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.TH "LIGHTNINGD-CONFIG" "5" "" "" "lightningd-config"
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.SH NAME
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lightningd-config - Lightning daemon configuration file
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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\fB~/\.lightning/config\fR
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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When \fBlightningd\fR(8) starts up it usually reads a general configuration
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file (default: \fB$HOME/\.lightning/config\fR) then a network-specific
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configuration file (default: \fB$HOME/\.lightning/testnet/config\fR)\. This can
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be changed: see \fI--conf\fR and \fI--lightning-dir\fR\.
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General configuration files are processed first, then network-specific
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ones, then command line options: later options override earlier ones
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except \fIaddr\fR options and \fIlog-level\fR with subsystems, which
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accumulate\.
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\fIinclude \fR followed by a filename includes another configuration file at that
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point, relative to the current configuration file\.
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All these options are mirrored as commandline arguments to
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\fBlightningd\fR(8), so \fI--foo\fR becomes simply \fIfoo\fR in the configuration
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file, and \fI--foo=bar\fR becomes \fIfoo=bar\fR in the configuration file\.
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Blank lines and lines beginning with \fI#\fR are ignored\.
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.SH DEBUGGING
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\fI--help\fR will show you the defaults for many options; they vary with
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network settings so you can specify \fI--network\fR before \fI--help\fR to see
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the defaults for that network\.
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The \fBlightning-listconfigs\fR(7) command will output a valid configuration
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file using the current settings\.
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.SH OPTIONS
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.SH General options
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\fBallow-deprecated-apis\fR=\fIBOOL\fR
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Enable deprecated options, JSONRPC commands, fields, etc\. It defaults to
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\fItrue\fR, but you should set it to \fIfalse\fR when testing to ensure that an
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upgrade won’t break your configuration\.
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\fBhelp\fR
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Print help and exit\. Not very useful inside a configuration file, but
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fun to put in other’s config files while their computer is unattended\.
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\fBversion\fR
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Print version and exit\. Also useless inside a configuration file, but
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putting this in someone’s config file may convince them to read this man
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page\.
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Bitcoin control options:
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\fBnetwork\fR=\fINETWORK\fR
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Select the network parameters (\fIbitcoin\fR, \fItestnet\fR, or \fIregtest\fR)\.
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This is not valid within the per-network configuration file\.
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\fBtestnet\fR
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Alias for \fInetwork=testnet\fR\.
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\fBsignet\fR
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Alias for \fInetwork=signet\fR\.
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\fBmainnet\fR
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Alias for \fInetwork=bitcoin\fR\.
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\fBbitcoin-cli\fR=\fIPATH\fR
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The name of \fIbitcoin-cli\fR executable to run\.
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\fBbitcoin-datadir\fR=\fIDIR\fR
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\fI-datadir\fR argument to supply to \fBbitcoin-cli\fR(1)\.
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\fBbitcoin-rpcuser\fR=\fIUSER\fR
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The RPC username for talking to \fBbitcoind\fR(1)\.
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\fBbitcoin-rpcpassword\fR=\fIPASSWORD\fR
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The RPC password for talking to \fBbitcoind\fR(1)\.
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\fBbitcoin-rpcconnect\fR=\fIHOST\fR
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The \fBbitcoind\fR(1) RPC host to connect to\.
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\fBbitcoin-rpcport\fR=\fIPORT\fR
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The \fBbitcoind\fR(1) RPC port to connect to\.
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\fBbitcoin-retry-timeout\fR=\fISECONDS\fR
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Number of seconds to keep trying a \fBbitcoin-cli\fR(1) command\. If the
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command keeps failing after this time, exit with a fatal error\.
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\fBrescan\fR=\fIBLOCKS\fR
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Number of blocks to rescan from the current head, or absolute
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blockheight if negative\. This is only needed if something goes badly
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wrong\.
