lightningd-config

lightningd-config -- Lightning daemon configuration file

SYNOPSIS

~/.lightning/config

DESCRIPTION

When lightningd(8) starts up it usually reads a general configuration
file (default: $HOME/.lightning/config) then a network-specific
configuration file (default: $HOME/.lightning/testnet/config). This can
be changed: see --conf and --lightning-dir.

Note that some configuration options, marked dynamicm can be changed at runtime: see lightning-setconfig(7).

General configuration files are processed first, then network-specific
ones, then command line options: later options override earlier ones
except addr options and log-level with subsystems, which
accumulate.

include followed by a filename includes another configuration file at that
point, relative to the current configuration file.

All these options are mirrored as commandline arguments to
lightningd(8), so --foo becomes simply foo in the configuration
file, and --foo=bar becomes foo=bar in the configuration file.

Blank lines and lines beginning with # are ignored.

DEBUGGING

--help will show you the defaults for many options; they vary with
network settings so you can specify --network before --help to see
the defaults for that network.

The lightning-listconfigs(7) command will output a valid configuration
file using the current settings.

OPTIONS

General options

  • developer

    This enables developer mode, allowing developer options and commands to be used. It also disabled deprecated APIs; use allow-deprecated-apis=true to re-enable them.

  • allow-deprecated-apis=BOOL

    Enable deprecated options, JSONRPC commands, fields, etc. It defaults to
    true outside developer mode, but you should set it to false when testing to ensure that an
    upgrade won't break your configuration.

  • help

    Print help and exit. Not very useful inside a configuration file, but
    fun to put in other's config files while their computer is unattended.

  • version

    Print version and exit. Also useless inside a configuration file, but
    putting this in someone's config file may convince them to read this man
    page.

  • database-upgrade=BOOL

    Upgrades to Core Lightning often change the database: once this is done,
    downgrades are not generally possible. By default, Core Lightning will
    exit with an error rather than upgrade, unless this is an official released
    version. If you really want to upgrade to a non-release version, you can
    set this to true (or false to never allow a non-reversible upgrade!).

  • i-promise-to-fix-broken-api-user=FEATURE

    Deprecated features get removed slowly (over 3 releases), but
    sometimes people still get surprised when they are finally removed.
    As long as they haven't been actually fully removed, this option will
    re-enable it. Unless we've made a horrible mistake it's probably time
    to complain or fix to whatever is using the old API. It can be
    specified multiple times for different features.

Bitcoin control options:

Bitcoin control options:

  • network=NETWORK

    Select the network parameters (bitcoin, testnet, signet, or regtest).
    This is not valid within the per-network configuration file.

  • mainnet

    Alias for network=bitcoin.

  • regtest

    Alias for network=regtest (added in v23.08)

  • testnet

    Alias for network=testnet.

  • signet

    Alias for network=signet.

  • bitcoin-cli=PATH [plugin bcli]

    The name of bitcoin-cli executable to run.

  • bitcoin-datadir=DIR [plugin bcli]

    -datadir argument to supply to bitcoin-cli(1).

  • bitcoin-rpcuser=USER [plugin bcli]

    The RPC username for talking to bitcoind(1).

  • bitcoin-rpcpassword=PASSWORD [plugin bcli]

    The RPC password for talking to bitcoind(1).

  • bitcoin-rpcconnect=HOST [plugin bcli]

    The bitcoind(1) RPC host to connect to.

  • bitcoin-rpcport=PORT [plugin bcli]

    The bitcoind(1) RPC port to connect to.

  • bitcoin-retry-timeout=SECONDS [plugin bcli]

    Number of seconds to keep trying a bitcoin-cli(1) command. If the
    command keeps failing after this time, exit with a fatal error.

  • rescan=BLOCKS

    Number of blocks to rescan from the current head, or absolute
    blockheight if negative. This is only needed if something goes badly
    wrong.

Lightning daemon options

  • lightning-dir=DIR

    Sets the working directory. All files (except --conf and
    --lightning-dir on the command line) are relative to this. This
    is only valid on the command-line, or in a configuration file specified
    by --conf.

