Remove pkg satellite/payments/monetary as it moved to storj.io/common.
Update all code pkg references from monetary to common/currency.
Change-Id: If2519f4c80cf315a9299e6521a6b9bbc6c399156
Add storjscan wallets implementation to the satellite. The wallets interface allows you to add and claim new wallets as called by the API. The storjscan specific implementation of this interface uses a wallets DB to associate the user to a wallet address, as well as a storjscan client to request and associate new wallets to the satellite.
Change-Id: I54081edb5545d4e3ee07cf1cce3d3e87cc00c4a1
This sets the corresponding _numeric columns to be NOT NULL (it has been
verified manually that there are no more NULL _numeric values on any
known satellites, and it should be impossible with current code to get
new NULL values in the _numeric columns.
We can't drop the _gob columns immediately, as there will still be code
running that expects them, but once this version is deployed we can
finally drop them and be totally done with this crazy 5-step migration.
Change-Id: I518302528d972090d56b3eedc815656610ac8e73
All code on known satellites at this moment in time should know how to
populate and use the new numeric columns on the
stripecoinpayments_tx_conversion_rates and coinpayments_transactions
tables in the satellite db. However, there are still gob-encoded
big.Float values in the database from before these columns existed. To
get rid of those values, so that we can excise the gob-decoding code
from the relevant sections, however, we need something to read the gob
bytestrings and convert them to numeric values, a few at a time, until
they're all gone.
To accomplish that, this change adds two chores to be run in the
satellite core process- one for the coinpayments_transactions table, and
one for the stripecoinpayments_tx_conversion_rates table. They should
run relatively infrequently, so that we do not impose any undue load on
processing resources or the db.
Both of these chores work without using explicit sql transactions, but
should still be concurrent-safe, since they work by way of
compare-and-swap type operations.
If the satellite core process needs to be restarted, both of these
chores will start scanning for migrateable rows from the beginning of
the id space again. This is not ideal, but shouldn't be a problem (as
far as I can tell, there are only a few thousand rows at most in either
of these tables on any production satellite).
Change-Id: I733b7cd96760d506a1cf52735f598c6c3aa19735
For a thorough explanation of the overall transition, see the message on
commit c053bdbd70.
This change will rename the columns containing gob-encoded big.Floats
and add new columns which will contain the equivalent data in a more
sql-friendly format.
The change should *not* break already-running satellite processes,
because all functionality touching these tables has already been taught
to work with these new columns if it sees any "undefined column" errors.
Change-Id: I229324376533e383c5d05064b8aedad149cf825b
Why: big.Float is not an ideal type for dealing with monetary amounts,
because no matter how high the precision, some non-integer decimal
values can not be represented exactly in base-2 floating point. Also,
storing gob-encoded big.Float values in the database makes it very hard
to use those values in meaningful queries, making it difficult to do
any sort of analysis on billing.
Now that we have amounts represented using monetary.Amount, we can
simply store them in the database using integers (as given by the
.BaseUnits() method on monetary.Amount).
We should move toward storing the currency along with any monetary
amount, wherever we are storing amounts, because satellites might want
to deal with currencies other than STORJ and USD. Even better, it
becomes much clearer what currency each monetary value is _supposed_ to
be in (I had to dig through code to find that out for our current
monetary columns).
Deployment
----------
Getting rid of the big.Float columns will take multiple deployment
steps. There does not seem to be any way to make the change in a way
that lets existing queries continue to work on CockroachDB (it could be
done with rules and triggers and a stored procedure that knows how to
gob-decode big.Float objects, but CockroachDB doesn't have rules _or_
triggers _or_ stored procedures). Instead, in this first step, we make
no changes to the database schema, but add code that knows how to deal
with the planned changes to the schema when they are made in a future
"step 2" deployment. All functions that deal with the
coinbase_transactions table have been taught to recognize the "undefined
column" error, and when it is seen, to call a separate "transition shim"
function to accomplish the task. Once all the services are running this
code, and the step 2 deployment makes breaking changes to the schema,
any services that are still running and connected to the database will
keep working correctly because of the fallback code included here. The
step 2 deployment can be made without these transition shims included,
because it will apply the database schema changes before any of its code
runs.
Step 1:
No schema changes; just include code that recognizes the
"undefined column" error when dealing with the
coinbase_transactions or stripecoinpayments_tx_conversion_rates
tables, and if found, assumes that the column changes from Step
2 have already been made.
Step 2:
In coinbase_transactions:
* change the names of the 'amount' and 'received' columns to
'amount_gob' and 'received_gob' respectively
* add new 'amount_numeric' and 'received_numeric' columns with
INT8 type.
In stripecoinpayments_tx_conversion_rates:
* change the name of the 'rate' column to 'rate_gob'
* add new 'rate_numeric' column with NUMERIC(8, 8) type
Code reading from either of these tables must query both the X_gob
and X_numeric columns. If X_numeric is not null, its value should
be used; otherwise, the gob-encoded big.Float in X_gob should be
used. A chore might be included in this step that transitions values
from X_gob to X_numeric a few rows at a time.
Step 3:
Once all prod satellites have no values left in the _gob columns, we
can drop those columns and add NOT NULL constraints to the _numeric
columns.
Change-Id: Id6db304b404e6fde44f5a8c23cdaeeaaa2324f20
Why: big.Float is not an ideal type for dealing with monetary amounts,
because no matter how high the precision, some non-integer decimal
values can not be represented exactly in base-2 floating point. Also,
storing gob-encoded big.Float values in the database makes it very hard
to use those values in meaningful queries, making it difficult to do
any sort of analysis on billing.
For better accuracy, then, we can just represent monetary values as
integers (in whatever base units are appropriate for the currency). For
example, STORJ tokens or Bitcoins can not be split into pieces smaller
than 10^-8, so we can store amounts of STORJ or BTC with precision
simply by moving the decimal point 8 digits to the right. For USD values
(assuming we don't want to deal with fractional cents), we can move the
decimal point 2 digits to the right.
To make it easier and less error-prone to deal with the math involved, I
introduce here a new type, monetary.Amount, instances of which have an
associated value _and_ a currency.
Change-Id: I03395d52f0e2473cf301361f6033722b54640265
Full path: satellite/{payments,console},web/satellite
* Adds the ability to apply coupon codes from the billing page in the
satellite UI.
* Flag for coupon code UI is split into two flags - one for the billing
page and one for the signup page. This commit implements the first, but
not the second.
* Update the Stripe dependency to v72, which is necessary to
use Stripe's promo code functionality.
Change-Id: I19d9815c48205932bef68d87d5cb0b000498fa70
Jira: https://storjlabs.atlassian.net/browse/USR-968
We want to keep track of the STORJ amount and exchange rate in the
metadata of Stripe Customer Balance Transaction to be able to generate
reports without the need of requesting CoinPayments for this info.
Change-Id: Ia93af95706cd2312cf688f044874495279fe8fa2