A TxCreationKeys set represents the key which will be embedded in output
scripts of a party's commitment tx state. Among them there is a always
a key belonging to counter-party, the HTLC pubkey. To dissociate
strongly, prefix keys with broadcaster/countersignatory.
A revocation keypair is attributed to the broadcaster as it's used
to punish a fraudulent broadcast while minding that such keypair
derivation method will be always used by countersignatory as it's
its task to enforce punishement thanks to the release secret.
To avoid reviewers confusion, rename counterparty_to_self_delay
to counteparty_selected_contest_delay, i.e the justice delay announced
by a channel counterparty restraining our transactions, and to_self_delay
to locally_selected_contest_delay, i.e the justice delay announced by us
restraining counterparty's transactions
We deviate from wider nomenclature by prefixing local data with a
locally_ extension due to the leak of this value in transactions/scripts
builder, where the confusion may happen.
Rename further AcceptChannelData to the new nomenclature.
Previously most of variable fields relative to data belonging to
our node or counterparty were labeled "local"/"remote". It has been
deemed confusing with regards to transaction construction which is
always done from a "local" viewpoint, even if owner is our counterparty
Variables should be named according to the script semantic which is
an invariant with regards to generating a local or remote commitment
transaction.
I.e a broadcaster_htlc_key will always guard a HTLC to the party able
to broadcast the computed transactions whereas countersignatory_htlc_key
will guard HTLC to a countersignatory of the commitment transaction.
The C bindings automatically create a _new() function for structs
which contain only pub fields which we know how to map. This
conflicts with the actual TxCreationKeys::new() function, so we
simply rename it to capture its nature as a derivation function.
Its somewhat awkward that ChannelManagerReadArgs requires a mutable
reference to a HashMap of ChannelMonitors, forcing the callsite to
define a scope for the HashMap which they almost certainly won't use
after deserializing the ChannelManager. Worse, to map the current
version to C bindings, we'd need to also create a HashMap binding,
which is overkill for just this one use.
Instead, we just give the ReadArgs struct ownership of the HashMap
and add a constructor which fills the HashMap for you.
Lightning OutPoints only have 16 bits to express the output index
instead of Bitcoin's 32 bits, implying that some outputs are
possibly not expressible as lightning OutPoints. However, such
OutPoints can never be hit within the lightning protocol, and must
be on-chain spam sent by a third party wishing to donate us money.
Still, in order to do so, the third party would need to fill nearly
an entire block with garbage, so this case should be relatively
safe.
A new comment in channelmonitor explains the reasoning a bit
further.
Because the C bindings maps objects into new structs which contain
only a pointer to the underlying (immovable) Rust type, it cannot
create a list of Rust types which are contiguous in memory. Thus,
in order to allow C clients to call certain Rust functions, we have
to use &[&Type] not &[Type]. This commit fixes this issue for the
get_route function.
To do this, we replace get_and_clear_pending_htlcs_updated with
get_and_clear_pending_monitor_events, and which still transmits HTLCUpdates
as before, but now also transmits a new MonitorEvent::CommitmentTxBroadcasted
event when a channel's commitment transaction is broadcasted.
Due to a desire to be able to override temporary channel IDs and
onion keys, KeysInterface had two separate fetch-random-32-bytes
interfaces - an onion-key specific version which fetched 2 random
32 byte strings and a temporary-channel-id specific version.
It turns out, we never actually need to override both at once (as
creating a new channel and sending an outbound payment are always
separate top-level calls), so there's no reason to add two
functions to the interface when both really do the same thing.
This changes the LICENSE file and adds license headers to most files
to relicense under dual Apache-2.0 and MIT. This is helpful in that
we retain the patent grant issued under Apache-2.0-licensed work,
avoiding some sticky patent issues, while still allowing users who
are more comfortable with the simpler MIT license to use that.
See https://github.com/rust-bitcoin/rust-lightning/issues/659 for
relicensing statements from code authors.
Allows calling of InMemoryChannelKeys methods.
The wrapping makes it obvious to signer implementers that the pre-derived keys are a local cache and should not be trusted in a validating signer.
The commitment secret is sensitive - it can be used by an attacker to
steal funds if the node also signs the same transaction. Therefore,
only release the secret from ChannelKeys when we are revoking a
transaction.
For making debugging easy.
If the user gives a different node_secret for transport
layer (`PeerManager`) and for routing msg, internal_announcement_signatures
is the first place it causes an error.
By giving a detailed error message, user will be able to
fix the bug quickly.
... for ChannelError and APIMisuseError
Before this commit, When rl returns error, we don't know
The actual parameter which caused the error.
By returning parameterised `String` instead of predefined `&'static str`,
We can give a caller improved error message.
TestLogger now has two additional methods
1. `assert_log_contains` which checks the logged messsage
has how many entry which includes the specified string as a substring.
2. `aasert_log_regex` mostly the same with `assert_log_contains`
but it is more flexible that caller specifies regex which has
to be satisfied instead of just a substring.
For regex, tests now includes `regex` as dev-dependency.