OnionV2s don't (really) work on Tor anymore anyway, and the field
is set for removal in the BOLTs [1]. Sadly because of the way
addresses are parsed we have to continue to understand that type 3
addresses are 12 bytes long. Thus, for simplicity we keep the
`OnionV2` enum variant around and just make it an opaque 12 bytes,
with the documentation updated to note the deprecation.
[1] https://github.com/lightning/bolts/pull/940
Even if our gossip hasn't changed, we should be willing to
re-broadcast it to our peers. All our peers may have been
disconnected the last time we broadcasted it.
The network serialization format for all messages was changed some
time ago to include a TLV suffix for all messages, however we never
bothered to implement it as there isn't a lot of use validating a
TLV stream with nothing to do with it. However, messages are
increasingly utilizing the TLV suffix feature, and there are some
compatibility concerns with messages written as a part of other
structs having their format changed (see previous commit).
Thus, here we go ahead and convert most message serialization to a
new macro which includes a TLV suffix after a series of fields,
simplifying several serialization implementations in the process.
In order to avoid significant malloc traffic, messages previously
explicitly stated their serialized length allowing for Vec
preallocation during the message serialization pipeline. This added
some amount of complexity in the serialization code, but did avoid
some realloc() calls.
Instead, here, we drop all the complexity in favor of a fixed 2KiB
buffer for all message serialization. This should not only be
simpler with a similar reduction in realloc() traffic, but also
may reduce heap fragmentation by allocating identically-sized
buffers more often.
MessageSendEvent::PaymentFailureNetworkUpdate served as a hack to pass
an HTLCFailChannelUpdate from ChannelManager to NetGraphMsgHandler via
PeerManager. Instead, remove the event entirely and move the contained
data (renamed NetworkUpdate) to Event::PaymentFailed to be processed by
an event handler.
We very often receive duplicate gossip messages, which now causes us
to log at the DEBUG level, which is almost certainly not what a
user wants. Instead, we add a new form of ErrorAction which causes
us to only log at the TRACE level.
Previous to this PR, TLV serialization involved iterating from 0 to the highest
given TLV type. This worked until we decided to implement keysend, which has a
TLV type of ~5.48 billion.
So instead, we now specify the type of whatever is being (de)serialized (which
can be an Option, a Vec type, or a non-Option (specified in the serialization macros as "required").
VecReadWrapper is only used in TLVs so there is no need to prepend
a length before writing/reading the objects - we can instead simply
read until we reach the end of the TLV stream.
In #797, we stopped enforcing that read/sent node_announcements
had their addresses sorted. While this is fine in practice, we
should still make a best-effort to sort them to comply with the
spec's forward-compatibility requirements, which we do here in the
ChannelManager.
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>
* Implemented protocol.
* Made feature optional.
* Verify that the default value is true.
* Verify that on shutdown,
if Channel.supports_shutdown_anysegwit is enabled,
the script can be a witness program.
* Added a test that verifies that a scriptpubkey
for an unreleased segwit version is handled successfully.
* Added a test that verifies that
if node has op_shutdown_anysegwit disabled,
a scriptpubkey with an unreleased segwit version on shutdown
throws an error.
* Added peer InitFeatures to handle_shutdown
* Check if shutdown script is valid when given upfront.
* Added a test to verify that an invalid test results in error.
* Added a test to check that if a segwit script with version 0 is provided,
the updated anysegwit check detects it and returns unsupported.
* An empty script is only allowed when sent as upfront shutdown script,
so make sure that check is only done for accept/open_channel situations.
* Instead of reimplementing a variant of is_witness_script,
just call it and verify that the witness version is not 0.
The only API change outside of additional derives is to change
the inner field in `DecodeError::Io()` to an `std::io::ErrorKind`
instead of an `std::io::Error`. While `std::io::Error` obviously
makes more sense in context, it doesn't support Clone, and the
inner error largely doesn't have a lot of value on its own.
Our bindings generator is braindead with respect to the idents
used in a trait definition - it treats them as if they were used
where the trait is being used, instead of where the trait is
defined. Thus, if the idents used in a trait definition are not
also imported the same in the files where the traits are used, we
will claim the idents are bogus.
I spent some time trying to track the TypeResolvers globally
through the entire conversion run so that we could use the original
file's TypeResolver later when using the trait, but it is somewhat
of a lifetime mess. While likely possible, import consistency is
generally the case anyway, so unless it becomes more of an issue in
the future, it likely makes the most sense to just keep imports
consistent.
This commit keeps imports consistent across trait definition files
around `MessageSendEvent` and `MessageSendEventsProvider`.
This method was used to set the initial_routing_sync flag when sending
an outbound Init message to a peer. Since we are now relying on
gossip_queries instead of initial_routing_sync, synchronization can be
fully encapsulate into RoutingMessageHandler via sync_routing_table.
This commit removes should_request_full_sync from the trait
RoutingMessageHandler. The implementation is still used in
NetGraphMsgHandler and has been converted into a private method instead
of a trait function.
This commit changes outbound routing table sync to use gossip_queries
instead of the effectively deprecated initial_routing_sync feature.
This change removes setting of initial_routing_sync in our outbound Init
message. Instead we now call sync_routing_table after receiving an Init
message from a peer. If the peer supports gossip_queries and
should_request_full_sync returns true, we initiate a full gossip_queries
sync.
This commit modifies sync_routing_table in RoutingMessageHandler to
accept a reference to the Init message received by the peer. This allows
the method to use the Peer's features to drive the operations of the
gossip_queries routing table sync.
This change modifies gossip_queries methods in RoutingMessageHandler to
move the message instead of passing a reference. This allows the message
handler to be more efficient by not requiring a full copy of SCIDs
passed in messages.
This commit simplifies the sync process for routing gossip messages. When
a sync is initiated, the process is handled statelessly by immediately
issuing SCID queries as channel range replies are received. This greatly
simplifies the state machine at the cost of fully validating and
conforming to the current spec.
Defines message handlers for gossip_queries messages in the RoutingMessageHandler
trait. The MessageSendEventsProvider supertrait is added to RoutingMessageHandler
so that the implementor can use SendMessageEvents to send messages to a
peer at the appropriate time.
The trait methods are stubbed in NetGraphMsgHandler which implements
RoutingMessageHandler and return a "not implemented" error.