  • subdaemon=SUBDAEMON:PATH

    Specifies an alternate subdaemon binary.
    Current subdaemons are channeld, closingd,
    connectd, gossipd, hsmd, onchaind, and openingd.
    If the supplied path is relative the subdaemon binary is found in the
    working directory. This option may be specified multiple times.

    So, subdaemon=hsmd:remote_signer would use a
    hypothetical remote signing proxy instead of the standard lightning_hsmd
    binary.

  • pid-file=PATH

    Specify pid file to write to.

  • log-level=LEVEL[:SUBSYSTEM][:PATH]

    What log level to print out: options are io, debug, info, unusual,
    broken. If SUBSYSTEM is supplied, this sets the logging level
    for any subsystem (or nodeid) containing that string. If PATH is supplied, it means this log-level filter is only applied to that log-file, which is useful for creating logs to capture a specific subsystem. This option may be specified multiple times.
    Subsystems include:

    • lightningd: The main lightning daemon

    • database: The database subsystem

    • wallet: The wallet subsystem

    • gossipd: The gossip daemon

    • plugin-manager: The plugin subsystem

    • plugin-P: Each plugin, P = plugin path without directory

    • hsmd: The secret-holding daemon

    • connectd: The network connection daemon

    • jsonrpc#FD: Each JSONRPC connection, FD = file descriptor number

    The following subsystems exist for each channel, where N is an incrementing internal integer id assigned for the lifetime of the channel:

    • openingd-chan#N: Each opening / idling daemon

    • channeld-chan#N: Each channel management daemon

    • closingd-chan#N: Each closing negotiation daemon

    • onchaind-chan#N: Each onchain close handling daemon

    So, log-level=debug:plugin would set debug level logging on all
    plugins and the plugin manager. log-level=io:chan#55 would set
    IO logging on channel number 55 (or 550, for that matter).
    log-level=debug:024b9a1fa8:/tmp/024b9a1fa8.debug.log would set debug logging for that channel only on the log-file=/tmp/024b9a1fa8.debug.log (or any node id containing that string).

  • log-prefix=PREFIX

    Prefix for all log lines: this can be customized if you want to merge logs
    with multiple daemons. Usually you want to include a space at the end of PREFIX,
    as the timestamp follows immediately.

  • log-file=PATH

    Log to this file (instead of stdout). If you specify this more than once
    you'll get more than one log file: - is used to mean stdout. Sending
    lightningd(8) SIGHUP will cause it to reopen each file (useful for log
    rotation).

  • log-timestamps=BOOL

    Set this to false to turn off timestamp prefixes (they will still appear
    in crash log files).

  • rpc-file=PATH

    Set JSON-RPC socket (or /dev/tty), such as for lightning-cli(1).

  • rpc-file-mode=MODE

    Set JSON-RPC socket file mode, as a 4-digit octal number.
    Default is 0600, meaning only the user that launched lightningd
    can command it.
    Set to 0660 to allow users with the same group to access the RPC
    as well.

  • daemon

    Run in the background, suppress stdout and stderr. Note that you need
    to specify log-file for this case.

  • conf=PATH

    Sets configuration file, and disable reading the normal general and network
    ones. If this is a relative path, it is relative to the starting directory, not
    lightning-dir (unlike other paths). PATH must exist and be
    readable (we allow missing files in the default case). Using this inside
    a configuration file is invalid.

  • wallet=DSN

    Identify the location of the wallet. This is a fully qualified data source
    name, including a scheme such as sqlite3 or postgres followed by the
    connection parameters.

    The default wallet corresponds to the following DSN:
    --wallet=sqlite3://$HOME/.lightning/bitcoin/lightningd.sqlite31

    For the sqlite3 scheme, you can specify a single backup database file
    by separating it with a : character, like so:
    --wallet=sqlite3://$HOME/.lightning/bitcoin/lightningd.sqlite3:/backup/lightningd.sqlite3

    The following is an example of a postgresql wallet DSN:

    --wallet=postgres://user:pass@localhost:5432/db_name

    This will connect to a DB server running on localhost port 5432,
    authenticate with username user and password pass, and then use the
    database db_name. The database must exist, but the schema will be managed
    automatically by lightningd.

  • bookkeeper-dir=DIR [plugin bookkeeper]

    Directory to keep the accounts.sqlite3 database file in.
    Defaults to lightning-dir.

