490: Mainnet switch r=da-kami a=da-kami
Fixes #446Fixes#360Fixes#506Fixes#478
To be precise: It is actually a testnet switch, because I think mainnet should be default.
I took several assumptions on the way (e.g. network support, ...).
At this stage any feedback welcome :)
TODO:
- [ ] successful mainnet swap with this code base before merging :)
Co-authored-by: Daniel Karzel <daniel@comit.network>
It is currently not expected that ASB and CLI are used for swaps > 10_000$ equivalent to XMR/BTC, thus the finality confirmations were reduced to an equivalent of 20 mins of work (2 blocks for Bitcoin, 10 for Monero).
Monero enforces 10 unlocking blocks until the balance is spendable, so the finality confirmations cannot be set lower than 10.
We subscribe to transactions upon broadcast, where we use output index `0` for the subscription.
In order to ensure that this subscription is guaranteed to be for the locking script (and not a change output) we now ensure that the locking script output is always at index `0` of the outputs of the transaction.
We chose this solution because otherwise we would have to add more information to broadcasting a transaction.
This solution is less intrusive, because the order of transaction outputs should not have any side effects and ensuring index `0` makes the whole behaviour more deterministic.
The Electrum block-header subscription did not provide us with block headers, because upon the connection being closed by a node the subscription would end.
Re-newing the the subscription upon re-connect is not easily achievable, that's why we opted for a polling mode for now, where we start a block header subscription on every update iteration, that is only used once (when the subscription is made).
There is no `--mainnet` flag.
Since we cannot just pass an empty string to `.arg()` we use the `.args()` method to pass nothing for mainnet and the respective flags for stagenet and testnet.
By default the finality confirmations of the network's `env::Config` will be applied and no finality confirmations will be persisted on disk in the config file.
It is however possible to set finality confirmations in the config file for bitcoin and monero for power users at their own risk.
If set the defaults will be overwritten with the parameter from the config file upon startup.
To run the ASB on testnet, one actively has to provide the `--testnet` flag.
Mainnet and testnet data and config are separated into sub-folders, i.e. `{data/config-dir}/asb/testnet` and `{data-dir}/asb/mainnet`.
The initial setup is also per network. If (default) config for the network cannot be found the initial setup is triggered.
Startup includes network check to ensure the bitcoin/monero network in config file is the same as the one in the `env::Config`.
Note: Wallet initialization is done with the network set in the `env::Config`, the network saved in the config file is just to indicate what network the config file is for.
This includes testing CLI commandline args
Clap's `default_value_with` actually did not work on `Subcommand`s because the parent's flags were not picked up.
This was fixed by changing parameters dependent on testnet/mainnet to options.
This problem should have been detected by tests, that's why the command line parameter tests were finally (re-)added.
Thanks to @rishflab for some pre-work for this.
In order to allow people to plug into public nodes / be more flexible with their own setup we now enforce specifying the monero daemon port to be used by the `monero-wallet-rpc`.
In the past we had problems with flags/parameter changes several times, where on instance was changed, buy another one was missed. This should mitigate this problem.
This patch introduces structs for all duplicated parameters and uses flatten to only have one point for changes.
Additionally removes all mentions of `alice` from the commands / variables. This code is on an application level and should not be concerned with swap protocol roles.
We need to check two things:
- balance to be higher than dust amount (546).
- balance to be higher than min-relay fee.
Additionally, the tx_builder might fail if not enough funds are in the wallet to pay for the overall transaction fees.
Introduces a minimum buy Bitcoin amount similar to the maximum amount already present.
For the CLI the minimum amount is enforced by waiting until at least the minimum is available as max-giveable amount.
Max-buy and spread is not something that one would configure on every run.
More convenient to keep this in the config.
The max-buy Bitcoin value was adapted to `0.02` which is more reasonable for mainnet.
Activated feature `serde-float` to serialize the spread (Decimal) as float instead of string.
```
...
