Resolve forwarded HTLC claims via MonitorEvents#4524
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valentinewallace wants to merge 33 commits intolightningdevkit:mainfrom
Draft
Resolve forwarded HTLC claims via MonitorEvents#4524valentinewallace wants to merge 33 commits intolightningdevkit:mainfrom
MonitorEvents#4524valentinewallace wants to merge 33 commits intolightningdevkit:mainfrom
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👋 Hi! I see this is a draft PR. |
MonitorEvents
MonitorEventsMonitorEvents
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Helps when debugging to know which variants failed.
Currently, the resolution of HTLCs (and decisions on when HTLCs can be forwarded) is the responsibility of Channel objects (a part of ChannelManager) until the channel is closed, and then the ChannelMonitor thereafter. This leads to some complexity around race conditions for HTLCs right around channel closure. Additionally, there is lots of complexity reconstructing the state of all HTLCs in the ChannelManager deserialization/loading logic. Instead, we want to do all resolution in ChannelMonitors (in response to ChannelMonitorUpdates) and pass them back to ChannelManager in the form of MonitorEvents (similar to how HTLCs are resolved after channels are closed). In order to have reliable resolution, we'll need to keep MonitorEvents around in the ChannelMonitor until the ChannelManager has finished processing them. This simplify things - on restart instead of examining the set of HTLCs in monitors we can simply replay all the pending MonitorEvents. As a first step towards this, here we persist a flag in the ChannelManager and ChannelMonitors indicating whether this new feature is enabled. It will be used in upcoming commits to maintain compatibility and create an upgrade/downgrade path between LDK versions.
Cleans up the next commit
This field will be deprecated in upcoming commits when we start persisting MonitorEvent ids alongside the MonitorEvents.
Currently, the resolution of HTLCs (and decisions on when HTLCs can be forwarded) is the responsibility of Channel objects (a part of ChannelManager) until the channel is closed, and then the ChannelMonitor thereafter. This leads to some complexity around race conditions for HTLCs right around channel closure. Additionally, there is lots of complexity reconstructing the state of all HTLCs in the ChannelManager deserialization/loading logic. Instead, we want to do all resolution in ChannelMonitors (in response to ChannelMonitorUpdates) and pass them back to ChannelManager in the form of MonitorEvents (similar to how HTLCs are resolved after channels are closed). In order to have reliable resolution, we'll need to keep MonitorEvents around in the ChannelMonitor until the ChannelManager has finished processing them. This simplify things - on restart instead of examining the set of HTLCs in monitors we can simply replay all the pending MonitorEvents. Here we add an as-yet-unused API to chain::Watch to allow the ChannelManager to tell the a ChannelMonitor that a MonitorEvent has been irrevocably processed and can be deleted.
Currently, the resolution of HTLCs (and decisions on when HTLCs can be forwarded) is the responsibility of Channel objects (a part of ChannelManager) until the channel is closed, and then the ChannelMonitor thereafter. This leads to some complexity around race conditions for HTLCs right around channel closure. Additionally, there is lots of complexity reconstructing the state of all HTLCs in the ChannelManager deserialization/loading logic. Instead, we want to do all resolution in ChannelMonitors (in response to ChannelMonitorUpdates) and pass them back to ChannelManager in the form of MonitorEvents (similar to how HTLCs are resolved after channels are closed). In order to have reliable resolution, we'll need to keep MonitorEvents around in the ChannelMonitor until the ChannelManager has finished processing them. This simplify things - on restart instead of examining the set of HTLCs in monitors we can simply replay all the pending MonitorEvents. To allow the ChannelManager to ack specific monitor events once they are resolved in upcoming commits, here we give each MonitorEvent a corresponding unique id. It's implemented in such a way that we can delete legacy monitor event code in the future when the new persistent monitor events flag is enabled by default.
