Matt Corallo [Mon, 4 Oct 2021 04:47:33 +0000 (04:47 +0000)]
Move pending payment tracking to after the new HTLC flies
If we attempt to send a payment, but the HTLC cannot be send due to
local channel limits, we'll provide the user an error but end up
with an entry in our pending payment map. This will result in a
memory leak as we'll never reclaim the pending payment map entry.
Matt Corallo [Fri, 17 Sep 2021 17:51:13 +0000 (17:51 +0000)]
Update Event::PaymentReceived docs since we require payment secret
Users no longer need to verify the amounts of received payments as
the payment secret will protect us against the probing attacks such
verification was intended to fix.
Matt Corallo [Wed, 15 Sep 2021 19:20:44 +0000 (19:20 +0000)]
Regenerate PendingHTLCsForwardable on reload instead of serializing
When we are prepared to forward HTLCs, we generate a
PendingHTLCsForwardable event with a time in the future when the
user should tell us to forward. This provides some basic batching
of forward events, improving privacy slightly.
After we generate the event, we expect users to spawn a timer in
the background and let us know when it finishes. However, if the
user shuts down before the timer fires, the user will restart and
have no idea that HTLCs are waiting to be forwarded/received.
To fix this, instead of serializing PendingHTLCsForwardable events
to disk while they're pending (before the user starts the timer),
we simply regenerate them when a ChannelManager is deserialized
with HTLCs pending.
Matt Corallo [Wed, 29 Sep 2021 19:15:16 +0000 (19:15 +0000)]
Consider many first-hop paths to the same counterparty in routing
Previously we'd simply overwritten "the" first hop path to each
counterparty when routing, however this results in us ignoring all
channels except the last one in the `ChannelDetails` list per
counterparty.
We want to reuse send_payment internal functions for retries,
so some need to now be parameterized by PaymentId to avoid
generating a new PaymentId on retry
Matt Corallo [Wed, 1 Sep 2021 20:33:49 +0000 (20:33 +0000)]
Force-close channels if closing transactions may be non-standard
If a counterparty (or an old channel of ours) uses a non-segwit
script for their cooperative close payout, they may include an
output which is unbroadcastable due to not meeting the network dust
limit.
Here we check for this condition, force-closing the channel instead
if we find an output in the closing transaction which does not meet
the limit.
Matt Corallo [Wed, 1 Sep 2021 20:22:49 +0000 (20:22 +0000)]
Require user cooperative close payout scripts to be Segwit
There is little reason for users to be paying out to non-Segwit
scripts when closing channels at this point. Given we will soon, in
rare cases, force-close during shutdown when a counterparty closes
to a non-Segwit script, we should also require it of our own users.
Matt Corallo [Wed, 1 Sep 2021 20:18:47 +0000 (20:18 +0000)]
Reduce the maximum allowed counterparty dust limit to 546 sat/vbyte
546 sat/vbyte is the current default dust limit on most
implementations, matching the network dust limit for P2SH outputs.
Implementations don't currently appear to send any larger dust
limits, and allowing a larger dust limit implies higher payment
failure risk, so we'd like to be as tight as we can here.
Matt Corallo [Sun, 26 Sep 2021 04:20:44 +0000 (04:20 +0000)]
Make `NetworkGraph` Clone-able again
There isn't a lot of user-utility for cloning `NetworkGraph`
directly (its a rather large struct, and there probably isn't a lot
of reason to have *multiple* `NetworkGraph`s). Thus, when locks
were pushed down into it, the `Clone`-ability of it was dropped as
well.
Sadly, mapping the Java memory model onto:
* `Read`-ing a `NetworkGraph`, creating a Java-owned
`NetworkGraph` object that the JVM will destruct for us,
* Passing it to a `NetGraphMsgHandler`, which now expects to own
the `NetworkGraph`, including destructing it,
isn't really practical without adding a clone in between.
Given this, and the fact that there's nothing inherently wrong with
clone-ing a `NetworkGraph`, we simply re-add `Clone` here.
Matt Corallo [Thu, 23 Sep 2021 04:02:58 +0000 (04:02 +0000)]
Make method time on trait impl explitit to help bindings generator
Associated types in C bindings is somewhat of a misnomer - we
concretize each trait to a single struct. Thus, different trait
implementations must still have the same type, which defeats the
point of associated types.
In this particular case, however, we can reasonably special-case
the `Infallible` type, as an instance of it existing implies
something has gone horribly wrong.
In order to help our bindings code figure out how to do so when
referencing a parent trait's associated type, we specify the
explicit type in the implementation method signature.
Matt Corallo [Wed, 22 Sep 2021 19:00:30 +0000 (19:00 +0000)]
Use Infallible for the unconstructable default custom message type
When we landed custom messages, we used the empty tuple for the
custom message type for `IgnoringMessageHandler`. This was fine,
except that we also implemented `Writeable` to panic when writing
a `()`. Later, we added support for anchor output construction in
CommitmentTransaction, signified by setting a field to `Some(())`,
which is serialized as-is.
This causes us to panic when writing a `CommitmentTransaction`
with `opt_anchors` set. Note that we never set it inside of LDK,
but downstream users may.
Instead, we implement `Writeable` to write nothing for `()` and use
`core::convert::Infallible` for the default custom message type as
it is, appropriately, unconstructable.
This also makes it easier to implement various things in bindings,
as we can always assume `Infallible`-conversion logic is
unreachable.
Matt Corallo [Wed, 22 Sep 2021 03:57:53 +0000 (03:57 +0000)]
Make `ChainMonitor::get_claimable_balances` take a slice of refs
For the same reason as `get_route`, a slice of objects isn't
practical to map to bindings - the objects in the bindings space
are structs with a pointer and some additional metadata. Thus, to
create a slice of them, we'd need to take ownership of the objects
behind the pointer, place them into a slace, and then restore them
to the pointer.
