We added a conversion of failcodes that do not have sufficient information in
faac4b28ad. That means that a failcode that'd require additional information
in order to be a correct error to return in an onion is mapped to a generic
one since we can't backfill the information.
This tests that the mapping is performed correctly and replicates the
situation in #4070
We create ALL_PROGRAMS, ALL_TEST_PROGRAMS, ALL_C_SOURCES and
ALL_C_HEADERS. Then the toplevel Makefile knows which are
autogenerated (by wildcard), so it can have all the rules to clean
them or check the source as necessary.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Fixed: plugin: `bcli` no longer logs a harmless warning about being unable to connect to the JSON-RPC interface.
Changelog-Added: plugin: Plugins can opt out of having an RPC connection automatically initialized on startup.
This makes use of the payment modifier structure to just add the preimage to
the TLV payload for the last hop.
Changelog-Added: JSON-RPC: The `keysend` command allows sending to a node without requiring an invoice first.
There are various places where our tests failed with
--enable-expimental-features. And our plugin test overlapped an
existing feature.
We make our expected_feature functions more generic, and use them
everywhere.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Previously we were annotating every movement with the blockheight of
lightningd at notification time. Which is lossy in terms of info, and
won't be helpful for reorg reconciliation. Here we switch over to
logging chain moves iff they've been confirmed.
Next PR will fix this up for withdrawals, which are currently tagged
with a blockheight of zero, since we log on successful send.
We modify the slow_init() so it doesn't go too slowly for this test.
This demonstrates a crash, where we currently try to fail a command
multiple times.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This actually passes fine, but it's an interesting case to test.
Fixed-by: Darosior <darosior@protonmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Telling `lightningd` to pass a `-datadir` to `bitcoin-cli` so it doesn't go
snooping where it doesn't belong (i.e., the user's home directory and config).
Changelog-None
Suggested-by: Simon Vrouwe <@SimonVrouwe>
Signed-off-by: Christian Decker <@cdecker>
As discussed with Christian, prepending the length to the payload returned
is awkward, but it's the only way to set a legacy payload. As this will
be soon deprecated, simplify the external API.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We now track all pending RPC passthrough calls, and terminate them with an
error if the plugin dies.
Changelog-Fixed: JSON-RPC: Pending RPC method calls are now terminated if the handling plugin exits prematurely.
Shows what features we use in various contexts, including those added
by plugins in getmanifest.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Added: Plugin: `feature_set` object added to `init`
This adapts our fee estimations requests to the Bitcoin backend to the
new semantic, and batch the requests.
This makes our request for fees much simpler, and leaves some more
flexibility for a plugin to do something smart (it could still lie before
but now it's explicit, at least.) as we don't explicitly request
estimation for a specific mode and a target.
Changelog-Changed: We now batch the requests for fee estimation to our Bitcoin backend.
Changelog-Changed: We now get more fine-grained fee estimation from our Bitcoin backend.
We were nesting like the following:
```json
{"params": {
"rpc_command": {
"rpc_command": {
}
}
}
```
This is really excessive, so we unwrap once, and now have the following:
```json
{"params": {
"rpc_command": {
}
}
```
Still more wrapping than necessary (the method is repeated in the `params`
object), but it's getting closer.
Changelog-Deprecated: JSON-RPC: Removed double wrapping of `rpc_command` payload in `rpc_command` JSON field.
Suggested-by: @fiatjaf
Signed-off-by: Christian Decker <@cdecker>
Make the `htlc_accepted` hook the first chained hook in our repertoire. The
plugins are called one after the other in order until we have no more plugins
or the HTLC was handled by one of the plugins. If no plugins handles the HTLC
we continue to handle it internally like always.
Handling in this case means the plugin returns either `{"result": "resolve",
...}` or `{"result": "fail", ...}`.
Changelog-Changed: plugin: Multiple plugins can now register for the htlc_accepted hook.
This completes the custommsg epic, finally we are back where we began all that
time ago (about 4 hours really...): in a plugin that implements some custom
logic.
We clone the test above, but this time we don't attach waiters (they'd be racy
anyway), and we wait for the notification to be called. This fails, but is
fixed in the next two commits.