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.SH Lightning daemon options
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\fBlightning-dir\fR=\fIDIR\fR
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Sets the working directory\. All files (except \fI--conf\fR and
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\fI--lightning-dir\fR on the command line) are relative to this\. This
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is only valid on the command-line, or in a configuration file specified
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by \fI--conf\fR\.
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\fBsubdaemon\fR=\fISUBDAEMON\fR:\fIPATH\fR
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Specifies an alternate subdaemon binary\.
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Current subdaemons are \fIchanneld\fR, \fIclosingd\fR,
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\fIconnectd\fR, \fIgossipd\fR, \fIhsmd\fR, \fIonchaind\fR, and \fIopeningd\fR\.
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If the supplied path is relative the subdaemon binary is found in the
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working directory\. This option may be specified multiple times\.
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So, \fBsubdaemon=hsmd:remote_signer\fR would use a
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hypothetical remote signing proxy instead of the standard \fIlightning_hsmd\fR
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binary\.
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\fBpid-file\fR=\fIPATH\fR
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Specify pid file to write to\.
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\fBlog-level\fR=\fILEVEL\fR[:\fISUBSYSTEM\fR]
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What log level to print out: options are io, debug, info, unusual,
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broken\. If \fISUBSYSTEM\fR is supplied, this sets the logging level
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for any subsystem containing that string\. Subsystems include:
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.RS
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.IP \[bu]
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\fIlightningd\fR: The main lightning daemon
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.IP \[bu]
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\fIdatabase\fR: The database subsystem
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.IP \[bu]
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\fIwallet\fR: The wallet subsystem
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.IP \[bu]
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\fIgossipd\fR: The gossip daemon
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.IP \[bu]
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\fIplugin-manager\fR: The plugin subsystem
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.IP \[bu]
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\fIplugin-P\fR: Each plugin, P = plugin path without directory
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.IP \[bu]
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\fIhsmd\fR: The secret-holding daemon
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.IP \[bu]
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\fIconnectd\fR: The network connection daemon
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.IP \[bu]
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\fIjsonrpc#FD\fR: Each JSONRPC connection, FD = file descriptor number
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.RE
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The following subsystems exist for each channel, where N is an incrementing
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internal integer id assigned for the lifetime of the channel:
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.RS
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.IP \[bu]
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\fIopeningd-chan#N\fR: Each opening / idling daemon
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.IP \[bu]
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\fIchanneld-chan#N\fR: Each channel management daemon
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.IP \[bu]
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\fIclosingd-chan#N\fR: Each closing negotiation daemon
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.IP \[bu]
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\fIonchaind-chan#N\fR: Each onchain close handling daemon
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.RE
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So, \fBlog-level=debug:plugin\fR would set debug level logging on all
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plugins and the plugin manager\. \fBlog-level=io:chan#55\fR would set
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IO logging on channel number 55 (or 550, for that matter)\.
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\fBlog-prefix\fR=\fIPREFIX\fR
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Prefix for log lines: this can be customized if you want to merge logs
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with multiple daemons\.
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\fBlog-file\fR=\fIPATH\fR
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Log to this file instead of stdout\. Sending \fBlightningd\fR(8) SIGHUP will
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cause it to reopen this file (useful for log rotation)\.
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\fBrpc-file\fR=\fIPATH\fR
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Set JSON-RPC socket (or /dev/tty), such as for \fBlightning-cli\fR(1)\.
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\fBrpc-file-mode\fR=\fIMODE\fR
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Set JSON-RPC socket file mode, as a 4-digit octal number\.
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Default is 0600, meaning only the user that launched lightningd
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can command it\.
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Set to 0660 to allow users with the same group to access the RPC
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as well\.
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\fBdaemon\fR
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Run in the background, suppress stdout and stderr\.
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\fBconf\fR=\fIPATH\fR
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Sets configuration file, and disable reading the normal general and network
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ones\. If this is a relative path, it is relative to the starting directory, not
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\fBlightning-dir\fR (unlike other paths)\. \fIPATH\fR must exist and be
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readable (we allow missing files in the default case)\. Using this inside
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a configuration file is invalid\.
