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Fixing the current state update when lncli debuglevel and lncli setmccfg are called
Fixes #8793
modified: rpcserver.go
modified: server.go
modified: routing/missioncontrol.go
Change Description
Changed the DebugLevel function to start updating the main cfg DebugLevel variable.
Created the function UpdateEstimatorValue to just update the main cfg estimator value, this function is a callback function when we call NewMissionControl when creating a new server on server.go. And finally, call the callback function on SetConfig on routing/missioncontrol.go
IMPORTANT the estimator value part is not working, for sure I missed something !!! Any Help is welcome !!!
Steps to Test
After running LND with the wallet unlcoked, send the lncli commands to change the debuglevel and estimator and check if they are updated unsing 'getdebuginfo'.
Pull Request Checklist
Testing
- [ ] Your PR passes all CI checks.
- [ ] Tests covering the positive and negative (error paths) are included.
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Nice work @MPins. I left a few comments.
Also, I don't think this commit is necessary since all you did was add comments.
Nice work @MPins. I left a few comments.
Also, I don't think this commit is necessary since all you did was add comments
Thank you! ... About this last comment ... That's weird ... because I've added the line containing 'cfg.UpdateEstimatorValue(cfg.Estimator)' also
Hello everyone, the code is working as expected! But the changes made with lncli setmccfg are not impacting the information we get from lncli getdebuginfo . It looks like the GetDebugInfo function is getting this information from somewhere else.
https://github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/blob/71ba355d903f01990718866c358c2ccac9402891/rpcserver.go#L3164
~So
GetDebugInfois getting its info from a different config from the one that you are updating (r.cfg) https://github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/blob/b67af4a7061f5d14e0f537b8073afa3101d8d16b/rpcserver.go#L3166You would have to change it to
r.server.cfgto get the updated one.Then maybe change this from
r.cfg.LogWritertor.server.cfg.LogWriterso that all the config updates can be in one place: https://github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/blob/b67af4a7061f5d14e0f537b8073afa3101d8d16b/rpcserver.go#L6901I think maybe the config field in the
rpcserverstruct should be removed entirely since we can access config from theserverfield but I would like hear what other ppl think about it~
Edit:
Please ignore my earlier comments on this, it should work either ways if you are using r.cfg or r.server.cfg as they have same memory address. I think once you fix the pointer thing here it should work https://github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/pull/8857#discussion_r1663641513
Can you rebase the PR to get rid of the merge commits please? Then I'll take another look.
Can you rebase the PR to get rid of the merge commits please? Then I'll take another look.
Sorry about that mess! I'm learning a lot of things at the same time and the git collaboration process is one of them!
Rebase done, thank you for pointing it.
Thanks for the rebase. Looks a bit better now. Unfortunately there's another bit of learning ahead of you. Open Source is quite demanding in terms of git proficiency, since crafting a Pull Request is often as much about the reviewer as it is about the code change itself. So what you'll want to do to make sure your PRs are getting accepted quickly, is what I call "Review Oriented Programming". Basically you want to tell a coherent story to the reviewer with each commit.
That means each commit should be a small but internally consistent (e.g. each commit compiles on its own) change, with a clear description (e.g. in the commit message or code comments) of why the change is needed and why it's done in this specific way. And each commit should be in a logical order that makes sense to the reviewer.
What you want to avoid is that the commits show different iterations of things you tried or changes during the review itself. So that a new reviewer looking at the code doesn't have to look at all the different stages the code went through and can just take in the current state.
Don't worry if you don't get that perfect for the first couple of pull requests, great commit crafting is a hard skill to learn and an art form in itself.
So long story short: can you please update your PR so it only has 3 or 4 commits? You'll probably want to use interactive rebase to achieve that.
Here are a couple of links that should get you started:
- https://github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/blob/master/docs/code_contribution_guidelines.md#ideal-git-commit-structure
- https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-Rewriting-History
- https://hackernoon.com/beginners-guide-to-interactive-rebasing-346a3f9c3a6d
Thanks for the rebase. Looks a bit better now. Unfortunately there's another bit of learning ahead of you. Open Source is quite demanding in terms of git proficiency, since crafting a Pull Request is often as much about the reviewer as it is about the code change itself. So what you'll want to do to make sure your PRs are getting accepted quickly, is what I call "Review Oriented Programming". Basically you want to tell a coherent story to the reviewer with each commit.