Currently, the resolution of HTLCs (and decisions on when HTLCs can be forwarded) is the responsibility of Channel objects (a part of ChannelManager) until the channel is closed, and then the ChannelMonitor thereafter. This leads to some complexity around race conditions for HTLCs right around channel closure. Additionally, there is lots of complexity reconstructing the state of all HTLCs in the ChannelManager deserialization/loading logic. Instead, we want to do all resolution in ChannelMonitors (in response to ChannelMonitorUpdates) and pass them back to ChannelManager in the form of MonitorEvents (similar to how HTLCs are resolved after channels are closed). In order to have reliable resolution, we'll need to keep MonitorEvents around in the ChannelMonitor until the ChannelManager has finished processing them. This will simplify things - on restart instead of examining the set of HTLCs in monitors we can simply replay all the pending MonitorEvents. Here for the purposes of merging initial support for persistent monitor events, we ack each immediately after it is received/handled by the ChannelManager, which is equivalent to the behavior we had prior to monitor events becoming persistent. In upcoming work, we'll want to have much more special handling for HTLCUpdate monitor events in particular -- e.g. for outbound payment claim events, we should only ACK the monitor event when the PaymentSent event is processed, until that point we want it to keep being provided back to us on startup. All the other monitor events are trivial to ACK, since they don't need to be re-processed on startup.
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Currently, the resolution of HTLCs (and decisions on when HTLCs can be forwarded) is the responsibility of Channel objects (a part of ChannelManager) until the channel is closed, and then the ChannelMonitor thereafter. This leads to some complexity around race conditions for HTLCs right around channel closure. Additionally, there is lots of complexity reconstructing the state of all HTLCs in the ChannelManager deserialization/loading logic. Instead, we want to do all resolution in ChannelMonitors (in response to ChannelMonitorUpdates) and pass them back to ChannelManager in the form of MonitorEvents (similar to how HTLCs are resolved after channels are closed). In order to have reliable resolution, we'll need to keep MonitorEvents around in the ChannelMonitor until the ChannelManager has finished processing them. This will simplify things - on restart instead of examining the set of HTLCs in monitors we can simply replay all the pending MonitorEvents. Here we complete work that was built on recent prior commits and actually start re-providing monitor events on startup if they went un-acked during runtime. This isn't actually supported in prod yet, so this new code will run randomly in tests, to ensure we still support the old paths.
And log them in check_added_monitors if it fails.
Will be used in upcoming commits when generating MonitorEvents.
Processing MonitorEvent::HTLCEvent causes the ChannelManager to call claim_funds_internal, but it will currently pass in None for the user_channel_id parameter. In upcoming commits when we begin generating monitor events for off-chain HTLC claims as well as onchain, we'll want to start using an accurate value instead.
Used in an upcoming commit to insert a pending payment if it's missing on startup and we need to re-claim.
Used in an upcoming commit to generate an EventCompletionAction::AckMonitorEvent.
In upcoming commits, we'll be generating monitor events for off-chain claims as well as on-chain. As a small prefactor, calculate the from_onchain value rather than hardcoding it to true.
If ChannelManager::persistent_monitor_events is enabled, we may want to avoid acking a monitor event until after an Event is processed by the user. In upcoming commits, we'll use this to ensure a MonitorEvent::HTLCEvent will keep being re-provided back to us until after an Event::PaymentSent is processed.
Currently, the resolution of HTLCs (and decisions on when HTLCs can be forwarded) is the responsibility of Channel objects (a part of ChannelManager) until the channel is closed, and then the ChannelMonitor thereafter. This leads to some complexity around race conditions for HTLCs right around channel closure. Additionally, there is lots of complexity reconstructing the state of all HTLCs in the ChannelManager deserialization/loading logic. Instead, we want to do all resolution in ChannelMonitors (in response to ChannelMonitorUpdates) and pass them back to ChannelManager in the form of MonitorEvents (similar to how HTLCs are resolved after channels are closed). In order to have reliable resolution, we'll need to keep MonitorEvents around in the ChannelMonitor until the ChannelManager has finished processing them. This will simplify things - on restart instead of examining the set of HTLCs in monitors we can simply replay all the pending MonitorEvents. In recent work, we added support for keeping monitor events around until they are explicitly acked by the ChannelManager, but would always ack monitor events immediately, which preserved the previous behavior and didn't break any tests. Up until this point, we only generated HTLC monitor events when a payment was claimed/failed on-chain. In this commit, we start generating persistent monitor events whenever a payment is claimed *off*-chain, specifically when new latest holder commitment data is provided to the monitor. For the purpose of making incremental progress on this feature, these events will be a no-op and/or continue to be acked immediately except in the narrow case of an off-chain outbound payment claim. HTLC forward claim monitor events will be a no-op, and on-chain outbound payment claim events continue to be acked immediately. Off-chain outbound payment claims, however, now have monitor events generated for them that will not be acked by the ChannelManager until the PaymentSent event is processed by the user. This also allows us to stop blocking the RAA monitor update that removes the preimage, because the purpose of that behavior was to ensure the user got a PaymentSent event and the monitor event now serves that purpose instead.
