Add TLV field to hsmd_init_reply_v4 to communicate the HSM secret type
(mnemonic vs legacy) from HSM to lightningd. This allows lightningd to
automatically determine whether to use BIP86 or BIP32 derivation without
needing separate address types.
This commit is updating hsmtool and exposesecrets to use the new pattern for storing the secret, which is the secret_data and secret_len, to support both 64 byte and 32 byte seeds.
BIP86 wants the full 64-byte BIP32 seed (from BIP39). This wires up BIP86
support so the HSM derives the hardened base m/86'/0'/0' inside the box,
and exposes helpers:
• derive_bip86_base_key() // m/86'/0'/0'
• bip86_key(index) // m/86'/0'/0'/0/index
Spoiler: derive_bip86_base_key() and bip86_key() now live in libhsmd.c as they will later be used to check the derived wallet address against hsmd's derivation, this is just to sanity check that we haven't had an accidental bit flip while we have generated this address.
hsmd: plumb length-aware secret into hsmd_init; keep 32B mirror
BIP86 (from BIP39) wants the full 64-byte BIP32 seed. This commit plumbs a variable-length (32/64B) secret into hsmd and uses the accessors from the previous commit. We keep the old 32B hsm_secret mirror and, for now, only use the first 32 bytes so legacy paths keep working.
Spoiler: HKDFs will keep using the 32B seed; only wallet address derivation
will switch to the full 64B in a follow-up.
Each header should only include the other headers it needs to compile;
`devtools/reduce-includes.sh */*.h` does this. The C files then need
additional includes if they don't compile.
And remove the entirely useless wire/onion_wire.h, which only serves to include wire/onion_wiregen.h.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
One in 256 times, we will grind a signature to 70 bytes (or shorter). This breaks
our feerate tests. Unfortunately the grinding is deterministic, so there doesn't
seem to be a way to avoid it. So we add a log message, and then we skip the
feerate test if it happens.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Apparently VLS actually does something when we preapprove: if caller is just
checking we want to tell it not to do that!
I put in a flag so we can test both old and new APIs.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This should make VLS's life easier: they can ignore dev flags they
don't understand, but we will know their capabilites after init and so
know what they didn't understand (if required).
The only flag for now is a flag to force failure for "preapprove" calls.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Increasing the min version of the hsmd due that we
added new code that required the hsmd to sign an announcements.
One of the solution is to increase the min version in this way
a signer like VLS fails directly during the init phase.
Link: https://github.com/ElementsProject/lightning/issues/7074
Changelog-None: hsmd: increase the min version
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Palazzo <vincenzopalazzodev@gmail.com>
And turn "" includes into full-path (which makes it easier to put
config.h first, and finds some cases check-includes.sh missed
previously).
config.h sets _GNU_SOURCE which really needs to be done before any
'#includes': we mainly got away with it with glibc, but other platforms
like Alpine may have stricter requirements.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
I wante to hide it inside the library, but it is good to have a single
place to verify that the client was permitted to send a message we are
handling, so make it officially part of the interface by prefixing it.
These are currently just shims that replicate the old behavior, but
when compiling as a library we can relink the status_* functions to
something that makes sense in the context of the user, and not assume
we're running as a subdaemon.