ysangkok (on Twitter)
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
ECDSA signatures in Bitcoin are DER-encoded but public keys are not.
The compressed format for public keys is for example standardized in
Sections 2.3.3 and 2.3.4 of
Standards for Efficient Cryptography, SEC 1: Elliptic Curve
Cryptography, Certicom Research, Version 2, 2009,
https://www.secg.org/sec1-v2.pdf
This separates out the static remotekey changes from the more ambitious
option_simplified_commitment (which also included pushme outputs and
bring-your-own-fee for HTLC outputs).
As per http://www.erisian.com.au/meetbot/lightning-dev/2019/lightning-dev.2019-09-02-20.06.html
Thanks to everyone for feedback: @araspitzu @roasbeef @bitconner
Suggested-by: @roasbeef
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
* Added descriptions of how a 2-of-2 multisignature verification is used for enforcing timelocks when timing out on-chain offered HTLCs as well as spending on-chain received HTLCs in the success case.
OP_CHECKLOCKTIMEVERIFY and OP_CSV use an inconsistent naming convention.
Update OP_CSV to match the OP_CHECKLOCKTIMEVERIFY convention as OP_CHECKSEQUENCEVERIFY.
We express it has how the outputs are ordered, but the only way you can
detect that is by the htlc_signatures order, which is the part which really
matters.
I finally reproduced this, BTW, which is why I'm digging it up!
Closes: #448
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>