This isn't a bug at the moment because a claim in this situation would already be filtered out due to its inclusion in htlcs_resolved_to_user. However, when we stop issuing ReleasePaymentComplete monitor updates for claims in upcoming commits, HTLC claims will no longer be in htlcs_resolved_to_user when get_onchain_failed_htlcs checks.
Currently, the resolution of HTLCs (and decisions on when HTLCs can be forwarded) is the responsibility of Channel objects (a part of ChannelManager) until the channel is closed, and then the ChannelMonitor thereafter. This leads to some complexity around race conditions for HTLCs right around channel closure. Additionally, there is lots of complexity reconstructing the state of all HTLCs in the ChannelManager deserialization/loading logic. Instead, we want to do all resolution in ChannelMonitors (in response to ChannelMonitorUpdates) and pass them back to ChannelManager in the form of MonitorEvents (similar to how HTLCs are resolved after channels are closed). In order to have reliable resolution, we'll need to keep MonitorEvents around in the ChannelMonitor until the ChannelManager has finished processing them. This will simplify things - on restart instead of examining the set of HTLCs in monitors we can simply replay all the pending MonitorEvents. In recent work, we added support for keeping monitor events around until they are explicitly acked by the ChannelManager, but would always ack monitor events immediately, which preserved the previous behavior and didn't break any tests. Here we start acking monitor events for on-chain HTLC claims when the user processes the PaymentSent event, if the persistent_monitor_events feature is enabled. This allows us to stop issuing ReleasePaymentComplete monitor updates for onchain payment claims, because the purpose of that behavior is to ensure we won't keep repeatedly issuing PaymentSent events, and the monitor event and acking it on PaymentSent processing now serves that purpose instead.
Use new ForwardEventContents struct as the return value of the closure passed to claim_funds_from_htlc_forward_hop. Useful as upcoming commits will add a struct that wants to contain a forward event specifically, not just any Event.
claim_mpp_part will use this event id in future commits when generating monitor update completion actions to ack the event corresponding to the id.
Channel will store this event id in upcoming commits, to allow the monitor event corresponding to the id to be acked after the HTLC is removed via revoke_and_ack.
We don't actually need to write this field to disk because monitor events will be re-provided on startup. Will be used in upcoming commits to ack the monitor events corresponding to these ids after the htlcs are removed via revoke_and_ack.
We don't actually need to write this field to disk because monitor events will be re-provided on startup. Will be used in upcoming commits to ack the monitor events corresponding to these ids after the htlcs are removed via revoke_and_ack.
If we stored a monitor event id with a pending inbound HTLC and that HTLC is about to be fully removed from the channel via revoke_and_ack, we should ack the monitor event corresponding to that id when the monitor update associated with the RAA is complete. We do this so the monitor event will keep being re-provided to us on startup until the HTLC is removed, to ensure the HTLC gets resolved even if we lose the holding cell.
If we stored a monitor event id with a pending inbound HTLC and that HTLC is about to be fully removed from the channel via revoke_and_ack, we should ack the monitor event corresponding to that id when the monitor update associated with the RAA is complete. We do this so the monitor event will keep being re-provided to us on startup until the HTLC is removed, to ensure the HTLC gets resolved even if we lose the holding cell.
The first time we claim an HTLC in a channel, we may not have an associated monitor event id. Once we later process the monitor event for the claim, we need to update the channel's internal htlc state to include the monitor event id, so the event can be properly acked afer the htlc is removed.