[maker]
max_buy_btc = 0.02
ask_spread = 0.02
```
Weights fluctuate because of the length of the signatures. Valid ecdsa signatures can have 68, 69, 70, 71, or 72 bytes. Since most of our transactions have 2 signatures the weight can be up to 8 bytes less than the static weight (4 bytes per signature).
Adds `cancel`, `refund`, `punish`, `redeem` and `safely-abort` commands to the ASB that can be used to trigger the specific scenario for the swap by ID.
`asb --help` :
(...)
SUBCOMMANDS:
balance Prints the Bitcoin and Monero balance. Requires the monero-wallet-rpc to be running.
help Prints this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
history Prints swap-id and the state of each swap ever made.
start Main command to run the ASB.
withdraw-btc Allows withdrawing BTC from the internal Bitcoin wallet.
In the production code it is a weird indirection that we load the state and then pass in the state and the database.
In the tests we have one additional load by doing it inside the command, but loading from the db is not expensive.
Each test spawns swarm for Alice and Bob that only contains the spot_price behaviours and uses a memory transport.
Tests cover happy path (i.e. expected price is returned) and error scenarios.
Implementation of `TestRate` on `LatestRate` allows testing rate fetch error and quote calculation error behaviour.
Thanks to @thomaseizinger for ramping up the test framework for comit-rs in the past!
Instead of handling all errors on the inside spot_price errors are bubbled up (as `SwapRequestDeclined`).
This allows us to test both Alice's and Bob's behaviour for all scenarios.
What goes over the wire should not be coupled to the errors being printed.
For the CLI and ASB we introduce a separate error enum that is used for logging.
When sending over the wire the errors are mapped to and from the `network::spot_price::Error`.
As part of Bob-specific spot_price code was moved from the network into bob.
Clearly separation of the network API from bob/alice.
Move Alice's spot price logic into a dedicated network behaviour that handles all the logic.
The new behaviour encapsulates the complete state necessary for spot price request decision making.
The network behaviour cannot handle asynchronous calls, thus the balance is managed inside the spot price and has to updated regularly from the outside to ensure the spot price balance check has up to date data.
At the moment the balance is updated upon an incoming quote requests.
Code that is relevant for both ASB and CLI remains in the `network::spot_price` module (e.g. `network::spot_price::Error`).
When a CLI requests a spot price have some errors that are expected, where we can provide a proper error message for the CLI:
- Balance of ASB too low
- Buy amount sent by CLI exceeds maximum buy amount accepted by ASB
- ASB is running in maintenance mode and does not accept incoming swap requests
All of these errors returns a proper error to the CLI and prints a warning in the ASB logs.
Any other unexpected error will result in closing the channel with the CLI and printing an error in the ASB logs.
Resume-only is a maintenance mode where no swaps are accepted but unfinished swaps are resumed.
This is achieve by ignoring incoming spot-price requests (that would lead to execution setup) in the event-loop.
Fees are hard to compute and it is too easy to get wrong and lose a lot of money. Hence, a hardcoded maximum of 100,000 satoshi for a single transaction is in place.
Electrum has an estimate-fee feature which takes as input the block you want a tx to be included.
The result is a recommendation of BTC/vbyte.
Using this recommendation and the knowledge about the size of our transactions we compute an appropriate fee.
The size of the transactions were taken from real transactions as published on bitcoin testnet.
Note: in reality these sizes might fluctuate a bit but not for much.
Alice chooses the fee for TxPunish because she is the one that cares.
Bob chooses the fee for TxRefund because he is the one that cares.
Note must be taken here because if the fee is too low (e.g. < min tx fee) then she might not be able to publish TxRedeem at all.
Alice chooses the fee for TxRedeem because she is the one that cares. Note must be taken here because if the fee is too low (e.g. < min tx fee) then she might not be able to publish TxRedeem at all.
