- Swap-id is exchanged during execution setup. CLI (Bob) sends the swap-id to be used in his first message.
- Transfer poof and encryption signature messages include the swap-id so it can be properly associated with the correct swap.
- ASB: Encryption signatures are associated with swaps by swap-id, not peer-id.
- ASB: Transfer proofs are still associated to peer-ids (because they have to be sent to the respective peer), but the ASB can buffer multiple
- CLI: Incoming transfer proofs are checked for matching swap-id. If a transfer proof with a different swap-id than the current executing swap is received it will be ignored. We can change this to saving into the database.
Includes concurrent swap tests with the same Bob.
- One test that pauses and starts an additional swap after the transfer proof was received. Results in both swaps being redeemed after resuming the first swap.
- One test that pauses and starts an additional swap before the transfer proof is sent (just after BTC locked). Results in the second swap redeeming and the first swap being refunded (because the transfer proof on Bob's side is lost). Once we store transfer proofs that we receive during executing a different swap into the database both swaps should redeem.
Note that the monero harness was adapted to allow creating wallets with multiple outputs, which is needed for Alice.
This also formats `log` events more nicely. Instead of
```
Mar 29 09:46:16.775 INFO log: Found message after comparing 82 lines log.target="testcontainers::core::wait_for_message" log.module_path="testcontainers::core::wait_for_message" log.file="/home/thomas/.cargo/registry/src/github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823/testcontainers-0.12.0/src/core/wait_for_message.rs" log.line=35
```
We now have
```
Mar 29 09:57:15.860 INFO testcontainers::core::wait_for_message: Found message after comparing 81 lines
```
Prefixing docker-containers and -networks is a necessity to be able to spin up multiple containers and networks.
However, there is no reason to prefix the wallet names that live inside a container. One cannot add a wallet with
the same name twice, so the prefixing of wallets does not bring any advantage. When re-opening a wallet by name
the wallet name prefix is cumbersome and was thus removed.
The monero harness wallet always starts a miner that mines new blocks every second.
This can conflict with additionally triggering block generation and cause this error:
```
monero_rpc::rpc::monerod: generate blocks response: {
"error": {
"code": -7,
"message": "Block not accepted"
},
"id": "1",
"jsonrpc": "2.0"
}
```
Since the miner is generating blocks anyway we can wait for the wallet to catch up.
Refresh is done upon querying the balance, thus the refresh calls were removed.
This allows us to see the response from the monerod client on debug.
When the monero-harness was split up into harness and rpc this was overlooked.
We need the debug logs to investigate the monero harness CI fail bug.
CI keeps failing when generating blocks, but response is only printed on debug level.
To investigate what is the problem change monero-harness log levels to debug.
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.
- Make it the same for Alice and Bob.
- Make it contain a wallet client instead of the `Monero` struct.
Also:
Remove `Container` from inside `Monero` struct. The caller of `new`
can simply ensure that `Container` is not dropped to keep the
container alive.
This makes the `Monero` struct easier to work with, as it just holds
the data necessary to create the different clients created during
`init`, and does not have any lifetime restrictions.