  • bookkeeper-db=DSN [plugin bookkeeper]

    Identify the location of the bookkeeper data. This is a fully qualified data source
    name, including a scheme such as sqlite3 or postgres followed by the
    connection parameters.
    Defaults to sqlite3://accounts.sqlite3 in the bookkeeper-dir.

  • encrypted-hsm

If set, you will be prompted to enter a password used to encrypt the hsm_secret.
Note that once you encrypt the hsm_secret this option will be mandatory for
lightningd to start.
If there is no hsm_secret yet, lightningd will create a new encrypted secret.
If you have an unencrypted hsm_secret you want to encrypt on-disk, or vice versa,
see lightning-hsmtool(8).

  • grpc-port=portnum [plugin cln-grpc]

    The port number for the GRPC plugin to listen for incoming
    connections; default is not to activate the plugin at all.

Lightning node customization options

  • recover=hsmsecret

    Restore the node from a 32-byte secret encoded as either a codex32 secret string or a 64-character hex string: this will fail if the hsm_secret file exists. Your node will start the node in offline mode, for manual recovery. The secret can be extracted from the hsm_secret using hsmtool(8).

  • alias=NAME

    Up to 32 bytes of UTF-8 characters to tag your node. Completely silly, since
    anyone can call their node anything they want. The default is an
    NSA-style codename derived from your public key, but "Peter Todd" and
    "VAULTERO" are good options, too.

  • rgb=RRGGBB

    Your favorite color as a hex code.

  • fee-base=MILLISATOSHI

    Default: 1000. The base fee to charge for every payment which passes
    through. Note that millisatoshis are a very, very small unit! Changing
    this value will only affect new channels and not existing ones. If you
    want to change fees for existing channels, use the RPC call
    lightning-setchannel(7).

  • fee-per-satoshi=MILLIONTHS

    Default: 10 (0.001%). This is the proportional fee to charge for every
    payment which passes through. As percentages are too coarse, it's in
    millionths, so 10000 is 1%, 1000 is 0.1%. Changing this value will only
    affect new channels and not existing ones. If you want to change fees
    for existing channels, use the RPC call lightning-setchannel(7).

  • min-capacity-sat=SATOSHI [dynamic]

    Default: 10000. This value defines the minimal effective channel
    capacity in satoshi to accept for channel opening requests. This will
    reject any opening of a channel which can't pass an HTLC of least this
    value. Usually this prevents a peer opening a tiny channel, but it
    can also prevent a channel you open with a reasonable amount and the peer
    requesting such a large reserve that the capacity of the channel
    falls below this.

  • ignore-fee-limits=BOOL

    Allow nodes which establish channels to us to set any fee they want.
    This may result in a channel which cannot be closed, should fees
    increase, but make channels far more reliable since we never close it
    due to unreasonable fees. Note that this can be set on a per-channel
    basis with lightning-setchannel(7).

  • commit-time=MILLISECONDS

    How long to wait before sending commitment messages to the peer: in
    theory increasing this would reduce load, but your node would have to be
    extremely busy node for you to even notice.

  • force-feerates==VALUES

    Networks like regtest and testnet have unreliable fee estimates: we
    usually treat them as the minimum (253 sats/kw) if we can't get them.
    This allows override of one or more of our standard feerates (see
    lightning-feerates(7)). Up to 5 values, separated by '/' can be
    provided: if fewer are provided, then the final value is used for the
    remainder. The values are in per-kw (roughly 1/4 of bitcoind's per-kb
    values), and the order is "opening", "mutual_close", "unilateral_close",
    "delayed_to_us", "htlc_resolution", and "penalty".

    You would usually put this option in the per-chain config file, to avoid
    setting it on Bitcoin mainnet! e.g. ~rusty/.lightning/regtest/config.

  • htlc-minimum-msat=MILLISATOSHI

    Default: 0. Sets the minimal allowed HTLC value for newly created channels.
    If you want to change the htlc_minimum_msat for existing channels, use the
    RPC call lightning-setchannel(7).

  • htlc-maximum-msat=MILLISATOSHI

    Default: unset (no limit). Sets the maximum allowed HTLC value for newly created
    channels. If you want to change the htlc_maximum_msat for existing channels,
    use the RPC call lightning-setchannel(7).

