Also implements a way to decompress an onion using the devtools/onion tool
Changelog-Added: devtools: The `onion` tool can now generate, compress and decompress onions for rendez-vous routing
also: convert the stored int value from 'int' to 's64'
atoi fails silently, returning a zero. instead we use the more robust
strtoll which will allow us fail with an error.
we also make the parsing for bools stricter, only allowing plausibly
boolean values to parse.
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
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>
Before this patch we would only update `channel->last_tx` with the newly
proposed closure tx from the peer if the fee of the new one was lower.
In negotiations where we are at the higher end and the peer starts
lower, all peer's subsequent proposals will be higher than his initial
proposal and in this case we would never update `channel->last_tx`
and would wrongly broadcast his initial proposal at the end of the
negotiation.
Fixes https://github.com/ElementsProject/lightning/issues/3549
Changelog-Fixed: Always broadcast the latest close transaction at the end of the close fee negotiation, instead of sometimes broadcasting the peer's initial closing proposal.
Does the allocation and copying; this is useful because we can
avoid being fooled into doing giant allocations.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Without this gcc 4.8 defaults to an older standard and cannot compile
the code:
```
gcc-4.8 -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I../../libwally-core/src -I../../libwally-core -I../../libwally-core/src/ccan -DWALLY_CORE_BUILD=1 -Wall -Wextra -Wpedantic -Wcast-align -Wnested-externs -Wshadow -Wstrict-prototypes -Wformat -Wformat-security -Wformat-nonliteral -O0 -ggdb -DBUILD_ELEMENTS=1 -flax-vector-conversions -Wno-unused-function -Wno-long-long -Wno-overlength-strings -Wno-variadic-macros -fvisibility=hidden -g -O2 -MT libwallycore_la-elements.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/libwallycore_la-elements.Tpo -c ../../libwally-core/src/elements.c -o libwallycore_la-elements.o
../../libwally-core/src/elements.c: In function ‘wally_asset_pak_whitelistproof’:
../../libwally-core/src/elements.c:629:5: error: ‘for’ loop initial declarations are only allowed in C99 mode
for (size_t i = 0; i < num_keys; ++i) {
^
../../libwally-core/src/elements.c:629:5: note: use option -std=c99 or -std=gnu99 to compile your code
```
Changelog-None
We are returning a `BADONION` error despite the cause being an invalid onion
payload containing an unknown even TLV type. It really should return
`INVALID_ONION_PAYLOAD` errors instead.
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.
Even without optimization, it's faster to walk all the channels than
ping another daemon and wait for the response.
Changelog-Changed: Forwarding messages is now much faster (less inter-daemon traffic)
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Instead of saving a stripped_update, we use the new
local_fail_in_htlc_needs_update.
One minor change: we return the more correct
towire_temporary_channel_failure when the node is still syncing.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
The idea is that gossipd can give us the cupdate we need for an error, and
we wire things up so that we ask for it (async) just before we send the
error to the subdaemon.
I tried many other things, but they were all too high-risk.
1. We need to ask gossipd every time, since it produces these lazily
(in particular, it doesn't actually generate an offline update unless
the channel is used).
2. We can't do async calls in random places, since we'll end up with
an HTLC in limbo. What if another path tries to fail it at the same time?
3. This allows us to use a temporary_node_failure error, and upgrade it
when gossipd replies. This doesn't change any existing assumptions.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This is a common thing to do, so create a macro.
Unfortunately, it still needs the type arg, because the paramter may
be const, and the return cannot be, and C doesn't have a general
"(-const)" cast.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
common should not include specific per-daemon files. Turns out this
caused a lot of indirect includes to be exposed.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
It was a pointer into the list of plugins for the hook, but it was rather
unstable: if a plugin exits after handling the event we could end up skipping
a later plugin. We now rely on the much more stable `call_chain` list, so we
can clean up that useless field.
We are attaching the destructor to notify us when the plugin exits, but we
also need to clear them once the request is handled correctly, so we don't
call the destructor when it exits later.
We make the current state of `lightningd` explicit so we don't have to
identify a shutdown by its side-effects. We then use this in order to prevent
the killing and freeing of plugins to continue down the chain of registered
plugins.
We were waiting for both stdin and stdout to close, however that resulted in
us deferring cleanup indefinitely since we did not poll stdout for being
writable most of the time. On the other hand we are almost always polling
the plugin's stdout, so that notifies us as soon as the plugin stops.
Changelog-Fixed: plugin: Plugins no longer linger indefinitely if their process terminates