Basically, `devtools/reduce-includes.sh */*.c`.
Build time from make clean (RUST=0) (includes building external libs):
Before:
real 0m38.944000-40.416000(40.1131+/-0.4)s
user 3m6.790000-17.159000(15.0571+/-2.8)s
sys 0m35.304000-37.336000(36.8942+/-0.57)s
After:
real 0m37.872000-39.974000(39.5466+/-0.59)s
user 3m1.211000-14.968000(12.4556+/-3.9)s
sys 0m35.008000-36.830000(36.4143+/-0.5)s
Build time after touch config.vars (RUST=0):
Before:
real 0m19.831000-21.862000(21.5528+/-0.58)s
user 2m15.361000-30.731000(28.4798+/-4.4)s
sys 0m21.056000-22.339000(22.0346+/-0.35)s
After:
real 0m18.384000-21.307000(20.8605+/-0.92)s
user 2m5.585000-26.843000(23.6017+/-6.7)s
sys 0m19.650000-22.003000(21.4943+/-0.69)s
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We take over the --bookkeeper-dir and --bookkeeper-db options, and
then if we can find the bookkeeper db we extract the records to
initialize our chain_moves and channel_moves tables.
Of course, bookkeeper now needs to not register those options.
When bookkeeper gets invoked the first time, it will reconstruct
everything from listchannelmoves and listcoinmoves. It cannot
preserve manually-added descriptions, so we put those in the datastore
for it ready to go.
Note that the order of onchain_fee changes slightly from the original.
But this is fine.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Removes the `COMPAT_V070` functionality for `listfowards`.
Changelog-Changed: The `listforwards` command will now return a value
of 0 for `received_time` for very old forward attempts.
I used `amount_msat_eq(x, AMOUNT_MSAT(0))` because I forgot this
function existed. I probably missed it because the name is surprising,
so add "is" in there to make it clear it's a boolean function.
You'll note almost all the places which did use it are Eduardo's and
Lisa's code, so maybe it's just me.
Fix up a few places which I could use it, too.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
It's a u64, we should pass by copy. This is a big sweeping change,
but mainly mechanical (change one, compile, fix breakage, repeat).
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This is the convention everywhere else: allocation ctx comes first, any
other context comes second.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We have various functions to convert to a string, rename them all so we can
count on fmt_X being the formatter for struct X, and make them all return
`char *`.
Sometimes they existed but were private, sometimes they had a
different name. Most take a pointer, but simple types pass by copy:
short_channel_id, amount_msat and amount_sat.
The following public functions changed:
1. psbt_to_b64 -> fmt_wally_psbt.
2. pubkey_to_hexstr -> fmt_pubkey.
3. short_channel_id_to_str -> fmt_short_channel_id (scid by copy now!)
4. fmt_signature -> fmt_secp256k1_ecdsa_signature
5. fmt_amount_sat/fmt_amount_msat pass copy not pointer, return non-const char *.
6. node_id_to_hexstr -> fmt_node_id
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
The `struct notification` lost type-safety, but avoided a redundant
string. The string is better, I think.
Since all notifications now contain an object of same name (some have
deprecated fields outside that), we can add helpers to do that, too.
Also, add some const (easy to do now we're typesafe!)
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This table doesn't have `id`, except as the implicit one in Sqlite3,
so we need to add it for postgres.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
peer_htlcs has become a bit of a dumping ground: move listforwards
etc to its own file.
Also move `struct channel_info` from peer_htlcs.h to channel.h where
it more logically belongs.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>