This passes the new `RecipientOnionFields` through the internal
sending APIs, ensuring we have access to the full struct when we
go to construct the sending onion so that we can include any new
fields added there.
This moves the public payment sending API from passing an explicit
`PaymentSecret` to a new `RecipientOnionFields` struct (which
currently only contains the `PaymentSecret`). This gives us
substantial additional flexibility as we look at add both
`PaymentMetadata`, a new (well, year-or-two-old) BOLT11 invoice
extension to provide additional data sent to the recipient.
In the future, we should also add the ability to add custom TLV
entries in the `RecipientOnionFields` struct.
Final nodes previously had stricter requirements on HTLC contents
matching onion value compared to intermediate nodes. This allowed
for probing, i.e. the last intermediate node could overshoot the
value by a small amount and conclude from the acceptance or rejection
of the HTLC whether the next node was the destination. This also
applies to the msat amount, however this change was already present.
This is largely motivated by some follow-up work for anchors that will
introduce an event handler for `BumpTransaction` events, which we can
now include in this new top-level `events` module.
`FaliureCode` is a trivial enum with no body, so we shouldn't be
passing it by reference. Its sufficiently strange that the Java
bindings aren't happy with it, which is fine, we should just fix it
here.
This field was previous useful in manual retries for users to know when all
paths of a payment have failed and it is safe to retry. Now that we support
automatic retries in ChannelManager and no longer support manual retries, the
field is no longer useful.
For backwards compat, we now always write false for this field. If we didn't do
this, previous versions would default this field's value to true, which can be
problematic because some clients have relied on the field to indicate when a
full payment retry is safe.
Long ago, we used the `no_connection_possible` to signal that a
peer has some unknown feature set or some other condition prevents
us from ever connecting to the given peer. In that case we'd
automatically force-close all channels with the given peer. This
was somewhat surprising to users so we removed the automatic
force-close, leaving the flag serving no LDK-internal purpose.
Distilling the concept of "can we connect to this peer again in the
future" to a simple flag turns out to be ripe with edge cases, so
users actually using the flag to force-close channels would likely
cause surprising behavior.
Thus, there's really not a lot of reason to keep the flag,
especially given its untested and likely to be broken in subtle
ways anyway.
`PaymentParams` is all about the parameters for a payment, i.e. the
parameters which are static across all the paths of a paymet.
`RouteParameters` is about the information specific to a given
`Route` (i.e. a set of paths, among multiple potential sets of
paths for a payment). The CLTV delta thus doesn't belong in
`RouterParameters` but instead in `PaymentParameters`.
Worse, because `RouteParameters` is built from the information in
the last hops of a `Route`, when we deliberately inflate the CLTV
delta in path-finding, retries of the payment will have the final
CLTV delta double-inflated as it inflates starting from the final
CLTV delta used in the last attempt.
By moving the CLTV delta to `PaymentParameters` we avoid this
issue, leaving only the sought amount in the `RouteParameters`.
Secrets should not be exposed in-memory at the interface level as it
would be impossible the implement it against a hardware security
module/secure element.
This is purely a refactor that does not change the InitFeatures
advertised by a ChannelManager. This allows users to configure which
features should be advertised based on the values of `UserConfig`. While
there aren't any existing features currently leveraging this behavior,
it will be used by the upcoming anchors_zero_fee_htlc_tx feature.
The UserConfig dependency on provided_init_features caused most
callsites of the main test methods responsible for opening channels to
be updated. This commit foregos that completely by no longer requiring
the InitFeatures of each side to be provided to these methods. The
methods already require a reference to each node's ChannelManager to
open the channel, so we use that same reference to obtain their
InitFeatures. A way to override such features was required for some
tests, so a new `override_init_features` config option now exists on
the test harness.
If we try to send any onion error with the `UPDATE` flag in
response to a phantom receipt, we should always swap it for
something generic that doesn't require a `channel_update` in it.
Here we use `temporary_node_failure`.
