Instead of relying on users to set an invoice's features correctly,
enforce the semantics inside InvoiceBuilder. For instance, if the user
sets a PaymentSecret then InvoiceBuilder should ensure the appropriate
feature bits are set. Thus, for this example, the TaggedField
abstraction can be retained while still ensuring BOLT 11 semantics at
the builder abstraction.
Current Bitcoin Core's policy will reject a p2wsh as a dust if it's
under 330 satoshis. A typical p2wsh output is 43 bytes big to which
Core's `GetDustThreshold()` sums up a minimal spend of 67 bytes (even
if a p2wsh witnessScript might be smaller). `dustRelayFee` is set
to 3000 sat/kb, thus 110 * 3000 / 1000 = 330. As all time-sensitive
outputs are p2wsh, a value of 330 sat is the lower bound desired
to ensure good propagation of transactions. We give a bit margin to
our counterparty and pick up 660 satoshis as an accepted
`dust_limit_satoshis` upper bound.
As this reasoning is tricky and error-prone we hardcode it instead of
letting the user picking up a non-sense value.
Further, this lower bound of 330 sats is also hardcoded as another constant
(MIN_DUST_LIMIT_SATOSHIS) instead of being dynamically computed on
feerate (derive_holder_dust_limit_satoshis`). Reducing risks of
non-propagating transactions in casee of failing fee festimation.
The ChannelSigner bounds are specified both in `impl<>` and in the
`where` clause, which the C bindings generator doesn't like. There
is no reason to have them specified twice.
For users who get PaymentPreimages via
`get_payment_secret_preimage`, they need to provide the
PaymentPreimage back in `claim_funds` but they aren't actually
given the preimage anywhere.
This commit gives users the PaymentPreimage in the
`PaymentReceived` event.
Like the payment_secret parameter, this paramter has been the source
of much confusion, so we just drop it.
Users should prefer to do this check when registering the payment
secret instead of at claim-time.
This allows users to store metadata about an invoice at
invoice-generation time and then index into that storage with a
general-purpose id when they call `get_payment_secret`. They will
then be provided the same index when the payment has been received.
Our current PaymentReceived API is incredibly easy to mis-use -
the "obvious" way to implement a client is to always call
`ChannelManager::claim_funds` in response to a `PaymentReceived`
event. However, users are *required* to check the payment secret
and value against the expected values before claiming in order to
avoid a number of potentially funds-losing attacks.
Instead, if we rely on payment secrets being pre-registered with
the ChannelManager before we receive HTLCs for a payment we can
simply check the payment secrets and never generate
`PaymentReceived` events if they do not match. Further, when the
user knows the value to expect in advance, we can have them
register it as well, allowing us to check it for them.
Other implementations already require payment secrets for inbound
payments, so this shouldn't materially lose compatibility.
This prepares us for requiring payment_secrets for all received
payments, by demonstrating test changes work even prior to the new
requirement.
In order to avoid needing to pipe payment secrets through to
additional places in the claim logic and then removing that
infrastructure once payment secrets are required, we use the new
payment secret storage in ChannelManager to look up the payment
secret for any given pament hash in claim and fail-back functions.
This part of the diff is reverted in the next commit.
In order to reduce code movement in the next commit, this commit
simply tweaks get_payment_preimage_hash!() and related functions in
functional tests to return a payment secret. Further, we ensure
that we always call get_payment_preimage_hash!() with the node
which will ultimately receive the payment.
This adds support for tracking payment secrets and (optionally)
payment preimages in ChannelManager. This potentially makes client
implementations much simper as they don't have to have external
payment preimage tracking.
This doesn't yet use such tracking anywhere.
We were waiting for the initiator, but the spec doesn't guarantee that they will send Init first, so we might theoretically wait forever.
Also, lnprototest expects this behavior.
During the block API refactor, we started calling
Channel::force_shutdown when a channel is closed due to a bogus
funding tx. However, we still set the channel's state to Shutdown
prior to doing so, leading to an assertion in force_shutdown (that
the channel is not already closed).
This removes the state-set call and adds a (long-overdue) test for
this case.
Fixes: 60b962a18e
Define a separate trait akin to chain::Listen for notifying when
transactions have been confirmed on chain or unconfirmed during a chain
reorganization. Whereas chain::Listen is used for block-oriented chain
sources, chain::Confirm is used for chain sources supplying data for
activity related to transactions and outputs registered via
chain::Filter.