chain::Filter::register_output may return an in-block dependent
transaction that spends the output. Test the scenario where the txdata
given to ChainMonitor::block_connected includes a commitment transaction
whose HTLC output is spent in the same block but not included in txdata.
Instead, it is returned by chain::Filter::register_output when given the
commitment transaction's HTLC output. This is a common scenario for
Electrum clients, which provided filtered txdata.
Add a method to TestChainSource to test chain::Filter expectations. This
is limited to register_output, allowing tests to assert that the method
was called with a specific output and dictate what the return value is.
Multiple expectations are checked in the order in which they were added.
Failure occurs if a call doesn't match the next expectation or if there
are unsatisfied expectations. If not expectations are added, then no
calls are checked.
Electrum clients will only provide transaction data for outputs that
have been explicitly registered. Hence, upon registering new outputs,
recursively register any outputs to watch contained within dependent
transactions from the same block.
When registering a watched transaction output, any in-block descendant
transactions spending the output must be supplied. Give the block hash
when registering such outputs such that this is possible. Otherwise,
spends from other blocks may be returned inadvertently.
Electrum clients primarily operate by subscribing to notifications of
transactions by script pubkeys. Therefore, they will send filtered
transaction data without including dependent transactions. Outputs for
such transactions must be explicitly registered with these clients.
Therefore, upon block_connected, provide a mechanism for an Electrum-
backed chain::Filter to return new transaction data to scan.
This expands the assertions on block ordering to apply to
`#[cfg(test)]` builds in addition to normal builds, requiring that
unit and functional tests have syntactically-valid (ie the previous
block hash pointer and the heights match the blocks) blockchains.
This requires a reasonably nontrivial diff in the functional tests
however it is mostly straightforward changes.
Many functional tests rely on being able to call block_connected
arbitrarily, jumping back in time to confirm a transaction at a
specific height. Instead, this takes us one step towards having a
well-formed blockchain in the functional tests.
We also take this opportunity to reduce the number of blocks
connected during tests, requiring a number of constant tweaks in
various functional tests.
Co-authored-by: Valentine Wallace <vwallace@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Matt Corallo <git@bluematt.me>
Sadly the connected-in-order tests have to be skipped in our normal
test suite as many tests violate it. Luckily we can still enforce
it in the tests which run in other crates.
Co-authored-by: Matt Corallo <git@bluematt.me>
Co-authored-by: Jeffrey Czyz <jkczyz@gmail.com>
In some PRs, codecov gets mad that the coverage of the patch itself
is lower than the base. In most cases, we largely don't want a Big
Red X, at least as long as the total coverage has not gone down
substantially.
We allow users to configure the to_self_delay, which is analogous to
the cltv_expiry_delta in terms of its security context, so we should
allow users to specify both.
We similarly bound it on the lower end, but reduce that bound
somewhat now that it is configurable.
Relative HTML doc paths in doc links works locally, but breaks on
crates.io. Luckily, we can now use explicit full paths and rustdoc
will resolve them for us.
Useful for constructing route hints for private channels in invoices.
Co-authored-by: Valentine Wallace <vwallace@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Antoine Riard <ariard@student.42.fr>
This will be used to expose forwarding info for route hints in the next commit.
Co-authored-by: Valentine Wallace <vwallace@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Antoine Riard <ariard@student.42.fr>
This will be filled in in upcoming commits, then exposed in ChannelDetails
to allow constructing route hints for invoices.
Also update the cltv_expiry_deta comment in msgs::ChannelUpdate
Co-authored-by: Valentine Wallace <vwallace@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Antoine Riard <ariard@student.42.fr>
Modify NetGraphMsgHandler::handle_query_channel_range to always use
first_blocknum=0 in replies. This is spec compliant after changes to
make sequence completion explicity using sync_complete.
Modifies NetGraphMsgHandler::handle_query_channel_range to use a constant
max value in replies. Modifies tests to generate 8000 channels instead
of making this value configurable.