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\fBwallet\fR=\fIDSN\fR
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Identify the location of the wallet\. This is a fully qualified data source
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name, including a scheme such as \fBsqlite3\fR or \fBpostgres\fR followed by the
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connection parameters\.
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The default wallet corresponds to the following DSN:
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.nf
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.RS
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--wallet=sqlite3://$HOME/.lightning/bitcoin/lightningd.sqlite3
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.RE
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.fi
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The following is an example of a postgresql wallet DSN:
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.nf
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.RS
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--wallet=postgres://user:pass@localhost:5432/db_name
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.RE
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.fi
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This will connect to a the DB server running on \fBlocalhost\fR port \fB5432\fR,
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authenticate with username \fBuser\fR and password \fBpass\fR, and then use the
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database \fBdb_name\fR\. The database must exist, but the schema will be managed
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automatically by \fBlightningd\fR\.
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\fBencrypted-hsm\fR
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If set, you will be prompted to enter a password used to encrypt the \fBhsm_secret\fR\.
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Note that once you encrypt the \fBhsm_secret\fR this option will be mandatory for
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\fBlightningd\fR to start\.
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If there is no \fBhsm_secret\fR yet, \fBlightningd\fR will create a new encrypted secret\.
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If you have an unencrypted \fBhsm_secret\fR you want to encrypt on-disk, or vice versa,
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see \fBlightning-hsmtool\fR(8)\.
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.SH Lightning node customization options
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\fBalias\fR=\fINAME\fR
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Up to 32 bytes of UTF-8 characters to tag your node\. Completely silly, since
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anyone can call their node anything they want\. The default is an
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NSA-style codename derived from your public key, but "Peter Todd" and
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"VAULTERO" are good options, too\.
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\fBrgb\fR=\fIRRGGBB\fR
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Your favorite color as a hex code\.
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\fBfee-base\fR=\fIMILLISATOSHI\fR
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Default: 1000\. The base fee to charge for every payment which passes
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through\. Note that millisatoshis are a very, very small unit! Changing
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this value will only affect new channels and not existing ones\. If you
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want to change fees for existing channels, use the RPC call
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\fBlightning-setchannelfee\fR(7)\.
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\fBfee-per-satoshi\fR=\fIMILLIONTHS\fR
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Default: 10 (0\.001%)\. This is the proportional fee to charge for every
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payment which passes through\. As percentages are too coarse, it’s in
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millionths, so 10000 is 1%, 1000 is 0\.1%\. Changing this value will only
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affect new channels and not existing ones\. If you want to change fees
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for existing channels, use the RPC call \fBlightning-setchannelfee\fR(7)\.
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\fBmin-capacity-sat\fR=\fISATOSHI\fR
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Default: 10000\. This value defines the minimal effective channel
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capacity in satoshi to accept for channel opening requests\. If a peer
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tries to open a channel smaller than this, the opening will be rejected\.
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\fBignore-fee-limits\fR=\fIBOOL\fR
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Allow nodes which establish channels to us to set any fee they want\.
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This may result in a channel which cannot be closed, should fees
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increase, but make channels far more reliable since we never close it
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due to unreasonable fees\.
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\fBcommit-time\fR=\fIMILLISECONDS\fR
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How long to wait before sending commitment messages to the peer: in
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theory increasing this would reduce load, but your node would have to be
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extremely busy node for you to even notice\.
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.SH Lightning channel and HTLC options
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\fBlarge-channels\fR
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Removes capacity limits for channel creation\. Version 1\.0 of the specification
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limited channel sizes to 16777215 satoshi\. With this option (which your
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node will advertize to peers), your node will accept larger incoming channels
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and if the peer supports it, will open larger channels\. Note: this option
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is spelled \fBlarge-channels\fR but it's pronounced \fBwumbo\fR\.