This would be a lot of memory copying and marshalling, not to
mention wouldn't be thread-safe, which the same function otherwise
would be if we used a slice of references instead of a slice of
objects.
Matt Corallo [Wed, 22 Sep 2021 01:04:35 +0000 (01:04 +0000)]
Move trait bounds on `wire::Type` from use to the trait itself
`wire::Type` is only (publicly) used as the `CustomMessage`
associated type in `CustomMessageReader`, where it has additional
trait bounds on `Debug` and `Writeable`. The documentation for
`Type` even mentions that you need to implement `Writeable` because
this is the one place it is used.
To make this more clear, we move the type bounds onto the trait
itself and not on the associated type.
This is also the only practical way to build C bindings for `Type`
as we cannot have a concrete, single, `Type` struct in C which only
optionally implements various subtraits, at least not without
runtime checking of the type bounds.
In 8ffc2d1742ff1171a87b0410b21cbbd557ff8247, in 0.0.100, we added
a backwards compatibility feature to the reading of `Event`s - if
the type was unknown and odd, we'd simply ignore the event and
treat it as no event. However, we failed to read the
length-prefixed TLV stream when doing so, resulting in us reading
some of the skipped-event data as the next event or other data in
the ChannelManager.
We fix this by reading the varint length prefix written, then
skipping that many bytes when we come across an unknown odd event
type.
Antoine Riard [Tue, 21 Sep 2021 16:25:38 +0000 (12:25 -0400)]
Add ChannelClosed generation at cooperative/force-close/error processing
When we detect a channel `is_shutdown()` or call on it
`force_shutdown()`, we notify the user with a Event::ChannelClosed
informing about the id and closure reason.
Matt Corallo [Tue, 21 Sep 2021 18:09:15 +0000 (18:09 +0000)]
Fix a panic in Route's new fee-calculation methods and clean up
This addresses Val's feedback on the new Route fee- and
amount-calculation methods, including fixing the panic she
identified and cleaning up various docs and comments.
Add methods to count total fees and total amount in a Route #999
* Added `get_total_fees` method to route,
to calculate all the fees paid accross each path.
* Added `get_total_amount` method to route,
to calculate the total of actual amounts paid in each path.
Matt Corallo [Sun, 29 Aug 2021 06:03:41 +0000 (06:03 +0000)]
Convert most P2P msg serialization to a new macro with TLV suffixes
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.
Matt Corallo [Sun, 29 Aug 2021 02:55:39 +0000 (02:55 +0000)]
Add forward-compat due serialization variants of HTLCFailureMsg
Going forward, all lightning messages have a TLV stream suffix,
allowing new fields to be added as needed. In the P2P protocol,
messages have an explicit length, so there is no implied length in
the TLV stream itself. HTLCFailureMsg enum variants have messages
in them, but without a size prefix or any explicit end. Thus, if a
HTLCFailureMsg is read as a part of a ChannelManager, with a TLV
stream at the end, there is no way to differentiate between the end
of the message and the next field(s) in the ChannelManager.
Here we add two new variant values for HTLCFailureMsg variants in
the read path, allowing us to switch to the new values if/when we
add new TLV fields in UpdateFailHTLC or UpdateFailMalformedHTLC so
that older versions can still read the new TLV fields.
Matt Corallo [Sun, 29 Aug 2021 05:26:39 +0000 (05:26 +0000)]
Drop writer size hinting/message vec preallocation
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.
Matt Corallo [Tue, 31 Aug 2021 23:22:14 +0000 (23:22 +0000)]
Increase our default/minimum dust limit to 354 sat/vbytes
330 sat/vbyte, the current value, is not sufficient to ensure a
future segwit script longer than 32 bytes meets the dust limit if
used for a shutdown script. Thus, we can either check the value
on shutdown or we can simply require segwit outputs and require a
dust value of no less than 354 sat/vbyte.
We swap the minimum dust value to 354 sat/vbyte here, requiring
segwit scripts in a future commit.
See https://github.com/lightningnetwork/lightning-rfc/issues/905
Matt Corallo [Wed, 25 Aug 2021 20:13:01 +0000 (20:13 +0000)]
Add an accessor to `ChainMonitor` to get the claimable balances
The common user desire is to get the set of claimable balances for
all non-closed channels. In order to do so, they really want to
just ask their `ChainMonitor` for the set of balances, which they
can do here by passing the `ChannelManager::list_channels` output
to `ChainMonitor::get_claimable_balances`.
Matt Corallo [Wed, 4 Aug 2021 15:16:43 +0000 (15:16 +0000)]
Track how our HTLCs are resolved on-chain persistently
This tracks how any HTLC outputs in broadcast commitment
transactions are resolved on-chain, storing the result of the HTLC
resolution persistently in the ChannelMonitor.
This can be used to determine which outputs may still be available
for claiming on-chain.
Decorate the user-supplied EventHandler with NetGraphMsgHandler in
the BackgroundProcessor. The resulting handler will intercept
PaymentFailed events in order to update the NetworkGraph in the
background before delegating to the user's event handler.
Jeffrey Czyz [Thu, 12 Aug 2021 21:02:42 +0000 (16:02 -0500)]
EventHandler for applying NetworkUpdate
PaymentFailed events contain an optional NetworkUpdate describing
changes to the NetworkGraph as conveyed by a node along a failed payment
path according to BOLT 4. An EventHandler should apply the update to the
graph so that future routing decisions can account for it.
Implement EventHandler for NetGraphMsgHandler to update NetworkGraph.
Previously, NetGraphMsgHandler::handle_htlc_fail_channel_update
implemented this behavior.