Plugins for c-lightning
Community curated plugins for c-lightning.
Available plugins
Name | Short description |
---|---|
autopilot | An autopilot that suggests channels that should be established |
backup | A simple and reliable backup plugin |
boltz-channel-creation | A c-lightning plugin for Boltz Channel Creation Swaps |
btcli4j | A Bitcoin Backend to enable safely the pruning mode, and support also rest APIs. |
commando | Authorize peers to run commands on your node, and running commands on them. |
csvexportpays | A plugin that exports all payments to a CSV file |
currencyrate | A plugin to convert other currencies to BTC using web requests |
donations | A simple donations page to accept donations from the web |
drain | Draining, filling and balancing channels with automatic chunks. |
event-websocket | Exposes notifications over a Websocket |
feeadjuster | Dynamic fees to keep your channels more balanced |
graphql | Exposes the c-lightning API over graphql |
invoice-queue | Listen to lightning invoices from multiple nodes and send to a redis queue for processing |
lightning-qt | A bitcoin-qt-like GUI for lightningd |
monitor | helps you analyze the health of your peers and channels |
persistent-channels | Maintains a number of channels to peers |
probe | Regularly probes the network for stability |
prometheus | Lightning node exporter for the prometheus timeseries server |
pruning | This plugin manages pruning of bitcoind such that it can always sync |
rebalance | Keeps your channels balanced |
reckless | An experimental plugin manager (search/install plugins) |
requestinvoice | Http server to request invoices |
sauron | A Bitcoin backend relying on Esplora's API |
sitzprobe | A Lightning Network payment rehearsal utility |
sparko | RPC over HTTP with fine-grained permissions, SSE and spark-wallet support |
summary | Print a nice summary of the node status |
trustedcoin | Replace your Bitcoin Core with data from public block explorers |
webhook | Dispatches webhooks based from event notifications |
watchtower | Watchtower client for The Eye of Satoshi |
zmq | Publishes notifications via ZeroMQ to configured endpoints |
Installation
To install and activate a plugin you need to stop your lightningd and restart it
with the plugin
argument like this:
lightningd --plugin=/path/to/plugin/directory/plugin_file_name.py
Notes:
- The
plugin_file_name.py
must have executable permissions:chmod a+x plugin_file_name.py
- A plugin can be written in any programming language, as it interacts with
lightningd
purely using stdin/stdout pipes.
Automatic plugin initialization
Alternatively, especially when you use multiple plugins, you can copy or symlink
all plugin directories into your ~/.lightning/plugins
directory. The daemon
will load each executable it finds in sub-directories as a plugin. In this case
you don't need to manage all the --plugin=...
parameters.
Dynamic plugin initialization
Most of the plugins can be managed using the RPC interface. Use
lightning-cli plugin start /path/to/plugin/directory/plugin_file_name
to start it, and
lightning-cli plugin stop /path/to/plugin/directory/plugin_file_name
to stop it.
As a plugin developer this option is configurable with all the available plugin libraries,
and defaults to true
.
pyln
PYTHONPATH and To simplify plugin development you can rely on pyln-client
for the plugin
implementation, pyln-proto
if you need to parse or write lightning protocol
messages, and pyln-testing
in order to write tests. These libraries can be
retrieved in a number of different ways:
- Using
pip
tools:pip3 install pyln-client pyln-testing
- Using the
PYTHONPATH
environment variable to include your clightning's shippedpyln-*
libraries:
export PYTHONPATH=/path/to/lightnind/contrib/pyln-client:/path/to/lightnind/contrib/pyln-testing:$PYTHONPATH
Writing tests
The pyln-testing
library provides a number of helpers and fixtures to write
tests. While not strictly necessary, writing a test will ensure that your
plugin is working correctly against a number of configurations (both with and
without DEVELOPER
, COMPAT
and EXPERIMENTAL_FEATURES
), and more
importantly that they will continue to work with newly release versions of
c-lightning.
Writing a test is as simple as this:
- The framework will look for unittest filenames starting with
test_
. - The test functions should also start with
test_
.
from pyln.testing.fixtures import *
pluginopt = {'plugin': os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), "YOUR_PLUGIN.py")}
def test_your_plugin(node_factory, bitcoind):
l1 = node_factory.get_node(options=pluginopt)
s = l1.rpc.getinfo()
assert(s['network'] == 'regtest') # or whatever you want to test
Tests are run against pull requests, all commits on master
, as well as once
ever 24 hours to test against the latest master
branch of the c-lightning
development tree.
Running tests locally can be done like this:
(make sure the PYTHONPATH
env variable is correct)
pytest YOUR_PLUGIN/YOUR_TEST.py
Python plugins specifics
Additional dependencies
Additionally, some Python plugins come with a requirements.txt
which can be
used to install the plugin's dependencies using the pip
tools:
pip3 install -r requirements.txt
Note: You might need to also specify the --user
command line flag depending on
your environment.
Minimum supported Python version
The minimum supported version of Python for this repository is currently 3.6.x
(23 Dec 2016).
Python plugins users must ensure to have a version >= 3.6
.
Python plugins developers must ensure their plugin to work with all Python versions >= 3.6
.
More Plugins from the Community
- @conscott's plugins
- @renepickhardt's plugins
- @rsbondi's plugins
- c-lightning plugins emulating commands of LND (lncli)
Plugin Builder Resources
- Description of the plugin API
- C Plugin API by @rustyrussell
- Python Plugin API & RPC Client (PyPI) by @cdecker and a video tutorial by @renepickhardt
- Go Plugin API & RPC Client by @niftynei
- C++ Plugin API & RPC Client by @darosior
- Javascript Plugin API & RPC Client by @darosior
- Java Plugin API & RPC Client by @vincenzopalazzo