In this commit, we consolidate the _lease specific_ logic for the
success and timeout HTLC resolvers. We do this with the addition of a
new struct which is then composed via struct embedding with the two
existing structs. This fixes a flake in the integration tests by
ensuring the height is set up front, rather than eventually once the
height matches the lock time.
This commit was previously split into the following parts to ease
review:
- 2d746f68: replace imports
- 4008f0fd: use ecdsa.Signature
- 849e33d1: remove btcec.S256()
- b8f6ebbd: use v2 library correctly
- fa80bca9: bump go modules
In order to sweep the commitment and HTLC outputs belonging to a
script-enforced leased channel, each resolver must know whether the
additional CLTV clause on the channel initiator applies to them. To do
so, we retrieve the historical channel state stored within the database
and supplement it to the resolvers to provide them with what's needed in
order to sweep the necessary outputs and resolve their respective
contracts.
This commit moves the logic for sweeping the confirmed second-level
timeout transaction into its own method.
We do a small change to the logic: When setting the spending tx in the
report, we use the detected commitspend instead of the presigned tiemout
tx. This is to prepare for the coming change where the spending
transaction might actually be a re-signed timeout tx, and will therefore
have a different txid.
When a remote peer claims one of our outgoing htlcs on chain, we do
not care whether they claimed with multiple stages. We simply store
the claim outgome then forget the resolver.
In this commit, we simplify the existing `htlcTImeoutResolver` with some
newly refactored out methods from the `htlcTimeoutContestResolver`. The
resulting logic is easier to follow as it's more linear, and only deals
with spend notifications rather than both spend _and_ confirmation
notifications.
Previously, contract resolvers that needed to publish a second level tx,
did not have access to the original htlc amount.
This commit reconstructs this amount from data that is already persisted
in arbitrator log.
Co-authored-by: Joost Jager <joost.jager@gmail.com>