  • announce-addr-discovered=BOOL

    Explicitly control the usage of discovered public IPs in node_announcement updates.
    Default: 'auto' - Only if we don't have anything else to announce.
    Note: You also need to open TCP port 9735 on your router towards your node.
    Note: Will always be disabled if you use 'always-use-proxy'.

  • announce-addr-discovered-port=PORT
    Sets the public TCP port to use for announcing dynamically discovered IPs.
    If unset, this defaults to the selected networks lightning port,
    which is 9735 on mainnet.

Lightning channel and HTLC options

  • large-channels (deprecated in v23.11)

    As of v23.11, this is the default (and thus, the option is ignored). Previously if you didn't specify this, channel sizes were limited to 16777215 satoshi. Note: this option is spelled large-channels but it's pronounced wumbo.

  • watchtime-blocks=BLOCKS

    How long we need to spot an outdated close attempt: on opening a channel
    we tell our peer that this is how long they'll have to wait if they
    perform a unilateral close.

  • max-locktime-blocks=BLOCKS

    The longest our funds can be delayed (ie. the longest
    watchtime-blocks our peer can ask for, and also the longest HTLC
    timeout we will accept). If our peer asks for longer, we'll refuse to
    create a channel, and if an HTLC asks for longer, we'll refuse it.

  • funding-confirms=BLOCKS

    Confirmations required for the funding transaction when the other side
    opens a channel before the channel is usable.

  • commit-fee=PERCENT

    The percentage of estimatesmartfee 2/CONSERVATIVE to use for the commitment
    transactions: default is 100.

  • commit-feerate-offset=INTEGER

    The additional feerate a channel opener adds to their preferred feerate to
    lessen the odds of a disconnect due to feerate disagreement (default 5).

  • max-concurrent-htlcs=INTEGER

    Number of HTLCs one channel can handle concurrently in each direction.
    Should be between 1 and 483 (default 30).

  • max-dust-htlc-exposure-msat=MILLISATOSHI

    Option which limits the total amount of sats to be allowed as dust on a channel.

  • cltv-delta=BLOCKS

    The number of blocks between incoming payments and outgoing payments:
    this needs to be enough to make sure that if we have to, we can close
    the outgoing payment before the incoming, or redeem the incoming once
    the outgoing is redeemed.

  • cltv-final=BLOCKS

    The number of blocks to allow for payments we receive: if we have to, we
    might need to redeem this on-chain, so this is the number of blocks we
    have to do that.

  • accept-htlc-tlv-type=types

    Normally HTLC onions which contain unknown even fields are rejected.
    This option specifies that this type is to be accepted, and ignored. Can be
    specified multuple times. (Added in v23.08).

  • min-emergency-msat=msat

    This is the amount of funds to keep in the wallet to close anchor channels (which don't carry their own transaction fees). It defaults to 25000sat, and is only maintained if there are any anchor channels (or, when opening an anchor channel). This amount may be insufficient for multiple closes at once, however.

Cleanup control options:

  • autoclean-cycle=SECONDS [plugin autoclean, dynamic]

    Perform search for things to clean every SECONDS seconds (default
    3600, or 1 hour, which is usually sufficient).

  • autoclean-succeededforwards-age=SECONDS [plugin autoclean, dynamic]

    How old successful forwards (settled in listforwards status) have to be before deletion (default 0, meaning never).

  • autoclean-failedforwards-age=SECONDS [plugin autoclean, dynamic]

    How old failed forwards (failed or local_failed in listforwards status) have to be before deletion (default 0, meaning never).

  • autoclean-succeededpays-age=SECONDS [plugin autoclean, dynamic]

    How old successful payments (complete in listpays status) have to be before deletion (default 0, meaning never).

  • autoclean-failedpays-age=SECONDS [plugin autoclean, dynamic]

    How old failed payment attempts (failed in listpays status) have to be before deletion (default 0, meaning never).

  • autoclean-paidinvoices-age=SECONDS [plugin autoclean, dynamic]

    How old invoices which were paid (paid in listinvoices status) have to be before deletion (default 0, meaning never).

  • autoclean-expiredinvoices-age=SECONDS [plugin autoclean, dynamic]

    How old invoices which were not paid (and cannot be) (expired in listinvoices status) before deletion (default 0, meaning never).

