The final database that needs to be made remote compatible is the
watchtower server and client database.
They are handled a bit differently because both of them are not always
active, only when specifically turned on in the config.
Even though the sphinx router's persistent replay log is not crucial in
the operation of lnd as its state can be re-created by creating a new
brontide connection, we want to make lnd fully stateless and therefore
have the option of not storing any state on disk.
As a preparation to not have a local and remote version of the database
around anymore, we rename the variables into what their actual function
is. In case of the RPC server we even directly use the channel graph
instead of the DB instance. This should allow us to extract the channel
graph into its own, separate database (perhaps with better access
characteristics) in the future.
As a preparation to initialize more than just the channel database on
startup we introduce a new struct that holds a reference to each of our
database instances.
This commit changes missioncontrol's store update from per payment to
every second. Updating the missioncontrol store on every payment caused
gradual slowdown when using etcd.
We also completely eliminate the use of the cursor, further reducing
the performance bottleneck.
This commit adds height-based invoice expiry for hodl invoices
that have active htlcs. This allows us to cancel our intentionally
held htlcs before channels are force closed. We only add this for
hodl invoices because we expect regular invoices to automatically
be resolved.
We still keep hodl invoices in the time-based expiry queue,
because we want to expire open invoices that reach their timeout
before any htlcs are added. Since htlcs are added after the
invoice is created, we add new htlcs as they arrive in the
invoice registry. In this commit, we allow adding of duplicate
entries for an invoice to be added to the expiry queue as each
htlc arrives to keep implementation simple. Our cancellation
logic can already handle the case where an entry is already
canceled, so this is ok.
closed
This commit makes the handoff procedure between the breachabiter and
chainwatcher use a function closure to mark the channel pending closed
in the DB. Doing it this way we know that the channel has been markd
pending closed in the DB when ProcessACK returns.
The reason we do this is that we really need a "two-way ACK" to have the
breacharbiter know it can go on with the breach handling. Earlier it
would just send the ACK on the channel and continue. This lead to a race
where breach handling could finish before the chain watcher had marked
the channel pending closed in the database, which again lead to the
breacharbiter failing to mark the channel fully closed.
We saw this causing flakes during itests.
In this commit we add a new flag that controls if lnd will do strict
zombie pruning or not. If true, then this will cause lnd to maintain a
tighter graph as it wants both edges to always be live. We enable this by
default for neutrino as without this, it's possible that a node never
sees both edges begin disabled, so those edges are never actually pruned
from the graph.
In this commit every succesfull started sub system is tracked
and in case of a failure to complete the Start function all
these sub systems are stopped using a generic cleanup function.
Since zombie pruning can be very slow on some devices (e.g. mobile) it
would stall lnd startup. Since it is not essential for pruning to be
finished for lnd to be functional, we instead delay the initial prune by
30 seconds.
Note that we could also wait for the graphPruneInterval to tick, but
since this is by default 2 hours, it is unlikely that a mobile app will
ever be open that long.
This commit deprecates/replaces the old field `sat_per_byte` with
`sat_per_vbyte`. While the old field suggests sat per byte, it’s
actually using sat per virtual byte. We use the Hidden param to hide all
the deprecated flags. These flags won't show up in help menu onwards,
while stay valid that can be passed from cli. Thus bash scripts
referencing these fields won't be broken.
This commit adds a new config option: "--coop-close-target-confs"
which allows a user to override the default target confirmations of 6
that is used to estimate a fee rate to use during a co-op closure
initiated by a remote peer.
Add a new boolean parameter without changing any existing
functionality. The parameter will be used to indicate
whether a request to update a channel's status was made
manually by a user (currently always false).
We are going to use the config struct to allow getting and setting
of the mission control config in the commits that follow. Self node
is not something we want to change, so we move it out for better
separation.
This commit caps the update fee the initiator will send when the anchors
channel type is used. We do not limit anything on the receiver side.
10 sat/vbyte is the current default max fee rate we use. This should be
enough to ensure propagation before anchoring down the commitment
transaction.
In certain container set ups, it's useful to optionally have lnd just shutdown if it detects that its certs are expired, as assuming there's a hypervisor to restart the container/pod, then upon restart, lnd will have fully up to date certs.
In this commit, we add a new option to toggle gossip rate limiting. This
new option can be useful in contexts that require near instant
propagation of gossip messages like integration tests.
With this commit we rename the existing AvailableDiskSpace function to
its correct name AvailableDiskSpaceRatio as it only returns a ratio. We
then go ahead and add a new function that returns the actual number of
free bytes available on a file system.
This also fixes some comments and always returns an error instead of
panicking.