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.
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.
A channel's `short_channel_id` is currently only set when the funding
transaction is confirmed via `transactions_confirmed`, which might be
well after the channel initally becomes usable, e.g., in the 0conf case.
Previously we would panic due to a reachable `unwrap` when receiving a
counterparty's `announcement_signatures` message for a 0conf channel
pending confirmation on-chain.
Here we fix this bug by avoiding unsafe `unwrap`s and just erroring out
and ignoring the announcement_signatures message if the `short_channel_id`
hasn't been set yet.
While bindings should probably be able to figure out that this is
the same type as `Self`, for now we simply swap the type to make
the bindings generator have an easier go of it.
Given we build `InFlightHtlcs` per route-fetch call, there's no
reason to pass them out by reference rather than simply giving the
user the full object. This also allows them to tweak the in-flight
set before fetching a route.
We introduce a `UnfundedChannelContext` which contains a counter for the
current age of an unfunded channel in timer ticks. This age is incremented
for every `ChannelManager::timer_tick_ocurred` and the unfunded channel
is removed if it exceeds `UNFUNDED_CHANNEL_AGE_LIMIT_TICKS`.
The value will not be persisted as unfunded channels themselves are not
persisted.
One of a series of follow-up commits to address some issues found
in PR 2077, where we split channels up into different maps and structs
depending on phase in their life.
We had some inconsistencies so far in referring to channels such as
`OutboundV1Channel` and `InboundV1Channel` as pending and unfunded.
From here we refer to these kinds of channels only as "unfunded".
This is a slight conflation with the term "unfunded" in the contexts
of denial of service mitigation. There, "unfunded" actually refers to
non-0conf, inbound channels that have not had their funding transaction
confirmed. This might warrant changing that usage to "unconfirmed inbound".
As done with inbound feerate updates, we can afford to commit less in
fees, as long as we still may the minimum mempool feerate. This enables
users to spend a bit more of their balance, as less funds are being
committed to transaction fees.
Channels supporting anchors outputs no longer require their feerate
updates to target a prompt confirmation since commitment transactions
can be bumped when broadcasting. Commitment transactions must now at
least meet the minimum mempool feerate, until package relay is deployed,
such that they can propagate across node mempools in the network by
themselves.
The existing higher bound no longer applies to channels supporting
anchor outputs since their HTLC transactions don't have any fees
committed, which directly impact the available balance users can send.
There's no need to yield such an event when the commitment transaction
already meets the target feerate on its own, so we can simply broadcast
it without an anchor child transaction. This may be a common occurrence
until we are less aggressive about feerate updates.
In an older PR a reviewer had asked why the discarding of a channel
being blocked on another monitor update is okay if the blocked
channel has since closed. At the time, this was not actually okay -
the monitor updates in the channel weren't moved to the
`ChannelManager` on close so the whole pipeline was busted, but
with the changes in 4041f0899f the
handling of channel closes with pending monitor updates is now
correct, and so is the existing code block.
If a `ChannelMonitorUpdate` completes being persisted, but the
`ChannelManager` isn't informed thereof (or isn't persisted) before
shutdown, on startup we may still have it listed as in-flight. When
we compare the available `ChannelMonitor` with the in-flight set,
we'll notice it completed and remove it, however this may leave
some post-update actions dangling which need to complete.
Here we handle this with a new `BackgroundEvent` indicating we need
to handle any post-update action(s) for a given channel.
If a channel has been closed, there may still be some
`ChannelMonitorUpdate`(s) which are pending completion. These
in-flight updates may also be blocking another channel from letting
an update fly, e.g. for forwarded payments where the payment
preimage will be removed from the downstream channel after the
upstream channel has closed.
Luckily all the infrastructure to handle this case is already in
place - we just need to process the
`monitor_update_blocked_actions` for closed channels.
This was a regression resulting from f2453b7 since we now process events
in a loop until there aren't any left. Processing events is done in
batches and they are not removed until we're done processing each batch.
Since handling a `PendingHTLCsForwardable` event will call back into the
`ChannelManager`, we'll still see the original forwarding event not
removed. Phantom payments will need an additional forwarding event
before being claimed to make them look real by taking more time.