- upgrades to bdk 0.24 #1198
- adds a regression test for opening older wallets #1183
- adds a migration for older wallets that encounter the ChecksumMismatch
error #1182
- bdk to 0.22.0 #1126
- ecdsa_fun to 7c3d592 #1127
- sigma_fun to 7c3d592 #1128
- sha2 to 0.10.2 #948
- serde to 1.0.144 #1115
- bitcoin-harness to bff9a64
Revert "ci: specify previous dprint version until fixed"
This reverts commit 11eb1737ce.
This commit updates the rust-toolchain to the current stable version
1.59, and fixes a number of new clippy warnings from that change.
Other changes:
- updates backoff to 0.4
- updates swap to 2021 edition
- updates comfy-table to 5.0
- updates monero-wallet to 2021 edition
- updates moneor-harness to 2021 edition
- updates bdk and rust_decimal
- updates tokio-util to 0.7
- updates workflow to use actions/setup-python@3
- updates pem and serde_with
- adds stable rust toolchain notice to readme
Alice and Bob can both submit cancel. A scenario exists where one of
them may try and manually cancel but the other party has already
published cancel. Log a message to notify the user this has happened.
Add reusable function to check error for bitcoin rpc error code
Having `spot_price` and `execution_setup` as separate protocols did not bring any advantages, but was problematic because we had to ensure that `execution_setup` would be triggered after `spot_price`. Because of this dependency it is better to combine the protocols into one.
Combining the protocols also allows a refactoring to get rid of the `libp2p-async-await` dependency.
Alice always listens for the `swap_setup` protocol. When Bob opens a substream on that protocol the spot price is communicated, and then all execution setup messages (swap-id and signature exchange).
Forcing the user to create an implementation of `EstimateFeeRate`
every time they want to create a wallet for testing is tedious and
leads to duplicated code.
The implementation for tests is rarely dynamic and thus can be
simplified to static arguments.
This also allows us to provide convenience constructors to make tests
that don't care about fees less distracting by reducing the number of
constants that are floating around.
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).
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.
In order for the re-construction of TxLock to be meaningful, we limit
`Message2` to the PSBT instead of the full struct. This is a breaking
change in the network layer.
The PSBT is valid if:
- It has at most two outputs (we allow a change output)
- One of the outputs pays the agreed upon amount to a shared output script
Resolves#260.
We achieve our optimizations in three ways:
1. Batching calls instead of making them individually.
To get access to the batch calls, we replace all our
calls to the HTTP interface with RPC calls.
2. Never directly make network calls based on function
calls on the wallet.
Instead, inquiring about the status of a script always
just returns information based on local data. With every
call, we check when we last refreshed the local data and
do so if the data is considered to be too old. This
interval is configurable.
3. Use electrum's notification feature to get updated
with the latest blockheight.
Co-authored-by: Thomas Eizinger <thomas@eizinger.io>
Co-authored-by: Rishab Sharma <rishflab@hotmail.com>
We reduce indirection by constructing TxPunish directly based off
`State3` and make the type itself more powerful by moving the logic
of completing it with a signature onto it.
This reduces the overall amount of LoC that imports take up in our
codebase by almost 100.
It also makes merge-conflicts less likely because there is less
grouping together of imports that may lead to layout changes which
in turn can cause merge conflicts.
Abstracting over the individual bits of functionality of the wallet
does have its place, especially if one wants to keep a separation
of an abstract protocol library that other people can use with their
own wallets.
However, at the moment, the traits only cause unnecessary friction.
We can always add such abstraction layers again once we need them.
These traits were only used once within the `TxLock` constructor.
Looking at the rest of the codebase, we don't really seem to follow
any abstractions here where the protocol shouldn't know about the
exact types that is being passed in.
As such, these types are just noise and might as well be removed in
favor of simplicity.
To achieve this we also:
- upgrade rust-bitcoin to 0.26
- upgrade bitcoin-harness to latest version (which also depends bitcoin 0.26)
- upgrade to latest edcsa-fun
- replace cross_curve_dleq proof with sigma_fun (to avoid an upgrade dance over there)
The bitcoind wallet required the user to run a bitcoind node. It was replaced with a bdk wallet which allows the user to connect to an electrum instance hosted remotely. An electrum and bitcoind testcontainer were created to the test the bdk wallet. The electrum container reads the blockdata from the bitcoind testcontainer through a shared volume. bitcoind-harness was removed as bitcoind initialisation code was moved into test_utils. The bdk wallet differs from the bitcoind wallet in that it needs to be manually synced with an electrum node. We synchronise the wallet once upon initialisation to prevent a potentially long running blocking task from interrupting protocol execution. The electrum HTTP API was used to get the latest block height and the transaction block height as this functionality was not present in the bdk wallet API or it required the bdk wallet to be re-synced to get an up to date value.
To allow the related timelock to be defined with the
transaction that uses it. This will allow the access to the
timelock's struct inner field with defining `From` impl.
Upgrade bitcoin harness dependency to latest commit
Upgrade backoff to fix failing tests. The previous version of backoff had a broken version of the retry function. Upgraded to a newer comit which fixes this problem.
Upgrade hyper to 0.14 as the 0.13 was bringing in tokio 0.2.24
Upgraded bitcoin harness to version that uses tokio 1.0 and reqwest 0.11
Upgrade reqwest to 0.11. Reqwest 0.11 uses tokio 1.0
Upgrade libp2p to 0.34 in preparation for tokio 1.0 upgrade
Rust fmt automatically groups the imports (from top to bottom) as `pub use` `use crate` and `use`.
There is no need to introduce sections which cause annoyance when auto importing using the IDE.
Created network, storage and protocol modules. Organised
files into the modules where the belong.
xmr_btc crate moved into isolated modulein swap crate.
Remove the xmr_btc module and integrate into swap crate.
Consolidate message related code
Reorganise imports
Remove unused parent Message enum
Remove unused parent State enum
Remove unused dependencies from Cargo.toml