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\fBwatchtime-blocks\fR=\fIBLOCKS\fR
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How long we need to spot an outdated close attempt: on opening a channel
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we tell our peer that this is how long they’ll have to wait if they
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perform a unilateral close\.
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\fBmax-locktime-blocks\fR=\fIBLOCKS\fR
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The longest our funds can be delayed (ie\. the longest
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\fBwatchtime-blocks\fR our peer can ask for, and also the longest HTLC
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timeout we will accept)\. If our peer asks for longer, we’ll refuse to
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create a channel, and if an HTLC asks for longer, we’ll refuse it\.
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\fBfunding-confirms\fR=\fIBLOCKS\fR
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Confirmations required for the funding transaction when the other side
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opens a channel before the channel is usable\.
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\fBcommit-fee\fR=\fIPERCENT\fR
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The percentage of \fIestimatesmartfee 2/CONSERVATIVE\fR to use for the commitment
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transactions: default is 100\.
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\fBcommit-fee-min\fR=\fIPERCENT\fR
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\fBcommit-fee-max\fR=\fIPERCENT\fR
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Limits on what onchain fee range we’ll allow when a node opens a channel
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with us, as a percentage of \fIestimatesmartfee 2\fR\. If they’re outside
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this range, we abort their opening attempt\. Note that \fBcommit-fee-max\fR
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can (should!) be greater than 100\.
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\fBmax-concurrent-htlcs\fR=\fIINTEGER\fR
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Number of HTLCs one channel can handle concurrently in each direction\.
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Should be between 1 and 483 (default 30)\.
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\fBcltv-delta\fR=\fIBLOCKS\fR
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The number of blocks between incoming payments and outgoing payments:
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this needs to be enough to make sure that if we have to, we can close
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the outgoing payment before the incoming, or redeem the incoming once
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the outgoing is redeemed\.
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\fBcltv-final\fR=\fIBLOCKS\fR
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|
The number of blocks to allow for payments we receive: if we have to, we
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|
might need to redeem this on-chain, so this is the number of blocks we
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|
have to do that\.
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Invoice control options:
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\fBautocleaninvoice-cycle\fR=\fISECONDS\fR
|
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|
Perform cleanup of expired invoices every \fISECONDS\fR seconds, or disable
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|
|
if 0\. Usually unpaid expired invoices are uninteresting, and just take
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|
|
up space in the database\.
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|
\fBautocleaninvoice-expired-by\fR=\fISECONDS\fR
|
|
|
|
Control how long invoices must have been expired before they are cleaned
|
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|
(if \fIautocleaninvoice-cycle\fR is non-zero)\.
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|
.SH Networking options
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Note that for simple setups, the implicit \fIautolisten\fR option does the
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|
right thing: it will try to bind to port 9735 on IPv4 and IPv6, and will
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|
announce it to peers if it seems like a public address\.
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You can instead use \fIaddr\fR to override this (eg\. to change the port), or
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|
precisely control where to bind and what to announce with the
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|
\fIbind-addr\fR and \fIannounce-addr\fR options\. These will \fBdisable\fR the
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|
\fIautolisten\fR logic, so you must specifiy exactly what you want!
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|
\fBaddr\fR=\fI[IPADDRESS[:PORT]]|autotor:TORIPADDRESS[:SERVICEPORT][/torport=TORPORT]|statictor:TORIPADDRESS[:SERVICEPORT][/torport=TORPORT][/torblob=[blob]]\fR
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Set an IP address (v4 or v6) or automatic Tor address to listen on and
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|
(maybe) announce as our node address\.
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An empty 'IPADDRESS' is a special value meaning bind to IPv4 and/or
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|
IPv6 on all interfaces, '0\.0\.0\.0' means bind to all IPv4
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|
interfaces, '::' means 'bind to all IPv6 interfaces'\. If 'PORT' is
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|
not specified, 9735 is used\. If we can determine a public IP
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|
address from the resulting binding, the address is announced\.