That means each commit should be a small but internally consistent (e.g. each commit compiles on its own) change, with a clear description (e.g. in the commit message or code comments) of why the change is needed and why it's done in this specific way. And each commit should be in a logical order that makes sense to the reviewer.
What you want to avoid is that the commits show different iterations of things you tried or changes during the review itself. So that a new reviewer looking at the code doesn't have to look at all the different stages the code went through and can just take in the current state.
Don't worry if you don't get that perfect for the first couple of pull requests, great commit crafting is a hard skill to learn and an art form in itself.
So long story short: can you please update your PR so it only has 3 or 4 commits? You'll probably want to use interactive rebase to achieve that.
Here are a couple of links that should get you started:
- https://github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/blob/master/docs/code_contribution_guidelines.md#ideal-git-commit-structure
- https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-Rewriting-History
- https://hackernoon.com/beginners-guide-to-interactive-rebasing-346a3f9c3a6d
Thank you very much for investing time in providing such valuable guidance. I'll be working on it today and let you know when ready.
Thanks for the rebase. Looks a bit better now. Unfortunately there's another bit of learning ahead of you. Open Source is quite demanding in terms of git proficiency, since crafting a Pull Request is often as much about the reviewer as it is about the code change itself. So what you'll want to do to make sure your PRs are getting accepted quickly, is what I call "Review Oriented Programming". Basically you want to tell a coherent story to the reviewer with each commit.
That means each commit should be a small but internally consistent (e.g. each commit compiles on its own) change, with a clear description (e.g. in the commit message or code comments) of why the change is needed and why it's done in this specific way. And each commit should be in a logical order that makes sense to the reviewer.
What you want to avoid is that the commits show different iterations of things you tried or changes during the review itself. So that a new reviewer looking at the code doesn't have to look at all the different stages the code went through and can just take in the current state.
Don't worry if you don't get that perfect for the first couple of pull requests, great commit crafting is a hard skill to learn and an art form in itself.
So long story short: can you please update your PR so it only has 3 or 4 commits? You'll probably want to use interactive rebase to achieve that.
Here are a couple of links that should get you started:
- https://github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/blob/master/docs/code_contribution_guidelines.md#ideal-git-commit-structure
- https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-Rewriting-History
- https://hackernoon.com/beginners-guide-to-interactive-rebasing-346a3f9c3a6d
Done ... only 3 commits!
@guggero nits fixed ... make fmt working properly ... commits fixed again. Thanks!
Final nits, I promise 😅
Also, you might want to add a short release notes text to the
docs/release-notes/release-notes-0.18.3.mdfile (including your name in the list of contributors). If you rebase onto the latest version of themasterbranch, that file should already be there.
The process was very important to me. I learned a lot. Thank you. I'll be much more detailed on the following PRs. 😅
Hello @Abdulkbk and @Chinwendu20 It would be great if you have time to review this PR once more time, I believe it will be the final review. Thanks!
@abdulkbk: review reminder @chinwendu20: review reminder
nice work! My main comment is about ensuring that we account for all MC config values here and not just the estimator
Thank you for your careful review.
@MPins - thanks for the quick updates!
I've unresolved one comment cause it is unaddressed:
what about other config values that are not estimator related such as MaxMcHistory and MinFailureRelaxInterval? I think perhaps we should instead make this more generic: OnConfigUpdate?
I didnt just mean the name of the call-back. I meant the actual behaviour too. It should take in the cfg, not just the Estimator. Ie, if I update any MC config values via the rpc, those should be reflected in GetDebugInfo.
This also needs a rebase as there is a merge conflict
@MPins can you rebase & add release notes to 0.19 in the mean time so that the CI can run pls 🙏
@MPins can you rebase & add release notes to 0.19 in the mean time so that the CI can run pls 🙏
Thank you. Done.