Messages are sent in reestablish_channel (async)
Message checks and force_close are performed in on_channel_reestablish (not async).
That task should not be cancelled if the connection is closed.
Revert 57583c05cf
It is not safe to keep using the channel after we attempted to broadcast a force-close,
even if the broadcast errored: the server cannot be trusted wrt to errors.
Note that if there is a network-error, due to the state-transition, the GUI won't offer
the force-close option to the user again. However, LNWallet will periodically rebroadcast
the tx automatically (in on_channel_update); and we also save the tx as local into the
wallet.
* Refactor `create_trampoline_route`.
* Enables end-to-end multi-trampoline multipart payments.
Trampoline-to-legacy payments are still not enabled, as this is
currently not supported by Eclair.
* Reverts to a global trampoline fee level, as trampoline failures
are currently not handled properly, see (#7648), which doubles
fee rates.
In particular, in the regtests, with incoming peers, we can have multiple transports open with the same node simultaneously
(see e.g. lnworker._request_force_close_from_backup).
We now use the first few bytes of peer_pubkey, as that is potentially familiar to users,
and the first few bytes of sha256(id(self)) to mitigate collisions in case the peer_pubkeys collide.
log excerpt:
```
I/P | lnpeer.Peer.[LNWallet, 030f0bf260-e0b33756] | handshake done for 030f0bf260acdbd3edcad84d7588ec7c5df4711e87e6a23016f989b8d3a4147230@163.172.94.64:9735
D/P | lnpeer.Peer.[LNWallet, 030f0bf260-e0b33756] | Sending INIT
I/P | lnpeer.Peer.[LNWallet, 03933884aa-5e5dce45] | handshake done for 03933884aaf1d6b108397e5efe5c86bcf2d8ca8d2f700eda99db9214fc2712b134@34.250.234.192:9735
D/P | lnpeer.Peer.[LNWallet, 03933884aa-5e5dce45] | Sending INIT
D/P | lnpeer.Peer.[LNWallet, 030f0bf260-e0b33756] | Received INIT
I/P | lnpeer.Peer.[LNWallet, 02651acf4a-79696c42] | handshake done for 02651acf4a7096091bf42baad19b3643ea318d6979f6dcc16ebaec43d5b0f4baf2@82.119.233.36:19735
D/P | lnpeer.Peer.[LNWallet, 02651acf4a-79696c42] | Sending INIT
D/P | lnpeer.Peer.[LNWallet, 03933884aa-5e5dce45] | Received INIT
I/P | lnpeer.Peer.[LNWallet, 030f0bf260-e0b33756] | saved remote_update
D/P | lnpeer.Peer.[LNWallet, 030f0bf260-e0b33756] | Received CHANNEL_REESTABLISH
```
aiorpcx 0.20 changed the behaviour/API of TaskGroups.
When used as a context manager, TaskGroups no longer propagate
exceptions raised by their tasks. Instead, the calling code has
to explicitly check the results of tasks and decide whether to re-raise
any exceptions.
This is a significant change, and so this commit introduces "OldTaskGroup",
which should behave as the TaskGroup class of old aiorpcx. All existing
usages of TaskGroup are replaced with OldTaskGroup.
closes https://github.com/spesmilo/electrum/issues/7446
I think this was originally needed due to incorrect management of group lifecycles,
which our current code is doing better.
also note that if we needed this, in newer aiorpcx, the name of
the field was ~changed from `_closed` to `joined`:
239002689a
maybe fixes https://github.com/spesmilo/electrum/issues/7640
Looks like by default pip is ignoring the locally available setuptools and wheel,
and downloading the latest ones from the internet at build time...
https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/reference/build-system/pyproject-toml/?highlight=no-build-isolation#disabling-build-isolationhttps://stackoverflow.com/a/62889268
> When making build requirements available, pip does so in an isolated environment. That is, pip does not install those requirements into the user’s site-packages, but rather installs them in a temporary directory which it adds to the user’s sys.path for the duration of the build. This ensures that build requirements are handled independently of the user’s runtime environment. For example, a project that needs a recent version of setuptools to build can still be installed, even if the user has an older version installed (and without silently replacing that version).
>
> In certain cases, projects (or redistributors) may have workflows that explicitly manage the build environment. For such workflows, build isolation can be problematic. If this is the case, pip provides a --no-build-isolation flag to disable build isolation. Users supplying this flag are responsible for ensuring the build environment is managed appropriately (including ensuring that all required build dependencies are installed).
If only it were that easy!
If we add the "--no-build-isolation" flag, it becomes our responsibility to install *all* build time deps,
hence we now have "requirements-build-makepackages.txt".
Note: this was causing a weird flake8 error on CI. Presumably due to CI running flake8 via py3.7.
```
flake8 . --count --select=$ELECTRUM_LINTERS --show-source --statistics
./electrum/scripts/update_default_servers.py:1:26: E999 SyntaxError: invalid syntax
#!/usr/bin/env python3
^
1 E999 SyntaxError: invalid syntax
1
```
Historically, there have often been (visual) issues with new versions of qdarkstyle.
The upper bound restriction was mainly there for this reason: to ~force manually testing new versions.
There is no known issue with newer versions atm.
Remove the upper bound, as there have not been issues with newer versions recently,
and this makes it clear to e.g. packagers that it's fine to use newer versions.
Add a lower bound for a version that has been tested in the past and is known to work ok.
related https://github.com/spesmilo/electrum/issues/7361
The <2.1 pin had been put there as dnspython 2.1 added "poetry" as a build time dep,
which pulled in a significant number of transitive dependencies, and it was also
causing issues with our appimage build.
dnspython 2.2.0 was released since, which no longer needs full poetry, only "poetry-core":
da279dec7e
related https://github.com/spesmilo/electrum/issues/7361
trezorlib requires "dataclasses ; python_version<'3.7'", and our min supported python version is 3.6,
so freeze_packages.sh pins down a version of "dataclasses". However, when creating binaries we
use newer versions of python (typically py3.9 atm), for which dataclasses is not available (it's a backport of py3.7 stuff).
Hmhm, what to do... short-term, I am manually removing the dataclasses pin, so it won't be installed in our binaries.
```
Collecting construct==2.10.67
Downloading construct-2.10.67.tar.gz (57 kB)
|████████████████████████████████| 57 kB 2.7 MB/s
Preparing metadata (setup.py) ... done
Requirement already satisfied: cryptography==36.0.1 in ./build/appimage/electrum.AppDir/usr/lib/python3.9/site-packages (from -r /opt/electrum/contrib/build-linux/appimage/../../../contrib/deterministic-build/requirements-hw.txt (line 74)) (36.0.1)
ERROR: Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement dataclasses==0.8 (from versions: 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6)
ERROR: No matching distribution found for dataclasses==0.8
```