This commit refactors the remaining usage of WriteElements. By
replacing the interface types with concrete types for the params used in
the methods, most of the encoding of the messages now takes zero heap
allocations.
This commit changes the WriteElement and WriteElements methods to take a
write buffer instead of io.Writer. The corresponding Encode methods are
changed to use the write buffer.
This commit changes the method WriteMessage to use bytes.Buffer to save
heap allocations. A unit test is added to check the method is
implemented as expected.
Removes the MaxPayloadLength function from the Message interface
and checks that each message payload is not greater than MaxMsgBody.
Since all messages are now allowed to be 65535 bytes in size, the
MaxPayloadLength is no longer needed.
In this commit, we convert the delivery address in the open and accept
channel methods to be a TLV type. This works as an "empty" delivery
address is encoded using a two zero bytes (uint16 length zero), and a
tlv type of 0 is encoded in the same manner (byte for type, byte for
zero length). This change allows us to easily extend these messages in
the future, in a uniform manner.
When decoding the message we snip the bytes from the read TLV data.
Similarly, when encoding we concatenate the TLV record for the shutdown
script with the rest of the TLV data.
Messages:
- UpdateFulfillHTLC
- UpdateFee
- UpdateFailMalformedHTLC
- UpdateFailHTLC
- UpdateAddHTLC
- Shutdown
- RevokeAndAck
- ReplyShortChanIDsEnd
- ReplyChannelRange
- QueryShortChanIDs
- QueryChannelRange
- NodeAnnouncement
- Init
- GossipTimestampRange
- FundingSigned
- FundingLocked
- FundingCreated
- CommitSig
- ClosingSigned
- ChannelUpdate
- ChannelReestablish
- ChannelAnnouncement
- AnnounceSignatures
lnwire: update quickcheck tests, use constant for Error
multi: update unit tests to pass deep equal assertions with messages
In this commit, we update a series of unit tests in the code base to now
pass due to the new wire message encode/decode logic. In many instances,
we'll now manually set the extra bytes to an empty byte slice to avoid
comparisons that fail due to one message having an empty byte slice and
the other having a nil pointer.
In this commit, we create a new `ExtraOpaqueData` based on the field
with the same name that's present in all the announcement related
messages. In later commits, we'll embed this new type in each message,
so we'll have a generic way to add/parse TLV extensions from messages.
In order to prep for allowing TLV extensions for the `ReplyChannelRange`
and `QueryChannelRange` messages, we'll need to remove the struct
embedding as is. If we don't remove this, then we'll attempt to decode
TLV extensions from both the embedded and outer struct.
All relevant call sites have been updated to reflect this minor change.
In this commit, we add a new RequiresFeature method to the feature
vector struct. This method allows us to check if the set of features
we're examining *require* that the even portion of a bit pair be set.
This can be used to check if new behavior should be allowed (after we
flip new bits to be required) for existing contexts.
This change was largely motivated by an increase in high disk usage as a
result of channel update spam. With an in memory graph, this would've
gone mostly undetected except for the increased bandwidth usage, which
this doesn't aim to solve yet. To minimize the effects to disks, we
begin to rate limit channel updates in two ways. Keep alive updates,
those which only increase their timestamps to signal liveliness, are now
limited to one per lnd's rebroadcast interval (current default of 24H).
Non keep alive updates are now limited to one per block per direction.
This fixes a decoding error when the list of short channel ids within a
QueryShortChanIDs message started with a zero sid.
BOLT-0007 specifies that lists of short channel ids should be sorted in
ascending order. Previously, this was checked within lnwire by comparing
two consecutive sids in the list, starting at the empty (zero) sid.
This meant that a list that started with a zero sid couldn't be decoded
since the first element would _not_ be greater than the last one
(namely: also zero).
Given that one can only check for ordering starting at the second
element, we add a check to ensure the proper behavior.
A unit test is also added to ensure no future regressions on this
behavior.
Before this commit, both writing and reading an encoded empty set of
short channel IDs from the wire would fail. Prior to this commit, we
treated decoding an empty set as a caller error, and failed to write out
the zlib encoding of an empty set in a way that us and the other
implementations were able to read.
To fix this, rather than giving zlib an empty buffer to write out (which
results in an encoding with the zlib header data and the rest), we just
write a blank slice. When decoding, if we have an empty query body, then
we'll return a `nil` slice.
With the above changes, we'll now always write out an empty short
channel ID set as:
```
0001 (1 byte follows) || <encoding_type>
```
A new test has also been added to exercise this case for both known
encoding types.
The number and the name will be separate on the rpc level, so we remove
the feature bit from the string. Currently this method is unused apart
from maybe in some rare logging instances.
This commit removes an unnecessarely large 32 byte buffer in favor of
a small 2 byte buffer and cleans up type conversion between uint16
and uint32 values.
This commit adds the feature bit and additional fields
required in `open_channel` and `accept_channel` wire
messages for `option_upfront_shutdown_script`.