370: No Bitcoin deposit for Alice r=da-kami a=da-kami
The message to deposit Bitcoin only applies to Bob, not Alice.
Alice does not require any initial Bitcoin.
Co-authored-by: Daniel Karzel <daniel@comit.network>
The swap should not be concerned with connection handling. This is
the responsibility of the overall application.
All but the execution-setup NetworkBehaviour are `request-response`
behaviours. These have built-in functionality to automatically emit
a dial attempt in case we are not connected at the time we want to
send a message. We remove all of the manual dialling code from the
swap in favor of this behaviour.
Additionally, we make sure to establish a connection as soon as the
EventLoop gets started. In case we ever loose the connection to Alice,
we try to re-establish it.
351: Show the actual BTC amount and fee to be swapped r=da-kami a=da-kami
We got user feedback, that it is confusing that the amount "found" in the wallet does not match the amount actually being swapped, thus with this PR we explicitly display the amount swapped and fees.
Co-authored-by: Daniel Karzel <daniel@comit.network>
Since Alice's refund scenario starts with generating the temporary wallet
from keys to claim the XMR which results in Alice' unloading the wallet.
Alice then loads her original wallet to be able to handle more swaps.
Since Alice is in the role of the long running daemon handling concurrent
swaps, the operation to close, claim and re-open her default wallet must
be atomic.
This PR adds an additional step, that sweeps all the refunded XMR back into
the default wallet. In order to ensure that this is possible, Alice has to
ensure that the locked XMR got enough confirmations.
These changes allow us to assert Alice's balance after refunding.
The execution params don't change throughout the lifetime of the
program. They can be set in the wallet at the very beginning.
This simplifies the interface of the wallet functions.
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>
Instead of spawning the swap inside the event loop we send the swap back
to the caller to be spawned. This means we no longer need the remote handle
that was only used in the tests.
This now properly logs the swap results in production.
It also gives us more control over Alice's swap in the tests.
The CLI has sensible default values for all parameters,
thus a config file is not really an advantage but just
keeps getting in our way, so re remove it.
Instead, we use a regular loop and extract everything into a function
that can be independently tested.
`backoff` would be useful to retry the actual call to the node.
In order to be able to re-connect on certain errors, we model
connection errors separately from parsing errors. We also change
the API of the whole module to no longer forward all errors to
the subscribers but instead, only update the subscribers with
either a latest rate or a permanent failure in case we exhausted
all our options to re-connect the websocket.
To model all of this properly, we introduce to sub-modules so that
each submodule can have their own `Error` type.
Resolves#297.
The type hints are generated from the field names. This has the
unfortunate consequence of the config field becoming file_path which
does not really make sense people working on the codebase.
The bitcoin::Wallet::sync_wallet function doesn't do anything else
other than delegating. As such, we have just as much information
about what went wrong inside this function as we have outside.
By moving the .context call into the function, we can avoid repeating
us on every call-site.
288: Switch to public stagenet node that works r=rishflab a=rishflab
The xmr.to node has been unreliable lately. The exan.tech node seems to
working.
@da-kami is following up with making this configurable. Lets get this in so we can get a release on Friday.
Co-authored-by: rishflab <rishflab@hotmail.com>
Instead of leaking the tokio::sync:⌚:Receiver type in our
return value, we create a newtype that implements the desired
interface. This allows us to get rid of the `RateService` structs
and instead implement `LatestRate` directly on top of this struct.
Given that `LatestRate` is only used within the event_loop module,
we move the definition of this type into there.
Previously, the user neither knew the price nor the maximum quantity
they could trade. We now request a quote from the user and display
it to them.
Fixes#255.
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.
261: Sweep xmr funds from generated temp wallet r=da-kami a=da-kami
Fixes#252
Please review by commit :)
Did a few cleanups before actually doing the feature.
Please note the comment that influenced this solution: https://github.com/comit-network/xmr-btc-swap/issues/252#issuecomment-789387074
Co-authored-by: Daniel Karzel <daniel@comit.network>
Instead of instantiating the `EventLoop` within the builder, we only
pass in the necessary arguments (which is the `EventLoopHandle`) to
the Builder upon `new`.
This is work towards #255 which will require us to perform network
communication (which implies having the `EventLoop`) before starting
a swap.
If our expression directly evaluates to a future, we don't need to
create an async block.
This requires us to have `EventLoopRun::run` consume the instance
instead of just taking a mutable reference (otherwise we run into
lifetime issues). However, that is better anyway because `run` is
an endless loop so you never get to use the handle afterwards
anyway.