We previously tracked funding transaction confirmation by marking
funding_tx_confirmations to 1 when we see it in a block and
incrementing each block thereafter if its non-0. To avoid
double-incrementing the first confirmation, we did the increment
(and funding_locked check) after doing the first-confirmation
checks. Thus, we'd never hit the funding_locked case during the
first confirmation.
To address this, we simply swap the order of the checks, though
bumping the funding_tx_confirmations increment up to the top.
Reported-by: Igor Cota <igor@codexapertus.com>
If our counterparty burns their funds by revoking their current
commitment transaction before we've sent them a new one, we'll step
forward the remote commitment number. This would be otherwise fine
(and may even encourage them to broadcast their revoked state(s) on
chain), except that our new EnforcingChannelKeys expects us to not
jump forward in time. Since it isn't too important that we punish
our counterparty in such a corner-case, we opt to just close the
channel in such a case and move on.
Fix a crash where previously we weren't able to detect any accepted
HTLC if its witness-encoded cltv expiry was different from expected
ACCEPTED_HTLC_SCRIPT_WEIGHT. This should work for any cltv expiry
included between 0 and 16777216 on mainnet, testnet and regtest.
The Features::new() method is nonsense and doesn't describe what
features were being set - we introduce an empty() and supported()
constructors instead.
This merges local and global features into one struct, which is
parameterized by where it appers. The parameterization restricts
which queries can be made and which features can be set, in line
with the latest BOLT 9.
Closes#427.
We now have current-local-tx broadcast ability in channel monitors
directly (for ChannelManager deserialization), so we can just use
that instead of always having the Channel store signed ready-to-go
copies of the latest local commitment transaction.
This is further kinda nice since ChannelMonitor is live and can, eg
broadcast HTLC-Success transactions immediately as they will be
generated at broadcast time instead of in advance.
Finally, this lets us clean up a tiny bit in Channel.
This adds a new fn to ChannelKeys which is called when we generte
a new remote commitment transaction for signing. While it may be
theoretically possible to unwind state updates by disconnecting and
reconnecting as well as making appropriate state machine changes,
the effort required to get it correct likely outweighs the UX cost
of "preflighting" the requests to hardwre wallets.
Instead of having in-memory access to the list of private keys
associated with a channel, we should have a generic API which
allows us to request signing, allowing the user to store private
keys any way they like.
The first step is the (rather mechanical) process of templating
the entire tree of ChannelManager -> Channel impls by the
key-providing type. In a later commit we should expose only public
keys where possible.