Note: prior to v22.11, forwards for channels which were closed were
not easily distinguishable. As a result, autoclean may delete more
than one of these at once, and then suffer failures when it fails to
delete the others.

Payment and invoice control options:

  • disable-mpp [plugin pay]

    Disable the multi-part payment sending support in the pay plugin. By default
    the MPP support is enabled, but it can be desirable to disable in situations
    in which each payment should result in a single HTLC being forwarded in the
    network.

  • invoices-onchain-fallback

    Add a (taproot) fallback address to invoices produced by the invoice
    command, so they invoices can also be paid onchain.

Networking options

Note that for simple setups, the implicit autolisten option does the
right thing: for the mainnet (bitcoin) network it will try to bind to
port 9735 on IPv4 and IPv6, and will announce it to peers if it seems
like a public address (and other default ports for other networks,
as described below).

Core Lightning also support IPv4/6 address discovery behind NAT routers.
If your node detects an new public address, it will update its announcement.
For this to work you need to forward the default TCP port 9735 to your node.
IP discovery is only active if no other addresses are announced.

You can instead use addr to override this (eg. to change the port), or
precisely control where to bind and what to announce with the
bind-addr and announce-addr options. These will disable the
autolisten logic, so you must specify exactly what you want!

  • addr=[IPADDRESS[:PORT]]|autotor:TORIPADDRESS[:SERVICEPORT][/torport=TORPORT]|statictor:TORIPADDRESS[:SERVICEPORT][/torport=TORPORT][/torblob=[blob]]|HOSTNAME[:PORT]

    Set an IP address (v4 or v6) or automatic Tor address to listen on and
    (maybe) announce as our node address.

    An empty 'IPADDRESS' is a special value meaning bind to IPv4 and/or
    IPv6 on all interfaces, '0.0.0.0' means bind to all IPv4
    interfaces, '::' means 'bind to all IPv6 interfaces' (if you want to
    specify an IPv6 address and a port, use [] around the IPv6
    address, like [::]:9750).
    If 'PORT' is not specified, the default port 9735 is used for mainnet
    (testnet: 19735, signet: 39735, regtest: 19846).
    If we can determine a public IP address from the resulting binding,
    the address is announced.

    If the argument begins with 'autotor:' then it is followed by the
    IPv4 or IPv6 address of the Tor control port (default port 9051),
    and this will be used to configure a Tor hidden service for port 9735
    in case of mainnet (bitcoin) network whereas other networks (testnet,
    signet, regtest) will set the same default ports they use for non-Tor
    addresses (see above).
    The Tor hidden service will be configured to point to the
    first IPv4 or IPv6 address we bind to and is by default unique to
    your node's id.

    If the argument begins with 'statictor:' then it is followed by the
    IPv4 or IPv6 address of the Tor control port (default port 9051),
    and this will be used to configure a static Tor hidden service.
    You can add the text '/torblob=BLOB' followed by up to
    64 Bytes of text to generate from this text a v3 onion service
    address text unique to the first 32 Byte of this text.
    You can also use an postfix '/torport=TORPORT' to select the external
    tor binding. The result is that over tor your node is accessible by a port
    defined by you and possibly different from your local node port assignment.

    This option can be used multiple times to add more addresses, and
    its use disables autolisten. If necessary, and 'always-use-proxy'
    is not specified, a DNS lookup may be done to resolve HOSTNAME or TORIPADDRESS'.

    If HOSTNAME was given that resolves to a local interface, the daemon
    will bind to that interface.

  • bind-addr=[IPADDRESS[:PORT]]|SOCKETPATH|HOSTNAME[:PORT]

    Set an IP address or UNIX domain socket to listen to, but do not
    announce. A UNIX domain socket is distinguished from an IP address by
    beginning with a /.

    An empty 'IPADDRESS' is a special value meaning bind to IPv4 and/or
    IPv6 on all interfaces, '0.0.0.0' means bind to all IPv4
    interfaces, '::' means 'bind to all IPv6 interfaces'. 'PORT' is
    not specified, 9735 is used.

