At some point lightning-cli help defaulted to human readable format, the additional -H broke the bash completion.
Changelog-Fixed: bash completion on lightning-cli now works again
contrib/pyln-proto/pyln/proto/bech32.py:120
/home/rusty/devel/cvs/lightning/contrib/pyln-proto/pyln/proto/bech32.py:120: SyntaxWarning: "is not" with a literal. Did you mean "!="?
assert decode(hrp, ret) is not (None, None)
I think this warning is correct (though I don't see the warning once I installed coincurve:
are we suppressing warnings?)
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
I quickly ran through the comments in lightning.py and saw a few small inconsistencies:
- upper/lower case for the "B" in "Bitcoin" unified (see https://github.com/lnbook/lnbook/pull/98)
- added missing "." after a complete sentence
- removed unnecessary double spaces
secp256k1 Python library is not maintained anymore and coincurve was
already used in the `wire` module.
Changelog-None
Signed-off-by: Michal Rostecki <mrostecki@mailfence.com>
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>
This was breaking a couple of tests if the pyln version was not synced up with
`lightningd`, so now we just warn (these are then collected when running in
pytest and highlighted).
We only support a very limited number of argument combinations, and apparently
sometimes we trigger a case we aren't handling. This adds a more useful error
message, including the params we didn't match.
So far we've always cleared the node directory when provisioning the node, but
while testing some plugins we noticed that pre-generating some files in that
directory is useful. This just adds yet another flag to `get_node` that
disables deleting any existing node directory.
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
We kept track of an URGENT, a NORMAL, and a SLOW feerate. They were used
for opening (NORMAL), mutual (NORMAL), UNILATERAL (URGENT) transactions
as well as minimum and maximum estimations, and onchain resolution.
We now keep track of more fine-grained feerates:
- `opening` used for funding and also misc transactions
- `mutual_close` used for the mutual close transaction
- `unilateral_close` used for unilateral close (commitment transactions)
- `delayed_to_us` used for resolving our output from our unilateral close
- `htlc_resolution` used for resolving onchain HTLCs
- `penalty` used for resolving revoked transactions
We don't modify our requests to our Bitcoin backend, as the next commit
will batch them !
Changelog-deprecated: The "urgent", "slow", and "normal" field of the `feerates` command are now deprecated.
Changelog-added: The fields "opening", "mutual_close", "unilateral_close", "delayed_to_us", "htlc_resolution" and "penalty" have been added to the `feerates` command.
pytest captures the output by monkey patching out `sys.stdout`. This may
conflict with our use of `sys.stdout` when configuring logging, resulting in
the "Write to closed file" issue that is spamming the logs. By making the
logging configuration a fixture hopefully we always use the correct
stdout (after pytest has monkey-patched it).
For some reason we fail to remove the test directory in some cases. My
hypothesis is that it is a daemon that is not completely shut down yet, and
still writes to the directory. This commit intercepts the error, prints any
files in the directory and re-raises the error. This should allow us to debug
the reappears.
Some tests may not spawn a node at all, so make sure that our assumption that
the directory exists in the fixture cleanup is correct by creating the
directory.
we loosely enforce that the specified type must be one of the listed
options. you can still cause an error because we're not checking the
default value you're passing in ...
not sure if this is totally necessary, should we jsut let clightning
enforce the input?
if the node fails to start (and we're expecting it to) return to us the
node object anyway
we also signal to collect all of its stderr logs by setting stderr
on the tailableproc that backs the node
ChangeLog-Added: New `getsharedsecret` command, which lets you compute a shared secret with this node knowing only a public point. This implements the BOLT standard of hashing the ECDH point, and is incompatible with ECIES.
Update to v13 as v12 started to raise undefined symbol exceptions agains latest
libsecp256k1.
Note: any version of `pip install coincurve` fails if no libsecp256k1 headers
are installed, should we point this out somewhere/somehow?
Changelog-None
we have 4 venues in which we can add features, 3 of which are unilaterally
controlled (`init`, `node_announcement`, and `invoices`) the
`channel_announcement` is co-signed by both parties, so we can't add
featurebits without additional coordination overhead.
Each location is encoded as a key-value pair in a dict called `featurebits` in
the manifest (omitted if no custom featurebits are set).
We are about to disect a couple of invoices for features, so let's add a class
that can encode and decode invoices from bolt11 strings. This is pretty much
the lnaddr.py file created by @rustyrussell with some minor changes. I'm
planning to clean this up further which is why I'm only exporting the
`Invoice` class for now.
The `generate` has been deprecated since 0.16 and has been removed in 0.18.0
so we better use `generatetoaddress` instead, which is already what we do with
`bitcoind`. So we remove the override here.
Fixes: #3192
Changelog-Added: `waitanyinvoice` now supports a `timeout` parameter, which when set will cause the command to fail when the timeout is reached; can set this to 0 to fail immediately if no new invoice has been paid yet.
As per the spec (https://www.jsonrpc.org/specification#request_object)
```
A rpc call is represented by sending a Request object to a Server. The Request object has the following members:
jsonrpc
A String specifying the version of the JSON-RPC protocol. MUST be exactly "2.0".
```
Changelog-fixed: pyln now includes the "jsonrpc" field to jsonrpc2 requests
This is needed to fully implement handling of blockheight disagreements
between us and payee.
If payee believes the blockheight is higher than ours, then `pay`
should wait for our node to achieve that blockheight.
Changelog-Add: Implement `waitblockheight` to wait for a specific blockheight.
Some Linux OSs impose a length limit on the path a Unix socket may have. This
is not an issue in `lightningd` since we `chdir()` into that directory before
opening the socket, however in pyln this became a problem for some tests,
since we use absolute paths in the testing framework. It's also a rather
strange quirk to expose to users.
This patch introduces a `UnixSocket` abstraction that attempts to work around
these limitations by aliasing the directory containing the socket into
`/proc/self/fd` and then connecting using that alias.
It was inspired by Open vSwitch code here https://github.com/openvswitch/ovs/blob/master/python/ovs/socket_util.py
Signed-off-by: Christian Decker <@cdecker>
We were indiscriminately accessing the `__annotations__` which could cause
issues if the function had been wrapped by some functions such as
`functools.partial`. This just checks that the access is safe before doing it.
Suggested-by: jarret <@jarret>
Signed-off-by: Christian Decker <@cdecker>