531: Bump thiserror from 1.0.24 to 1.0.25 r=thomaseizinger a=dependabot[bot]
Bumps [thiserror](https://github.com/dtolnay/thiserror) from 1.0.24 to 1.0.25.
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a href="https://github.com/dtolnay/thiserror/releases">thiserror's releases</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>1.0.25</h2>
<ul>
<li>Support <code>error(transparent)</code> on errors containing a non-<code>'static</code> inner error (<a href="https://github-redirect.dependabot.com/dtolnay/thiserror/issues/113">#113</a>)</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a href="19cb5cee4b"><code>19cb5ce</code></a> Release 1.0.25</li>
<li><a href="e49c10f2ba"><code>e49c10f</code></a> Merge pull request <a href="https://github-redirect.dependabot.com/dtolnay/thiserror/issues/134">#134</a> from dtolnay/nonstatic</li>
<li><a href="1ed8751081"><code>1ed8751</code></a> Support non-static AsDynError lifetimes</li>
<li><a href="51a1ff6593"><code>51a1ff6</code></a> Add regression test for issue 113</li>
<li><a href="ee2a47d3af"><code>ee2a47d</code></a> Adjust macro hygiene test formatting</li>
<li><a href="c610d97267"><code>c610d97</code></a> Update ui test suite to nightly-2021-05-14</li>
<li><a href="c10adbc25e"><code>c10adbc</code></a> Ignore manual_map clippy lint</li>
<li>See full diff in <a href="https://github.com/dtolnay/thiserror/compare/1.0.24...1.0.25">compare view</a></li>
</ul>
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535: Bitcoin network check when building PSBT r=da-kami a=da-kami
This ensures that funds are not sent to an address on the wrong network.
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Daniel Karzel <daniel@comit.network>
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.
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
```
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.
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`).
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.
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.
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.
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.
- Listen on both tcp and websockets as default
- Listening addresses in config as array
- Configure fallback transport using `or_transport` - if listening on a given address fails on WS, we fall back to TCP.
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>
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.
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 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.