In this commit, we start to ignore the option to allow the caller to use
the legacy onion payload. The new payload is much more flexible and
efficient, so there's really no reason to still use it, other than for
backwards compatibility tests. Our existing tests that exercise the
legacy feature uses a build tag, which forces nodes to not advertise the
new payload format, which then forces path finding to include the legacy
payload, so we can be confident that route is still being tested.
The existence of this option (which actually makes the TLV payload
opt-in for `SendToRoute` users) makes it harder to remove it from the
protocol all together. With this PR, we take a step forward to allowing
such a change which is being tracked on the spec level at:
https://github.com/lightning/bolts/pull/962.
In a future release, we'll move to remove the field all together.
Ignoring the field today doesn't seem to have any clear downsides, as
most payments always include the MPP payload (due to payment secrets),
so this shouldn't impact users in a significant way.
Was discovered in a race unit test in lightning node connect that uses
the websocket proxy to connect to the hashmail server on the client
side.
By not shadowing the err variable we end up reading and writing to the
same variable from two different goroutines, which causes the data race.
If new default scopes are added to the underlying btcwallet
implementation, then they aren't automatically created for _existing_
wallets, only for new ones. So on startup we need to make sure all
scopes are present.
Because Taproot key spend only spends don't allow us to re-construct the
spent pkScript from the witness alone, we cannot support registering
spend notifications for v1 pkScripts only. We instead require the
outpoint to be specified. This commit makes it possible to only match by
outpoint and also adds an itest for it.
Fixes#6329.
This commit fixes a connection leak in the RPC wallet's health check. By
not closing the test connection the watch-only node would slowly stack
up connections and eventually hit the ulimit.
Fixes an issue with SignOutputRaw in remote signing mode where we
weren't able to sign on the remote signer if we only provided the public
key or only the family/index (and not both).
Fixes part of an issue detected in lightninglabs/loop#457.
We need to be able to query the watch-only wallet about a public key
when trying to sign with a key that we don't know the family or index
of. The easiest way to do that is to leverage the wallet's address index
to query the derivation path for a public key.
To give the RPC wallet access to that functionality, we need to expose
the method on the WalletController interface.
To help debug remote signing issues, it's helpful to get the raw PSBT
that failed to be parsed. This is necessary since serializing an invalid
PSBT is allowed and the checks only fail when trying to de-serialize
such an invalid packet.