OnionMessageProvider is a super-trait of OnionMessageHandler, but they
don't need to be used separately. Additionally, the former is misplaced
in the events module. Remove OnionMessageProvider and add it's only
method, next_onion_message_for_peer, into OnionMessageHandler.
The new `create_onion_message` function in `OnionMessenger` is hard
to handle - it has various generic requirements indirectly via the
struct, but they're not bounded by any of the method parameters.
Thus, you can't simply call `OnionMessenger::create_onion_message`,
as various bounds are not specified.
Instead, we move it to a freestanding function so that it can be
called directly without explicitly setting bounds.
Add a trait for finding routes for onion messages and parameterize
OnionMessenger with it. This allows OnionMessenger to reply to messages
that it handles via one of its handlers (e.g., OffersMessageHandler).
To avoid confusion in the upcoming MessageRouter trait, introduce an
OnionMessagePath struct that wraps the intermediate nodes and the
destination. Use this in OnionMessenger::send_onion_message.
Add a trait for handling BOLT 12 Offers messages to OnionMessenger and a
skeleton implementation of it for ChannelManager. This allows users to
either provide their own custom handling Offers messages or rely on a
version provided by LDK using stateless verification.
BOLT 12 Offers makes use of onion messages to request and respond with
invoices. Add these types and an error type to OnionMessageContents
along with the necessary parsing and encoding.
In an upcoming commit, messages for BOLT 12 offers are read from the
onion payload. Passing a logger allows for logging semantic errors when
parsing the messages.
Previously, we would panic when failing to construct onion messages in
certain circumstances. Here we opt to always rather error out and don't
panic if something goes wrong during OM packet construction.
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.
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.
Currently the `onion_message` module exposes the blinded route
object as *both* `BlindedRoute` and `BlindedPath`. This is somewhat
confusing, and given they are really paths, not routes (at least in
the sense that a route could be multi-path, though for OMs they are
not), here we unify to only call them paths.
If we're sending straight to a blinded route with no unblinded intermediate
hops, and we are the introduction node, we need to advance the blinded route by
one hop so that the second hop is the new introduction node.
+ remove MaybeReadableArgs trait as it is now unused
+ remove onion_utils::DecodeInput as it would've now needed to be parameterized
by the CustomOnionMessageHandler trait, and we'd like to avoid either
implementing DecodeInput in messenger or having onion_utils depend on
onion_message::*
Co-authored-by: Matt Corallo <git@bluematt.me>
Co-authored-by: Valentine Wallace <vwallace@protonmail.com>
This uses the work done in the preceding commits to implement encoding a user's
custom TLV in outbound onion messages, and decoding custom TLVs in inbound
onion messages, to be provided to the new CustomOnionMessageHandler.
OnionMessageContents specifies the data TLV that the sender wants in the onion
message. This enum only has one variant for now, Custom. When offers are added,
additional variants for invoice, invoice_request, and invoice_error will be
added.
This commit does not actually implement sending the custom OM contents, just
the API change.
OnionMessenger::new will now take a custom onion message handler trait
implementation. This handler will be used in upcoming commit(s) to handle
inbound custom onion messages.
The new trait also specifies what custom messages are supported via its
associated type, CustomMessage. This associated type must implement a new
CustomOnionMessagesContents trait, which requires custom messages to support
being written, being read, and supplying their TLV type.