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|
If the argument begins with 'autotor:' then it is followed by the
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|
IPv4 or IPv6 address of the Tor control port (default port 9051),
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|
and this will be used to configure a Tor hidden service for port 9735\.
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|
|
The Tor hidden service will be configured to point to the
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|
first IPv4 or IPv6 address we bind to\.
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If the argument begins with 'statictor:' then it is followed by the
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|
IPv4 or IPv6 address of the Tor control port (default port 9051),
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|
and this will be used to configure a static Tor hidden service for port 9735\.
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|
|
The Tor hidden service will be configured to point to the
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|
|
first IPv4 or IPv6 address we bind to and is by default unique to
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|
|
your nodes id\. You can add the text '/torblob=BLOB' followed by up to
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|
|
64 Bytes of text to generate from this text a v3 onion service
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|
|
address text unique to the first 32 Byte of this text\.
|
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|
|
You can also use an postfix '/torport=TORPORT' to select the external
|
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|
|
tor binding\. The result is that over tor your node is accessible by a port
|
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|
defined by you and possible different from your local node port assignment
|
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|
This option can be used multiple times to add more addresses, and
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|
its use disables autolisten\. If necessary, and 'always-use-proxy'
|
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|
|
is not specified, a DNS lookup may be done to resolve 'IPADDRESS'
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|
or 'TORIPADDRESS'\.
|
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|
|
\fBbind-addr\fR=\fI[IPADDRESS[:PORT]]|SOCKETPATH\fR
|
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|
|
Set an IP address or UNIX domain socket to listen to, but do not
|
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|
|
announce\. A UNIX domain socket is distinguished from an IP address by
|
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|
|
beginning with a \fI/\fR\.
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|
|
An empty 'IPADDRESS' is a special value meaning bind to IPv4 and/or
|
|
|
|
IPv6 on all interfaces, '0\.0\.0\.0' means bind to all IPv4
|
|
|
|
interfaces, '::' means 'bind to all IPv6 interfaces'\. 'PORT' is
|
|
|
|
not specified, 9735 is used\.
|
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|
|
This option can be used multiple times to add more addresses, and
|
|
|
|
its use disables autolisten\. If necessary, and 'always-use-proxy'
|
|
|
|
is not specified, a DNS lookup may be done to resolve 'IPADDRESS'\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
\fBannounce-addr\fR=\fIIPADDRESS[:PORT]|TORADDRESS\.onion[:PORT]\fR
|
|
|
|
Set an IP (v4 or v6) address or Tor address to announce; a Tor address
|
|
|
|
is distinguished by ending in \fI\.onion\fR\. \fIPORT\fR defaults to 9735\.
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
Empty or wildcard IPv4 and IPv6 addresses don't make sense here\.