    This option can be used multiple times to add more addresses, and
    its use disables autolisten. If necessary, and 'always-use-proxy'
    is not specified, a DNS lookup may be done to resolve 'IPADDRESS'.

    If a HOSTNAME was given and always-use-proxy is not specified,
    a DNS lookup may be done to resolve it and bind to a local interface (if found).

  • announce-addr=IPADDRESS[:PORT]|TORADDRESS.onion[:PORT]|dns:HOSTNAME[:PORT]

    Set an IP (v4 or v6) address or Tor address to announce; a Tor address
    is distinguished by ending in .onion. PORT defaults to 9735.

    Empty or wildcard IPv4 and IPv6 addresses don't make sense here.
    Also, unlike the 'addr' option, there is no checking that your
    announced addresses are public (e.g. not localhost).

    This option can be used multiple times to add more addresses, and
    its use disables autolisten.

    Since v23.058, the dns: prefix can be used to indicate that this hostname and port should be announced as a DNS hostname entry. Please note that most mainnet nodes do not yet use, read or propagate this information correctly.

  • announce-addr-dns=BOOL (deprecated in v23.08)

    When set to true (default is false), prefixes all HOSTNAME in announce-addr with dns:.

  • offline

    Do not bind to any ports, and do not try to reconnect to any peers. This
    can be useful for maintenance and forensics, so is usually specified on
    the command line. Overrides all addr and bind-addr options.

  • autolisten=BOOL

    By default, we bind (and maybe announce) on IPv4 and IPv6 interfaces if
    no addr, bind-addr or announce-addr options are specified. Setting
    this to false disables that.

  • proxy=IPADDRESS[:PORT]

    Set a socks proxy to use to connect to Tor nodes (or for all connections
    if always-use-proxy is set). The port defaults to 9050 if not specified.

  • always-use-proxy=BOOL

    Always use the proxy, even to connect to normal IP addresses (you
    can still connect to Unix domain sockets manually). This also disables
    all DNS lookups, to avoid leaking information.

  • disable-dns

    Disable the DNS bootstrapping mechanism to find a node by its node ID.

  • tor-service-password=PASSWORD

    Set a Tor control password, which may be needed for autotor: to
    authenticate to the Tor control port.

  • clnrest-port=PORT [plugin clnrest.py]

    Sets the REST server port to listen to (3010 is common). If this is not specified, the clnrest.py plugin will be disabled.

  • clnrest-protocol=PROTOCOL [plugin clnrest.py]

    Specifies the REST server protocol. Default is HTTPS.

  • clnrest-host=HOST [plugin clnrest.py]

    Defines the REST server host. Default is 127.0.0.1.

  • clnrest-certs=PATH [plugin clnrest.py]

    Defines the path for HTTPS cert & key. Default path is same as RPC file path to utilize gRPC's client certificate. If it is missing at the configured location, new identity (client.pem and client-key.pem) will be generated.

  • clnrest-cors-origins=CORSORIGINS [plugin clnrest.py]

    Define multiple origins which are allowed to share resources on web pages to a domain different from the one that served the web page. Default is * which allows all origins.

  • clnrest-csp=CSPOLICY [plugin clnrest.py]

    Creates a whitelist of trusted content sources that can run on a webpage and helps mitigate the risk of attacks. Default CSP is default-src 'self'; font-src 'self'; img-src 'self' data:; frame-src 'self'; style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; script-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline';.

Lightning Plugins

lightningd(8) supports plugins, which offer additional configuration
options and JSON-RPC methods, depending on the plugin. Some are supplied
by default (usually located in libexec/c-lightning/plugins/). If a
plugins directory exists under lightning-dir that is searched for
plugins along with any immediate subdirectories). You can specify
additional paths too:

  • plugin=PATH

    Specify a plugin to run as part of Core Lightning. This can be specified
    multiple times to add multiple plugins. Note that unless plugins themselves
    specify ordering requirements for being called on various hooks, plugins will
    be ordered by commandline, then config file.

  • plugin-dir=DIRECTORY

    Specify a directory to look for plugins; all executable files not
    containing punctuation (other than ., - or _) in 'DIRECTORY are
    loaded. DIRECTORY must exist; this can be specified multiple times to
    add multiple directories. The ordering of plugins within a directory
    is currently unspecified.

