This error would be seen when an old wallet that has yet to update is
performing the latest wtxmgr migration. It's possible for the locked
outputs bucket to not exist if outputs haven't been locked before, so we
should its deletion correctly.
This commit allows for the ability to lease an output to a particular ID
for a limited amount of time, ensuring that no other processes can use
said output for their coin selection needs. An output can either be
unlocked manually, or lazily whenever required.
Add and test functions which can be used to write optional transaction
labels to disk in their own bucket. These labels are keyed by txid and
write the labels to disk using-length value encoding scheme. Although
the length field is not required at present, it is added to allow future
extensibility without a migration.
This approach is chosen over adding this information to txRecords,
Because a migration would be required to add a field after the variable
Length serialized tx.
The put label function will overwrite existing labels if called more
than once for the same txid. User side validation of whether we want
to override this label should be performed by calling code. Labels must
be > 0 characters and <= 500 characters (an arbitrarily chosen limit).
In this commit, we address an issue with the wallet store where it'd be
possible for us to keep lingering unconfirmed transaction entries for an
output that has been spent by a different, confirmed transaction. This
was caused due to us removing all spending transaction entries for a
given output when removing conflicts. Since all of the entries would be
removed, we weren't able to retrieve the hashes of the remaining
spending transactions to remove their records as well. Instead, we
propose to only remove the entry for the specified spending transaction.
In this commit, we can remove the LatestVersion constant as it's no
longer needed. Instead, we'll now define the latest version as the last
entry in the slice of versions previously defined.
In this commit, we modify the way we store spending transaction hashes
for unconfirmed spends. Now, rather than only keeping track of one
possible unconfirmed spend, we track multiple in order to ensure we
properly handle transaction replacements, like in the case of RBF,
double spends, etc. With this in, the double spent tests recently added
should now pass.
While making these tests compile and pass, we ended up tripping on the
broken bolt cursor usage painfully discovered in dcrwallet, so i've
ported that fix over as well. Would have learned about that a whole
lot sooner if those tests were never disabled..
This changes the database access APIs and each of the "manager"
packages (waddrmgr/wstakemgr) so that transactions are opened (only)
by the wallet package and the namespace buckets that each manager
expects to operate on are passed in as parameters.
This helps improve the atomicity situation as it means that many
calls to these APIs can be grouped together into a single
database transaction.
This change does not attempt to completely fix the "half-processed"
block problem. Mined transactions are still added to the wallet
database under their own database transaction as this is how they are
notified by the consensus JSON-RPC server (as loose transactions,
without the rest of the block that contains them). It will make
updating to a fixed notification model significantly easier, as the
same "manager" APIs can still be used, but grouped into a single
atomic transaction.
This updates all code to make use of the new chainhash package since the
old wire.ShaHash type and related functions have been removed in favor
of the abstracted package.
Also, while here, rename all variables that included sha in their name
to include hash instead.
Finally, update glide.lock to use the required version of btcd, btcutil,
and btcrpcclient.