Test provided by Valentine Wallace <vwallace@protonmail.com>
When we receive a phantom HTLC with a bogus/modified CLTV, we
should fail back with `incorrect_cltv_expiry`, but that requires a
`channel_update`, which we cannot generate for a phantom HTLC which
has no corresponding channel. Thus, instead, we have to fall back
to `incorrect_cltv_expiry`.
Fixes#1879
This replaces `final_expiry_too_soon` with
`incorrect_or_unknown_payment` as was done in
https://github.com/lightning/bolts/pull/608. Note that the
rationale for this (that it may expose whether you are the final
recipient for the payment or not) does not currently apply to us -
we don't apply different final CLTV values to different payments.
However, we might in the future, and this will make us slightly
more consistent with other nodes.
In upcoming commit(s), we'll want to store intercepted HTLC forwards in
ChannelManager before the user signals that they should be forwarded. It
wouldn't make sense to store a HTLCForwardInfo as-is because the FailHTLC
variant doesn't make sense, so we refactor out the ::AddHTLC contents into its
own struct for storage.
Co-authored-by: John Cantrell <johncantrell97@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Valentine Wallace <vwallace@protonmail.com>
In c986e52ce8, an `MppId` was added
to `HTLCSource` objects as a way of correlating HTLCs which belong
to the same payment when the `ChannelManager` sees an HTLC
succeed/fail. This allows it to have awareness of the state of all
HTLCs in a payment when it generates the ultimate user-facing
payment success/failure events. This was used in the same PR to
avoid generating duplicative success/failure events for a single
payment.
Because the field was only used as an internal token to correlate
HTLCs, and retries were not supported, it was generated randomly by
calling the `KeysInterface`'s 32-byte random-fetching function.
This also provided a backwards-compatibility story as the existing
HTLC randomization key was re-used for older clients.
In 28eea12bbe `MppId` was renamed to
the current `PaymentId` which was then used expose the
`retry_payment` interface, allowing users to send new HTLCs which
are considered a part of an existing payment.
At no point has the payment-sending API seriously considered
idempotency, a major drawback which leaves the API unsafe in most
deployments. Luckily, there is a simple solution - because the
`PaymentId` must be unique, and because payment information for a
given payment is held for several blocks after a payment
completes/fails, it represents an obvious idempotency token.
Here we simply require the user provide the `PaymentId` directly in
`send_payment`, allowing them to use whatever token they may
already have for a payment's idempotency token.
As we are eventually removing the `channel_state` lock, this commit
moves the `forward_htlcs` map out of the `channel_state` lock, to ease
that process.
As we remove the concept of a global "known/supported" feature set
in LDK, we should also remove the concept of a global "required"
feature set. This does so by moving the checks for specific
required features into handlers.
Specifically, it allows the handler `peer_connected` method to
return an `Err` if the peer should be disconnected. Only one such
required feature bit is currently set - `static_remote_key`, which
is required in `ChannelManager`.
The `rejected_by_dest` field of the `PaymentPathFailed` event has
always been a bit of a misnomer, as its really more about retry
than where a payment failed. Now is as good a time as any to
rename it.
This is mostly motivated by the fact that payments may happen while the
latest `ChannelUpdate` indicating our new `ChannelConfig` is still
propagating throughout the network. By temporarily allowing the previous
config, we can help reduce payment failures across the network.
A new `update_channel_config` method is exposed on the `ChannelManger`
to update the `ChannelConfig` for a set of channels atomically. New
`ChannelUpdate` events are generated for each eligible channel.
Note that as currently implemented, a buggy and/or
auto-policy-management client could spam the network with updates as
there is no rate-limiting in place. This could already be done with
`broadcast_node_announcement`, though users are less inclined to update
that as frequently as its data is mostly static.
In the near future, we plan to allow users to update their
`ChannelConfig` after the initial channel handshake. In order to reuse
the same struct and expose it to users, we opt to move out all static
fields that cannot be updated after the initial channel handshake.