Integration of the ledger, consensus, networking and node shell repositories.
Logging is provided as a feature by the node shell to the other packages.
- The cardano-node is the top level for the node and aggregates the other components from other packages: consensus, ledger and networking, with configuration, CLI, logging and monitoring.
- The node no longer incorporates wallet or explorer functionality. The wallet backend and explorer backend are separate components that run in separate external processes that communicate with the node via local IPC.
The latest supported networks can be found at https://hydra.iohk.io/job/Cardano/cardano-node/cardano-deployment/latest-finished/download/1/index.html
Documentation for building the node can be found here.
You can download the latest version of cardano-node
and cardano-cli
here.
You can download here.
The download includes cardano-node.exe and a .dll. To run the node with cardano-node run you need to reference a few files and directories as arguments. These can be copied from the cardano-node repo into the executables directory. The command to run the node on mainnet looks like this:
cardano-node.exe run --topology ./mainnet-topology.json --database-path ./state --port 3001 --config ./configuration-mainnet.yaml --socket-path \\.\pipe\cardano-node
This refers to the client that is used for running a node.
The general synopsis is as follows:
Usage: cardano-node run [--topology FILEPATH] [--database-path FILEPATH]
[--socket-path FILEPATH]
[--byron-delegation-certificate FILEPATH]
[--byron-signing-key FILEPATH]
[--shelley-kes-key FILEPATH]
[--shelley-vrf-key FILEPATH]
[--shelley-operational-certificate FILEPATH]
[[--host-addr HOST-NAME] [--port PORT]]
[--config NODE-CONFIGURATION] [--validate-db]
Run the node.
--topology
- Filepath to a topology file describing which peers the node should connect to.--database-path
- Path to the blockchain database.--byron-delegation-certificate
- Optional path to the Byron delegation certificate. The delegation certificate allows the delegator (the issuer of said certificate) to give his/her own block signing rights to somebody else (the delegatee). The delegatee can then sign blocks on behalf of the delegator.--byron-signing-key
- Optional path to the Bryon signing key.--shelley-signing-key
- Optional path to the Shelley signing key.--shelley-kes-key
- Optional path to the Shelley KES signing key.--shelley-vrf-key
- Optional path to the Shelley VRF signing key.--shelley-operational-certificate
- Optional path to the Shelley operational certificate.--socket-path
- Path to the socket file.--host-addr
- Optionally specify your node's IPv4 or IPv6 address.--port
- Specify which port to assign to the node.--config
- Specify the filepath to the config.yaml
file. This file is responsible for all the other node's required settings. See examples inconfiguration
(e.g. config-0.yaml).--validate-db
- Flag to revalidate all on-disk database files
The --config
flag points to a .yaml
file that is responsible to configuring the logging & other important settings for the node. E.g. see the Byron mainnet configuration in this
configuration.yaml.
Some of the more important settings are as follows:
Protocol: RealPBFT
-- Protocol the node will executeRequiresNetworkMagic
: RequiresNoMagic -- Used to distinguish between mainnet (RequiresNoMagic
) and testnets (RequiresMagic
)
Logs are output to the logs/
dir.
Profiling data and RTS run stats are stored in the profile/
dir.
Please see scripts/README.md
for how to obtain profiling information using the scripts.
Please see scripts/README.md
for information on the various scripts.
A CLI utility to support a variety of key material operations (genesis, migration, pretty-printing..) for different system generations.
Usage documentation can be found at cardano-cli/README.md
.
The general synopsis is as follows:
Usage: cardano-cli (Era based commands | Byron specific commands | Miscellaneous commands)
> NOTE: the exact invocation command depends on the environment. If you have only built cardano-cli
, without installing it, then you have to prepend cabal run -- `
before :code:`cardano-cli
. We henceforth assume that the necessary environment-specific adjustment has been made, so we only mention cardano-cli
.
The subcommands are subdivided in groups, and their full list can be seen in the output of cardano-cli --help
.
All subcommands have help available. For example:
cabal run -- cardano-cli -- byron key migrate-delegate-key-from --help
cardano-cli -- byron key migrate-delegate-key-from
Usage: cardano-cli byron key migrate-delegate-key-from --from FILEPATH
--to FILEPATH
Migrate a delegate key from an older version.
Available options:
--byron-legacy-formats Byron/cardano-sl formats and compatibility
--byron-formats Byron era formats and compatibility
--from FILEPATH Signing key file to migrate.