We'll be adding another parameter to this closure soon. Also this makes it a little clearer what's going on at the callsites.
Indicates we should emit an Event::PaymentForwarded and possibly ack a monitor event via Watch::ack_monitor_event. This is generated when we've completed an inbound edge preimage update for an HTLC forward, at which point it's safe to generate the forward event. If the inbound edge is closed, a monitor event id may be included so we can tell the outbound edge to stop telling us about the claim once the forward event is processed by the user.
We need this level of precision when generating this event for off-chain claims. One test failed due to us previously overreporting a fee due to this lack of precision, fixed now.
Currently, the resolution of HTLCs (and decisions on when HTLCs can be forwarded) is the responsibility of Channel objects (a part of ChannelManager) until the channel is closed, and then the ChannelMonitor thereafter. This leads to some complexity around race conditions for HTLCs right around channel closure. Additionally, there is lots of complexity reconstructing the state of all HTLCs in the ChannelManager deserialization/loading logic. Instead, we want to do all resolution in ChannelMonitors (in response to ChannelMonitorUpdates) and pass them back to ChannelManager in the form of MonitorEvents (similar to how HTLCs are resolved after channels are closed). In order to have reliable resolution, we'll need to keep MonitorEvents around in the ChannelMonitor until the ChannelManager has finished processing them. This will simplify things - on restart instead of examining the set of HTLCs in monitors we can simply replay all the pending MonitorEvents. Building on the work of prior commits, here we stop immediately acking monitor events for HTLC claims for forwarded HTLCs, and instead ack the monitor event when the forward is fully resolved and we don't want the monitor event to be re-provided back to us on startup. If the inbound edge channel is on-chain, we'll ack the event when the inbound edge preimage monitor update completes and the user processes a PaymentForwarded event. If the inbound edge is open, we'll ack the event when the inbound HTLC is fully removed via revoke_and_ack (this ensures we'll remember to resolve the htlc off-chain even if we lose the holding cell).
We're moving towards having the ChannelMonitor be responsible for resolving HTLCs, via MonitorEvents, so we need to start tracking more payment information in monitor updates so the monitor later has access to it. Here we add tracking for the skimmed_fee field for claims.
We're moving towards having the ChannelMonitor be responsible for resolving HTLCs, via MonitorEvents, so we need to start surfacing more information in monitor events. Here we start persisting/surfacing a specific HTLC failure reason and the skimmed fee in MonitorEvent::HTLCEvents, which is useful when generating and handling monitor events for off-chain claims/fails. The skimmed fee for forwards is already put to use in this commit for generating correct PaymentForwarded events. The failure reason will be used in upcoming commits. We add the failure reason now to not have to change what we're serializing to disk later.
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As part of #4482, we're looking into changing our architecture -- currently, the Channel{Manager} is responsible for managing the resolution of off-chain HTLCs, and the ChannelMonitor is responsible for them once they're on-chain. See the issue description but there's complexity that results from this design.
Quoting the issue, "Instead, we want to do all resolution in ChannelMonitors (in response to ChannelMonitorUpdates) and pass them back to ChannelManager in the form of MonitorEvents (similar to how HTLCs are resolved after channels are closed). In order to have reliable resolution, we'll need to keep MonitorEvents around in the ChannelMonitor until the ChannelManager has finished processing them - adding a new MonitorEvent resolution path through a new method (rather than via ChannelMonitorUpdates)."
Here we begin resolving forwarded HTLC claims using
MonitorEvents: when a preimage is persisted in theChannelMonitorviaChannelMonitorUpdateStep::LatestHolderCommitment{TXInfo}, we generate a persistent monitor event containing the preimage update. This monitor event will be regenerated until the preimage is durably persisted in the inbound edge, at which point it is ACK'd. This allows us to disable a bunch of startup reconstruction code ifpersistent_monitor_eventsis enabled, because we can just wait for the monitor event replay instead. We also stop using RAA monitor update blocking actions for forwards because there is no need to block the outbound edge's RAA update; instead, the monitor event will keep being replayed until the inbound edge has the preimage.Based on #4491, #4545