434: Introduce monero-wallet crate r=thomaseizinger a=thomaseizinger
This PR:
1. ~Introduce a crate for the epee binary serialization as a serde format~: Released here: https://github.com/comit-network/monero-epee-bin-serde
2. Extends the MoneroRPC client with two binary calls
3. Introduces a `monero-wallet` crate that for now just provides functionality for choosing random key offsets. Together with the the ability to produce bulletproofs and ring signatures, this should be enough for signing Monero transactions locally.
(1) and (2) are a prerequisite for (3).
Co-authored-by: Thomas Eizinger <thomas@eizinger.io>
460: Different default directories for CLI and ASB r=da-kami a=da-kami
Fixes#437
Using the same default directory as data-/config-dir has caused unwanted side effects when running both applications on the same machine.
Use these directory names:
- ASB: `xmr-btc-swap-asb`
- CLI: `xmr-btc-swap-cli`
Since the functionality is now application specific the respective functions were moved into the appropriate module of the application.
Co-authored-by: Daniel Karzel <daniel@comit.network>
459: Use dprint for formatting Cargo.toml files r=thomaseizinger a=thomaseizinger
Invoking cargo tomlfmt on all files is a PITA and as we can see from
the CI scripts, it is often forgotten to as new crates are added to
the workspace.
Using dprint for toml files fixes this.
Unfortunately, we can't use dprint for Rust code yet because there
hasn't been a release of rustfmt in quite a while but we are already
using features from a newer rustfmt via rustup.
Co-authored-by: Thomas Eizinger <thomas@eizinger.io>
Using the same default directory as data-/config-dir has caused unwanted side effects when running both applications on the same machine.
Use these directory names:
- ASB: xmr-btc-swap/asb
- CLI: xmr-btc-swap/cli
Since the functionality is now application specific the respective functions were moved into the appropriate module of the application.
Using the same default directory as data-/config-dir has caused unwanted side effects when running both applications on the same machine.
Use these directory names:
- ASB: xmr-btc-swap-asb
- CLI: xmr-btc-swap-cli
Since the functionality is now application specific the respective functions were moved into the appropriate module of the application.
Bob validates that incoming transfer proof messages are coming from the peer-id of Alice.
Currently Bob will ignore any transfer proof message that is not coming from the counterparty peer-id associated to the current swap in execution.
Once we add support for trying to save received transfer proofs for swaps that are currently not in execution we can also adapy allowing this for different counterparty peer-ids. This requires access to the database in Bob's event loop.
Alice validates that incoming encsig messages are coming from the peer-id that is associated with the swap.
Encsig message from a peer-id different to the one associated with the swap are ignored.
Invoking cargo tomlfmt on all files is a PITA and as we can see from
the CI scripts, it is often forgotten to as new crates are added to
the workspace.
Using dprint for toml files fixes this.
Unfortunately, we can't use dprint for Rust code yet because there
hasn't been a release of rustfmt in quite a while but we are already
using features from a newer rustfmt via rustup.
This PR does a few things.
* It adds a TorTransport which either dials through Tor's socks5 proxy or via clearnet.
* It enables ASB to register hidden services for each network it is listening on. We assume that we only care about different ports and re-use the same onion-address for all of them. The ASB requires to have access to Tor's control port.
* It adds support to dial through a local Tor socks5 proxy. We assume that Tor is always available on localhost. Swap cli only requires Tor to be running so that it can send messages via Tor's socks5 proxy.
* It adds a new e2e test which swaps through Tor. For this we assume that Tor is currently running on localhost. All other tests are running via clear net.
442: Minor cleanups towards implementing a Monero wallet for local signing r=thomaseizinger a=thomaseizinger
Extracted out of #434.
Co-authored-by: Thomas Eizinger <thomas@eizinger.io>
1. Split up image::Monero into Monerod and MoneroWalletRpc
2. Don't use `bash` to run the internal command. Instead we disable
the entrypoint script as per https://github.com/XMRto/monero#raw-commands
3. Remove the start up delay by listening for the correct log message.
To make this more resilient, we make the log level NOT configurable and
instead always log verbosely.