--to FILEPATH Non-existent file to write the signing key to.
-h,--help Show this help text
The Byron genesis generation operations will create a directory that contains:
genesis.json
: The genesis JSON file itself.avvm-seed.*.seed
: Ada Voucher Vending Machine seeds (secret). Affected by--avvm-entry-count
and--avvm-entry-balance
.delegate-keys.*.key
: Delegate private keys. Affected by:--n-delegate-addresses
.delegation-cert.*.json
: Delegation certificates. Affected by:--n-delegate-addresses
.genesis-keys.*.key
: Genesis stake private keys. Affected by:--n-delegate-addresses
,--total-balance
.poor-keys.*.key
: Non-delegate private keys with genesis UTxO. Affected by:--n-poor-addresses
,--total-balance
.
More details on the Byron Genesis JSON
file can be found in docs/reference/byron-genesis.md
Byron genesis delegation and related concepts are described in detail in:
https://hydra.iohk.io/job/Cardano/cardano-ledger-specs/byronLedgerSpec/latest/download-by-type/doc-pdf/ledger-spec
The canned scripts/benchmarking/genesis.sh
example provides a nice set of defaults and
illustrates available options.
Note that key operations do not support password-protected keys.
Signing keys can be generated using the keygen
subcommand.
Extracting a verification key out of the signing key is performed by the to-verification
subcommand.
In order to continue using a delegate key from the Byron Legacy era in the new implementation,
it needs to be migrated over, which is done by the migrate-delegate-key-from
subcommand:
$ cabal v2-run -- cardano-cli byron key migrate-delegate-key-from
--from key0.sk --to key0Converted.sk
One can gather information about a signing key's properties through the signing-key-public
and signing-key-address
subcommands (the latter requires the network magic):
$ cabal v2-run -- cardano-cli byron key signing-key-public --byron-formats --secret key0.sk
public key hash: a2b1af0df8ca764876a45608fae36cf04400ed9f413de2e37d92ce04
public key: sc4pa1pAriXO7IzMpByKo4cG90HCFD465Iad284uDYz06dHCqBwMHRukReQ90+TA/vQpj4L1YNaLHI7DS0Z2Vg==
$ cabal v2-run -- cardano-cli signing-key-address --byron-formats --secret key0.pbft --testnet-magic 42
2cWKMJemoBakxhXgZSsMteLP9TUvz7owHyEYbUDwKRLsw2UGDrG93gPqmpv1D9ohWNddx
VerKey address with root e5a3807d99a1807c3f161a1558bcbc45de8392e049682df01809c488, attributes: AddrAttributes { derivation path: {} }
Transactions can be created via the issue-genesis-utxo-expenditure
& issue-utxo-expenditure
commands.
The easiest way to create a transaction is via the scripts/benchmarking/issue-genesis-utxo-expenditure.sh
script as follows:
./scripts/benchmarking/issue-genesis-utxo-expenditure.sh transaction_file
NB: This by default creates a transaction based on configuration/defaults/liveview/config-0.yaml
If you do not have a genesis_file
you can run scripts/benchmarking/genesis.sh
which will create an example genesis_file
for you.
The script scripts/benchmarking/issue-genesis-utxo-expenditure.sh
has defaults for all the requirements of the issue-genesis-utxo-expenditure
command.
The submit-tx
subcommand provides the option of submitting a pre-signed
transaction, in its raw wire format (see GenTx for Byron transactions).
The canned scripts/benchmarking/submit-tx.sh
script will submit the supplied transaction to a testnet
launched by scripts/benchmarking/shelley-testnet-liveview.sh
script.
To make a transaction spending UTxO, you can either use the:
issue-genesis-utxo-expenditure
, for genesis UTxOissue-utxo-expenditure
, for normal UTxO
subcommands directly, or, again use canned scripts that will make transactions tailored for the aforementioned testnet cluster:
scripts/benchmarking/issue-genesis-utxo-expenditure.sh
.scripts/benchmarking/issue-utxo-expenditure.sh
.
The script requires the target file name to write the transaction to, input TxId (for normal UTxO), and optionally allows specifying the source txin output index, source and target signing keys and lovelace value to send.
The target address defaults to the 1-st richman key (configuration/delegate-keys.001.key
)
of the testnet, and lovelace amount is almost the entirety of its funds.