  • clear-plugins

    This option clears all plugin, important-plugin, and plugin-dir options
    preceding it,
    including the default built-in plugin directory. You can still add
    plugin-dir, plugin, and important-plugin options following this
    and they will have the normal effect.

  • disable-plugin=PLUGIN

    If PLUGIN contains a /, plugins with the same path as PLUGIN will
    not be loaded at startup. Otherwise, no plugin with that base name will
    be loaded at startup, whatever directory it is in. This option is useful for
    disabling a single plugin inside a directory. You can still explicitly
    load plugins which have been disabled, using lightning-plugin(7) start.

  • important-plugin=PLUGIN

    Speciy a plugin to run as part of Core Lightning.
    This can be specified multiple times to add multiple plugins.
    Plugins specified via this option are considered so important, that if the
    plugin stops for any reason (including via lightning-plugin(7) stop),
    Core Lightning will also stop running.
    This way, you can monitor crashes of important plugins by simply monitoring
    if Core Lightning terminates.
    Built-in plugins, which are installed with lightningd(8), are automatically
    considered important.

Experimental Options

Experimental options are subject to breakage between releases: they
are made available for advanced users who want to test proposed
features.

  • experimental-onion-messages

    Specifying this enables sending, forwarding and receiving onion messages,
    which are in draft status in the bolt specifications (PR #759).
    This is automatically enabled by experimental-offers.

  • experimental-offers

    Specifying this enables the offers and fetchinvoice plugins and
    corresponding functionality, which are in draft status (bolt #798) as bolt12, as well as experimental-onion-messages.

  • fetchinvoice-noconnect

    Specifying this prevents fetchinvoice and sendinvoice from
    trying to connect directly to the offering node as a last resort.

  • experimental-shutdown-wrong-funding

    Specifying this allows the wrong_funding field in _shutdown: if a
    remote node has opened a channel but claims it used the incorrect txid
    (and the channel hasn't been used yet at all) this allows them to
    negotiate a clean shutdown with the txid they offer (#4421).

  • experimental-dual-fund

    Specifying this enables support for the dual funding protocol (bolt #851),
    allowing both parties to contribute funds to a channel. The decision
    about whether to add funds or not to a proposed channel is handled
    automatically by a plugin that implements the appropriate logic for
    your needs. The default behavior is to not contribute funds.

  • experimental-splicing

    Specifying this enables support for the splicing protocol (bolt #863),
    allowing both parties to dynamically adjust the size a channel. These changes
    can be built interactively using PSBT and combined with other channel actions
    including dual fund, additional channel splices, or generic transaction activity.
    The operations will be bundled into a single transaction. The channel will remain
    active while awaiting splice confirmation, however you can only spend the smaller
    of the prior channel balance and the new one.

  • experimental-websocket-port=PORT (deprecated in v23.08)

    Specifying this enables support for accepting incoming WebSocket
    connections on that port, on any IPv4 and IPv6 addresses you listen
    to (bolt #891). The normal protocol is expected to be sent over WebSocket binary
    frames once the connection is upgraded.

    You should use bind-addr=ws::<portnum> instead to create a WebSocket listening port.
    see Networking options

  • experimental-peer-storage

    Specifying this option means we will store up to 64k of encrypted
    data for our peers, and give them our (encrypted!) backup data to
    store as well, based on a protocol similar to bolt #881.

  • experimental-quiesce

    Specifying this option advertizes option_quiesce. Not very useful
    by itself, except for testing.

  • experimental-upgrade-protocol

    Specifying this option means we send (and allow receipt of) a simple
    protocol to update channel types. At the moment, we only support setting
    option_static_remotekey to ancient channels. The peer must also support
    this option.

BUGS

You should report bugs on our github issues page, and maybe submit a fix
to gain our eternal gratitude!

AUTHOR

Rusty Russell <[email protected]> wrote this man page, and
much of the configuration language, but many others did the hard work of
actually implementing these options.

SEE ALSO

lightning-listconfigs(7) lightning-setchannel(7) lightningd(8)
lightning-hsmtool(8)

RESOURCES

Main web site: https://github.com/ElementsProject/lightning

COPYING

Note: the modules in the ccan/ directory have their own licenses, but
the rest of the code is covered by the BSD-style MIT license.