Rather than polling for interesting bitcoin txs via importaddress, we use
the chain topology to register our interest directly.x
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
With segregated witness, we can (in advance!) specify the txid or tx
output we want to watch, so convert to that now. For the moment it's
done by pretending we have normalized txids; that goes away after the
conversion.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This lets us live in a segwit world, before segwit. It's a shim which we
can remove once we've changed all our outputs.
We need a few more sleeps in our test script, since we've slowed
things down by doing these calls for every tx in every block.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
You need to be running a bitcoind modified with segregated witness:
https://github.com/sipa/bitcoin/tree/segwit4
It needs 432 blocks to activate it!
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We got the -> second translation wrong by a factor of 512, and also we
need to move the median time in our tests otherwise bitcoind won't let
us spend the tx.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We now keep a list of commitment transaction states for "us" and
"them", as well as a "struct channel_state" for staged changes.
We manipulate these structures as we send out packets, receive
packets, or receive acknowledgement of packets. In particular, we
update the other nodes' staging_cstate as we send out our requests,
and update our own staging_cstate are we receive acks. When we
receive a request, we update both (as we immediately send out our
ack).
The RPC output is changed; rather than expose the complexity, we
expose our last committed state: what would happen if we have to drop
to the blockchain now.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
And divide fees as specified there.
We still use fixed values rather than floating, and we don't send or
handle update_fee messages.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We used to have a hacky close timeout which would immediately fire
when we'd closed because the connection was down. Far better to have
a specific "connection lost" input, and have it respond like CMD_CLOSE.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This is only for the simple case where there are no HTLCs.
We group the current commit information together in the struct;
this involves a trivial transform from peer->cur_commit_theirsig to
peer->cur_commit.theirsig.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We abort when this happens, but still worth testing.
This involves a refactor so we can allocate watches off a specific context,
for easy freeing when they're no longer wanted.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We do the simplest thing: a timer goes off, and we check all HTLCs for
one which has expired more than 30 seconds ago.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>