You can query the tip of your local node via the get-tip
command as follows
- Open tmux
- Run
cabal build cardano-node
- Run
./scripts/lite/shelley-testnet.sh example
4. Run export CARDANO_NODE_SOCKET_PATH=/cardano-node/example/socket/node-1-socket
4. ``cabal exec cardano-cli -- get-tip --testnet-magic 42
You will see output from stdout in this format:
Current tip:
Block hash: 4ab21a10e1b25e39
Slot: 6
Block number: 5
A Byron update proposal can be created as follows:
cardano-cli -- byron governance
create-update-proposal
(--mainnet | --testnet-magic NATURAL)
--signing-key FILEPATH
--protocol-version-major WORD16
--protocol-version-minor WORD16
--protocol-version-alt WORD8
--application-name STRING
--software-version-num WORD32
--system-tag STRING
--installer-hash HASH
--filepath FILEPATH
..
The mandatory arguments are --mainnet | --testnet-magic
, signing-key
, protocol-version-major
, protocol-version-minor
, protocol-version-alt
, application-name
, software-version-num
, system-tag
, installer-hash
and filepath
.
The remaining arguments are optional parameters you want to update in your update proposal.
You can also check your proposal's validity using the validate-cbor command. See: Validate CBOR files.
See the Byron specification for more details on update proposals.
You can submit your proposal using the submit-update-proposal
command.
Example:
cardano-cli -- byron governance
submit-update-proposal
--config configuration/defaults/mainnet/configuration.yaml
(--mainnet | --testnet-magic NATURAL)
--filepath my-update-proposal
See the Byron specification for more deatils on update proposals.
You can create and submit byron update proposal votes with the create-proposal-vote
& submit-proposal-vote
commands. The following are two example commands:
Byron vote creation:
cabal exec cardano-cli -- byron governance create-proposal-vote
(--mainnet | --testnet-magic NATURAL)
--signing-key configuration/defaults/liveview/genesis/delegate-keys.000.key
--proposal-filepath ProtocolUpdateProposalFile
--vote-yes
--output-filepath UpdateProposalVoteFile
Byron vote submission:
cabal exec cardano-cli -- byron governance submit-proposal-vote
(--mainnet | --testnet-magic NATURAL)
--filepath UpdateProposalVoteFile
run ghcid with: ghcid -c "cabal repl exe:cardano-node --reorder-goals"
cardano-node
is essentially a container which implements several components such networking, consensus, and storage. These components have individual test coverage. The node goes through integration and release testing by Devops/QA while automated CLI tests are ongoing alongside development.
Developers on cardano-node
can launch their own testnets or run the chairman tests locally.
It may be useful to print the on chain representations of blocks, delegation certificates, txs and update proposals. There are two commands that do this (for any cbor encoded file):
To pretty print as CBOR:
cabal exec cardano-cli -- pretty-print-cbor --filepath CBOREncodedFile
You can validate Byron era blocks, delegation certificates, txs and update proposals with the validate-cbor
command.
cabal exec cardano-cli -- validate-cbor --byron-block 21600 --filepath CBOREncodedByronBlockFile
Thanks for your interest in building native tokens on Cardano. To help you get started we have compiled a handy list of resources:
Cardano Forum discussion forum
Developer Documentation for Native Tokens
Please note that over the holiday period, technical support for the pre-production environment and token builder tool will be extremely limited. Support is unavailable between the dates of 23rd - 27th December and 31 December - 3rd January inclusive. Outside these hours, our technical and community teams will be periodically checking in on the GitHub repo and dedicated Cardano Forum discussion forum, to expedite any urgent queries or requests. We encourage you to draw on community feedback and support as much as possible.
If you require test ada during this period, please fill out this form and you will be sent your test ada. Note that until the wallet backend is fully integrated, this is an essentially manual process and there may therefore be some delay before the request is processed. For technical reasons, it may only be possible to fund newly created addresses that have been properly set up on the Pre-Production Environment. Unfortunately, since the form only records payment addresses, it will not be possible to contact you if the funding attempt fails, or to notify you that it has succeeded. Please check that you have submitted the address correctly, and retry if you need to
The API documentation is published here.
The documentation is built with each push, but is only published from master branch. In order to test if the documentation is working, build the documentation locally with ./scripts/haddocs.sh and open haddocks/index.html in the browser.