We had them split according the separate use-cases:
- testing
- doc-gen
- wire-gen
But that was causing new contributors to miss some dependencies when they
first got hacking. So this consolidates all of our own dependencies in a root
requirements.txt, with the notable exception of `pyln-client`, `pyln-testing`
and `pyln-proto` which are distributed as PyPI modules and therefore have
their own dependencies that need to be tracked in the module root.
Closes#3518
They now use -fno-common by default, so duplicated variables cause
a link error:
/usr/bin/ld: common/utils.o:(.bss+0x10): multiple definition of `chainparams'; plugins/libplugin.o:(.bss+0x0): first defined here
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
make: *** [Makefile:408: plugins/autoclean] Error 1
This was introduced in 9ebfdf0b8c.
Fixes: #3597
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Fixed: Multiple definition of chainparams on Fedora (or other really recent gcc)
Use `LC_ALL=C sort` instead of `sort` so that mocks get sorted in
the same way on all developers' environments.
Re-record the result of `make update-mocks`.
Changelog-None
This happened on my testnet node because I've been failing to reconnect to
a node which created a channel and never exchanged announcement sigs.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
The shadow route algorithm is extending the route randomly using channels
adjacent to the current destination, in the hope to create a plausible route
extension. However, instead of only retrieving the channels adjacent to the
destination it was retrieving all channels in the entire topology, and
selecting a random channel from there. This resulted in a very large request
for all channels being processed, and then mostly not being used, but also in
shadow extensions to the path which were not plausible (they didn't extend the
real path, just random edges). This is fixed by restricting the call to
`listchannels` to the channels with the current destination as source.
On my laptop retrieving all channels in the current mainnet takes
approximately 1.2 seconds, and given the geometric series expansion of the 50%
extension probability this indeed would result in an overhead of 1.2 seconds
to the `pay` command. In contrast specifying a source results in an overhead
of ~30ms.
So good news everyone, your pay commands just shaved 1.17 seconds off their
runtime.
Changelog-Changed: pay: Improved the performance of the `pay`-plugin by limiting the `listchannels` when computing the shadow route.
Changelog-Fixed: pay: The `pay`-plugin was generating non-contiguous shadow routes
We don't free the signatures in this case, and for some reason leak checking
on my build machine just found it:
MEMLEAK: 0x560f7dc69fc8'
label=channeld/gen_channel_wire.c:266:secp256k1_ecdsa_signature'
backtrace:'
ccan/ccan/tal/tal.c:442 (tal_alloc_)'
channeld/gen_channel_wire.c:266 (fromwire_channel_init)'
channeld/channeld.c:3060 (init_channel)'
channeld/channeld.c:3254 (main)'
parents:'
channeld/channeld.c:3227:struct peer'
MEMLEAK: 0x560f7dc6a288'
label=channeld/gen_channel_wire.c:272:secp256k1_ecdsa_signature'
backtrace:'
ccan/ccan/tal/tal.c:442 (tal_alloc_)'
channeld/gen_channel_wire.c:272 (fromwire_channel_init)'
channeld/channeld.c:3060 (init_channel)'
channeld/channeld.c:3254 (main)'
parents:'
channeld/channeld.c:3227:struct peer'
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
common/onion is going to need to use this for the case where it finds a blinding
seed inside the TLV. But how it does ecdh is daemon-specific.
We already had this problem for devtools/gossipwith, which supplied a
special hsm_do_ecdh(). This just makes it more general.
So we create a generic ecdh() interface, with a specific implementation
which subdaemons and lightningd can use.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We currently abuse the added_htlc and failed_htlc messages to tell channeld
about existing htlcs when it restarts. It's clearer to have an explicit
'existing_htlc' type which contains all the information for this case.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This regroups questions (frequently) seen in Github issues, on IRC, and
also some I've been asked in face to face.
Changelog-Added: doc: An FAQ was added, accessible at https://lightning.readthedocs.io/FAQ.html
Christian wrote the block chain rescaning paragraph.