|
|
|
|
Also, unlike the 'addr' option, there is no checking that your
|
|
|
|
announced addresses are public (e\.g\. not localhost)\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This option can be used multiple times to add more addresses, and
|
|
|
|
its use disables autolisten\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
If necessary, and 'always-use-proxy' is not specified, a DNS
|
|
|
|
lookup may be done to resolve 'IPADDRESS'\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\fBoffline\fR
|
|
|
|
Do not bind to any ports, and do not try to reconnect to any peers\. This
|
|
|
|
can be useful for maintenance and forensics, so is usually specified on
|
|
|
|
the command line\. Overrides all \fIaddr\fR and \fIbind-addr\fR options\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\fBautolisten\fR=\fIBOOL\fR
|
|
|
|
By default, we bind (and maybe announce) on IPv4 and IPv6 interfaces if
|
|
|
|
no \fIaddr\fR, \fIbind-addr\fR or \fIannounce-addr\fR options are specified\. Setting
|
|
|
|
this to \fIfalse\fR disables that\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\fBproxy\fR=\fIIPADDRESS[:PORT]\fR
|
|
|
|
Set a socks proxy to use to connect to Tor nodes (or for all connections
|
|
|
|
if \fBalways-use-proxy\fR is set)\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\fBalways-use-proxy\fR=\fIBOOL\fR
|
|
|
|
Always use the \fBproxy\fR, even to connect to normal IP addresses (you
|
|
|
|
can still connect to Unix domain sockets manually)\. This also disables
|
|
|
|
all DNS lookups, to avoid leaking information\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\fBdisable-dns\fR
|
|
|
|
Disable the DNS bootstrapping mechanism to find a node by its node ID\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\fBenable-autotor-v2-mode\fR
|
|
|
|
Try to get a v2 onion address from the Tor service call, default is v3\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\fBtor-service-password\fR=\fIPASSWORD\fR
|
|
|
|
Set a Tor control password, which may be needed for \fIautotor:\fR to
|
|
|
|
authenticate to the Tor control port\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
.SH Lightning Plugins
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\fBlightningd\fR(8) supports plugins, which offer additional configuration
|
|
|
|
options and JSON-RPC methods, depending on the plugin\. Some are supplied
|
|
|
|
by default (usually located in \fBlibexec/c-lightning/plugins/\fR)\. If a
|
|
|
|
\fBplugins\fR directory exists under \fIlightning-dir\fR that is searched for
|
|
|
|
plugins along with any immediate subdirectories)\. You can specify
|
|
|
|
additional paths too:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\fBplugin\fR=\fIPATH\fR
|
|
|
|
Specify a plugin to run as part of c-lightning\. This can be specified
|
|
|
|
multiple times to add multiple plugins\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\fBplugin-dir\fR=\fIDIRECTORY\fR
|
|
|
|
Specify a directory to look for plugins; all executable files not
|
|
|
|
containing punctuation (other than \fI\.\fR, \fI-\fR or \fI_) in 'DIRECTORY\fR are
|
|
|
|
loaded\. \fIDIRECTORY\fR must exist; this can be specified multiple times to
|
|
|
|
add multiple directories\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\fBclear-plugins\fR
|
|
|
|
This option clears all \fIplugin\fR and \fIplugin-dir\fR options preceeding it,
|
|
|
|
including the default built-in plugin directory\. You can still add
|
|
|
|
\fIplugin-dir\fR and \fIplugin\fR options following this and they will have the
|
|
|
|
normal effect\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\fBdisable-plugin\fR=\fIPLUGIN\fR
|
|
|
|
If \fIPLUGIN\fR contains a /, plugins with the same path as \fIPLUGIN\fR will
|
|
|
|
not be loaded at startup\. Otherwise, no plugin with that base name will
|
|
|
|
be loaded at startup, whatever directory it is in\. This option is useful for
|
|
|
|
disabling a single plugin inside a directory\. You can still explicitly
|
|
|
|
load plugins which have been disabled, using \fBlightning-plugin\fR(7) \fBstart\fR\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
.SH BUGS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
You should report bugs on our github issues page, and maybe submit a fix
|
|
|
|
to gain our eternal gratitude!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
.SH AUTHOR
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Rusty Russell <\fIrusty@rustcorp.com.au\fR> wrote this man page, and
|
|
|
|
much of the configuration language, but many others did the hard work of
|
|
|
|
actually implementing these options\.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
.SH SEE ALSO
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\fBlightning-listconfigs\fR(7) \fBlightning-setchannelfee\fR(7) \fBlightningd\fR(8)
|
|
|
|
\fBlightning-hsmtool\fR(8)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
.SH RESOURCES
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Main web site: \fIhttps://github.com/ElementsProject/lightning\fR
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
.SH COPYING
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Note: the modules in the ccan/ directory have their own licenses, but
|
|
|
|
the rest of the code is covered by the BSD-style MIT license\.
|
|
|
|
|