lnd/lnwire/commit_revocation_test.go
Joseph Poon f3849f5c10 Structs for Wire Protocol HTLCs and Commitments
* Structs and wire messages for HTLCs
* Wire protocol for a state machine with no blocking(!!!)
  (I will write the state machine)
  TL;DR: Can do multiple HTLC modifications in-flight, dead simple wire
  protocol. Both sides can update their Commitments unliaterally without
  waiting for the other party's signature. Will have basic/preliminary
  notes in the README
* Added **swp to .gitignore because of vim annoyances
2016-01-14 23:56:10 -08:00

37 lines
1.4 KiB
Go

package lnwire
import (
"testing"
)
var (
//Need to to do this here
_ = copy(revocationHash[:], revocationHashBytes)
commitRevocation = &CommitRevocation{
ChannelID: uint64(12345678),
CommitmentHeight: uint64(12345),
RevocationProof: revocationHash, //technically it's not a hash... fix later
}
commitRevocationSerializedString = "0000000000bc614e00000000000030394132b6b48371f7b022a16eacb9b2b0ebee134d41"
commitRevocationSerializedMessage = "0709110b000007da000000240000000000bc614e00000000000030394132b6b48371f7b022a16eacb9b2b0ebee134d41"
)
func TestCommitRevocationEncodeDecode(t *testing.T) {
//All of these types being passed are of the message interface type
//Test serialization, runs: message.Encode(b, 0)
//Returns bytes
//Compares the expected serialized string from the original
s := SerializeTest(t, commitRevocation, commitRevocationSerializedString, filename)
//Test deserialization, runs: message.Decode(s, 0)
//Makes sure the deserialized struct is the same as the original
newMessage := NewCommitRevocation()
DeserializeTest(t, s, newMessage, commitRevocation)
//Test message using Message interface
//Serializes into buf: WriteMessage(buf, message, uint32(1), wire.TestNet3)
//Deserializes into msg: _, msg, _ , err := ReadMessage(buf, uint32(1), wire.TestNet3)
MessageSerializeDeserializeTest(t, commitRevocation, commitRevocationSerializedMessage)
}