Commit f560320b introduced changes that require users of
`impl_writeable_tlv_based`/`impl_writeable_tlv_based_enum` to import
`_encode_varint_length_prefixed_tlv` and `alloc` separately.
Here, we take care of the necessary imports in
`_encode_varint_length_prefixed_tlv` itself, allowing users to just
import the `impl_writeable_tlv_based` variant they need.
Don't collect iterators to compare, minorly simplify encoding the
keysend TLV, combine the _encode_tlv_stream variants to check that the
ordering of TLVs is correct including custom TLVs.
When reloading a node in the test framework, we end up with a new
`ChannelManager` that has references to various test util structs.
In order for the tests to compile reliably in the face of unrelated
changes, those test structs need to always be initialized before
both the new but also the original `ChannelManager`.
Here we make that change.
01847277b9 switched around the logic
for inbound channel construction to assign the outbound SCID alias
after constructing the `InboundV1Channel` object. Thus, the SCID
alias argument is now unused, and we remove it here.
If we have a pending inbound un-accepted channel but receive an
error message for it from our peer, or our peer disconnects, we
should remove the pending entry, ensuring any attempts to accept
it fail.
For some reason an unrelated PR caused all our tests with
`reload_node` calls to fail to compile. This is due, in part, to
the lifetimes on `reload_node` implying that the new and original
`ChannelManager` (or some of the structs they reference) must live
for the same lifetime.
This fixes that issue by correcting the lifetimes to be consistent
across `Node` and `_reload_node`.
The ChannelMonitor::get_claimable_balances method provides a more
straightforward approach to the balance of a channel, which satisfies
most use cases. The computation of AvailableBalances::balance_msat is
complex and originally had a different purpose that is not applicable
anymore.
Create a new table in 'peer_state' to maintain unaccepted inbound
channels; i.e., a channel for which we've received an 'open_channel'
message but that user code has not yet confirmed for acceptance. When
user code accepts the channel (e.g. via 'accept_inbound_channel'),
create the channel object and as before.
Currently, the 'open_channel' message eagerly creates an
InboundV1Channel object before determining if the channel should be
accepted. Because this happens /before/ the channel has been assigned
a user identity (which happens in the handler for OpenChannelRequest),
the channel is assigned a random user identity. As part of the
creation process, the channel's cryptographic material is initialized,
which then uses this randomly generated value for the user's channel
identity e.g. in SignerProvider::generate_channel_keys_id.
By delaying the creation of the InboundV1Channel until /after/ the
channel has been accepted, we ensure that we defer cryptographic
initialization until we have given the user the opportunity to assign
an identity to the channel.
Because we don't know which custom TLV type numbers the user is
expecting (and it would be cumbersome for them to tell us), instead of
failing unknown even custom TLVs on deserialization, we accept all
custom TLVs, and pass them to the user to check whether they recognize
them and choose to fail back if they don't. However, a user may not
check for custom TLVs, in which case we should reject any even custom
TLVs as unknown.
This commit makes sure a user must explicitly accept a payment with
even custom TLVs, by (1) making the default
`ChannelManager::claim_funds` fail if the payment had even custom TLVs
and (2) adding a new function
`ChannelManager::claim_funds_with_known_custom_tlvs` that accepts them.
This commit also refactors our custom TLVs test and updates various
documentation to account for this.
When a user decodes custom TLVs, if they fail to recognize even type
numbers they should fail back with the correct failure code and fail
data. This new variant adds the proper failure variant for the user to
pass into `ChannelManager::fail_htlc_backwards_with_reason`.
Note that the enum discriminants were removed because when adding a
struct variant we can no longer make use of the discriminant through
casting like we previously did, and instead have to manually define the
associated failure code anyway.
Upon receiving multiple payment parts with custom TLVs, we fail payments
if they have any non-matching or missing even TLVs, and otherwise just
drop non-matching TLVs if they're odd.
When serialized, the TLVs in `OutboundOnionPayload`, unlike a normal
TLV stream, are prefixed with the length of the stream. To allow a user
to add arbitrary custom TLVs, we aren't able to communicate to our
serialization macros exactly which fields to expect, so this commit
adds new macro variants to allow appending an extra set of bytes (and
modifying the prefixed length accordingly).
Because the keysend preimage TLV has a type number in the custom type
range, and a user's TLVs may have type numbers above and/or below
keysend's type number, and because TLV streams must be serialized in
increasing order by type number, this commit also ensures the keysend
TLV is properly sorted/serialized amongst the custom TLVs.
Custom TLVs allow users to send extra application-specific data with
a payment. These have the additional flexibility compared to
`payment_metadata` that they don't have to reflect recipient generated
data provided in an invoice, in which `payment_metadata` could be
reused.
We ensure provided type numbers are unique, increasing, and within the
experimental range with the `RecipientOnionFields::with_custom_tlvs`
method.
This begins sender-side support for custom TLVs.
Decaying the channel liquidity bounds by a half life can result in a
large decrease, which may have an oscillating affect on whether a
channel is retried. Approximate an additional three-quarter life when
half of the next half life has passed to help smooth out the decay.
The current ChannelClosed event does not let
you know the counterparty during a channel close
event. This change adds the counterparty_node_id
and the channel_capacity to the ChannelClosed event.
This helps users to have more context during a
channel close event. Solves #2343
b0d4ab8cf8 fixed a nasty bug where
we'd failed to include the payment preimage in keysend onions at
all. Ultimately, this was a test failure - the existing test suite
should which did keysend payments were not structured in a way that
would fail in this case, instead using the same preimage variable
both for sending and receiving.
Here we improve the main keysend test tweaked by b0d4ab8cf8
to make absolutely sure it cannot work if the preimage doesn't come
from the onion. We make the payment preimage on the sending side a
variable inside a scope which only exists for the send call. Once
that scope completes the payment preimage only exists in the
sending `ChannelManager`, which must have put it in the onion in
order for the receiving node to have it.
Fixes a bug where we wouldn't use the provided keysend preimage when
piping through OutboundPayment::pay_route_internal.
Also simplifies and refactors existing keysend tests to make sure this
gets hit.
To support route blinding, we want to split OnionHopData into two separate
structs, one for inbound onions and one for outbound onions. This is because
blinded payloads change the fields present in the onion hop data struct based
on whether we're sending vs receiving (outbound onions include encrypted blobs,
inbound onions can decrypt those blobs and contain the decrypted fields
themselves).
In upcoming commits, we'll add variants for blinded payloads to the new
InboundPayload enum.
Javadocs refuse unicode and as our rustdocs get copied over to Java
bindings (and thus get run through javadocs) we can't have unicode
in our rustdocs.
In Java/TypeScript, we map enums as a base class and each variant
as a class which extends the base. In Java/TypeScript, functions
and fields share the same namespace, which means we cannot have
functions on an enum which have the same name as any fields in any
enum variants.
`Balance`'s `claimable_amount_satoshis` method aliases with fields
in each variant, and thus ultimately doesn't compile in TypeScript.
Because `Balance::claimable_amount_satoshis` has the same name as
the fields, it's also a bit confusing, as it doesn't return the
field for each variant, but sometimes returns zero if we're not
sure we can claim the balance.
Instead, we rename the fields in each enum variant to simply
`amount_satoshis`, to avoid implying that we can definitely claim
the balance.
Makes it easier to add new arguments without a ton of resulting test changes.
Useful for route blinding testing because we need to check for malformed HTLCs,
which is not currently supported by reconnect_nodes. It also makes it easier to
tell what is being checked in relevant tests.