In this commit, we adjust the DeleteCommitmentUpdate method so that it
marks a session as Terminal (if there are updates to delete) since once
we have deleted a commitment update from a session - the session is no
longer useable.
This commit adds the DeactiateTower method to the wtclient.ClientManager
interface along with its implementation. A test is also added for the
new method.
This new method sets the tower's status to inactive so that it is not
loaded at startup as a candidate tower. We also ensure that a tower's
status is set to active if the CreateTower is called when the tower
already exists.
This commit updates the DeleteCommittedUpdate DB method to delete all of
a given session's committed updates instead of just one at a time. The
reason for this is that in an upcoming commit, we will introduce a
"Terminal" session state - once we have deleted a committed update for a
session it should be considered "Terminal" and there is never a case
where we would only want to delete one committed update and not the
rest. So we want these two actions (deleting committed updates of a
session and setting it's status to terminal) to be atomic.
This commit adds a new FlagTaprootChannel Flag which is then used to
construct a new blob Type: TypeAltruistTaprootCommit. New watchtower
feature bits are also added (4/5).
Before this commit, in the watchtower client's DiskOverflowQueue, there
could be a situation _if no consumer was reading from the queue_ that
could lead to an in-memory build up of backup tasks instead of the
expected disk overflow. This commit fixes this by ensuring that if a
task is read from disk, then the mode is set to disk mode to ensure that
any new items are persisted to disk in this scenario.
The unit tests added in the previous commit is updated here in order to
show that the fix does in-fact fix the test.
In this commit, some temporary variables and logic is added to the
DiskOverflowQueue for easy stop/go control from unit tests. This is then
used to write a temporary unit tests that demonstrates a race condition
that can cause the queue to be in disk mode when it should be in memory
mode. This new code & test will be removed after the issue has been
fixed.
In this commit, we use the newly added session listing options to ensure
that we only see a session as exhausted if it does not have any un-acked
updates on disk. This fixes the bug previously demonstrated.
In this commit, we adjust the PostEvaluateFilterFn to also take in a
count representing the number of committed updates (ie, persisted
un-acked updates) that the session has. This will be made use of in an
upcoming commit.
This commit adds a test to demonstrate an edge case that can result in
the "tower has un-acked updates" error being thrown when a user is
attempting to remove a tower. This will be fixed in an upcoming commit.
In this commit, we convert the `JusticeKit` struct to an interface.
Then, we add two implementations of that interface:
1) The `legacyJusticeKit` which implements all the methods of
`JusticeKit`
2) The `anchorJusticKit` which wraps the `legacyJusticeKit` and just
re-implements the `ToRemoteOutputSpendInfo` method since.
In preparation for the next commit which will introduce the `JusticeKit`
interface, here we just move the code related to building the actual
justice kit packet into a separate file.
In this commit a new enum, CommitmentType, is introduced and initially
there are 3 CommitmentTypes: Legacy, LegacyTweakless and Anchor.
Then, various methods are added to `CommitmentType`. This allows us to
remove a bunch of "if-else" chains from the `wtclient` and `lookout`
code. This will also make things easier to extend when a new commitment
type (like Taproot) is added.
This commit moves over the last two methods, `RegisterChannel` and
`BackupState` from the `Client` to the `Manager` interface. With this
change, we no longer need to pass around the individual clients around
and now only need to pass the manager around.
To do this change, all the goroutines that handle channel closes,
closable sessions needed to be moved to the Manager and so a large part
of this commit is just moving this code from the TowerClient to the
Manager.
This commit removes the mutex from ClientStats and instead puts that in
clientStats which wraps ClientStats with a mutex. This is so that the
tower client interface can return a ClientStats struct without worrying
about copying a mutex.
Simiarly to the previous commit, this commit moves the RemoveTower
method from the Client to the TowerClientManager interface. The manager
handles any DB related handling. The manager will first attempt to
remove the tower from the in-memory state of each client and then will
attempt to remove the tower from the DB. If the removal from the DB
fails, the manager will re-add the tower to the in-memory state of each
client.
In this commit we move the AddTower method from the Client interface to
the TowerClientManager interface. The wtclientrpc is updated to call the
`AddTower` method of the Manager instead of calling the `AddTower`
method of each individual client. The TowerClient now is also only
concerned with adding a new tower (or new tower address) to its
in-memory state; the tower Manager will handle adding the tower to the
DB.
In this commit, the `Stop` and `Start` methods are removed from the
`Client` interface and instead added to the new `Manager`. Callers now
only need to call the Manager to start or stop the clients instead of
needing to call stop/start on each individual client.
Introduce a wtclient `Manager` which handles tower clients. It indexes
clients by the policy used. The policy field is thus removed from the
`Config` struct which configures the Manager and is instead added to a
new `towerClientCfg` which configures a specific client managed by the
manager. For now, only the `NewClient` method is added to the Manager.
It can be used to construct a new `TowerClient`. The Manager currently
does notthing with the clients added to it.