Lisa corrected my poor english grammar.
Co-Authored-by: Christian Decker <decker.christian@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-by: Lisa Neigut <niftynei@gmail.com>
It's almost always "their_features" and "our_features" respectively, so
make those names clear.
Suggested-by: @cdecker
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Note that now we check capacity once we've figured out which peer, which
broke a test (we returned "unknown peer" instead of "capacity exceeded"),
so we rework that too.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This is useful in general, but in particular it allows fundchannel to avoid YA
query to figure out if it can wumbo.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Added: JSON: `connect` returns `features` of the connected peer on success.
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`
Turns out that unnecessary: all callers can access the feature_set,
so make it much more like a normal primitive.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This will help with the next patch, where we wean off using a global
for features: connectd.c has access to the feature bits.
Since connectd might now want to send a message, it needs the crypto_state
non-const, which makes this less trivial than it would otherwise be.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
A CONSERVATIVE/3 target for them.
Some noisy changes to the tests as we had to update the estimatesmartfee
mock.
Changelog-Changed: We now use a higher feerate for resolving onchain HTLCs and for penalty transactions
Normal output is suitable for feeding to devtools/onion, but for python tests
we want something simpler.
Ideally, we'd simply generate blinded paths in pyln.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
e.g.
$ PUBKEY1=0266e4598d1d3c415f572a8488830b60f7e744ed9235eb0b1ba93283b315c03518
$ PRIVKEY1=41bfd2660762506c9933ade59f1debf7e6495b10c14a92dbcd2d623da2507d3d
$ PUBKEY2=022d223620a359a47ff7f7ac447c85c46c923da53389221a0054c11c1e3ca31d59
$ PRIVKEY1=c4a813f81ffdca1da6864db81795ad2d320add274452cafa1fb2ac2d07d062bd
# First line is blinding, second is contents and nodeids for onion.
$ ./devtools/blindedpath create $PUBKEY1 $PUBKEY2
03f006a18d5653c4edf5391ff23a61f03ff83d237e880ee61187fa9f379a028e0a
0266e4598d1d3c415f572a8488830b60f7e744ed9235eb0b1ba93283b315c03518/350633c340f28bc69cbc86f568b7b9e99fa41eb581452d066fcd70dd53c43ace14d034eebfbe472a2b9901b11c268d2cc2034a77928a 0326f31ff78e584461420e5026fe72374af2ef853e65c47a3f2406348b7c6c0911/00
# Generate the onion
$ /devtools/onion generate 0266e4598d1d3c415f572a8488830b60f7e744ed9235eb0b1ba93283b315c03518/350633c340f28bc69cbc86f568b7b9e99fa41eb581452d066fcd70dd53c43ace14d034eebfbe472a2b9901b11c268d2cc2034a77928a 0326f31ff78e584461420e5026fe72374af2ef853e65c47a3f2406348b7c6c0911/00 > /tmp/onion.dat
# First node unwraps it, gives next blinding and onion
$ ./devtools/blindedpath --first-node unwrap $PRIVKEY1 `cat /tmp/onion.dat` 03f006a18d5653c4edf5391ff23a61f03ff83d237e880ee61187fa9f379a028e0a
Contents: 04210326f31ff78e584461420e5026fe72374af2ef853e65c47a3f2406348b7c6c0911
Next blinding: 021295ce94fcadc42c3e5187a12dd80122214c8f9da61635163cddb63282f1ee9b
Next onion: 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
# Feed that onion and blinding to second node
$ ./devtools/blindedpath unwrap $PRIVKEY2 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 021295ce94fcadc42c3e5187a12dd80122214c8f9da61635163cddb63282f1ee9b
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Header from folded patch 'fixup':
fixup! devtool/blindedpath: primitive tool to make blinded onions.
On decode, don't mess with op.ephemeralkey, since it will be used to derive
the next hop.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Changelog-Fixed: Passing 0 as minconf to withdraw allows you to use unconfirmed transaction outputs, even if explicitly passed as the `utxos` parameter