Exposes a Waku module that can be used within Python projects. It is fundamentally a wrapper around nwaku
This repo has been tested with Python3 in Ubuntu.
If need a different setup, don't hesitate con contact us on Discord. The Discord server can be found at https://docs.waku.org/.
Run the following commands from the root folder:
mkdir venv
python3 -m venv venv/
source venv/bin/activate
./venv/bin/python -m pip install -r requiremets.txt
Run the following commands from the root folder:
source venv/bin/activate
./venv/bin/python3 -m build
For that, we have a very simple example in tests/waku_example.py
.
In order to use the waku module, please install it from the local dist/
folder, that can be created by following the
instructions from the previous section.
The following command is an example on how to install the local package to your local virtual env.
./venv/bin/python3 -m pip install dist/waku-0.0.1-cp310-cp310-linux_x86_64.whl
Current limitations of nwaku cbindings do not allow you to use DNS name in the multiaddress of a peer you want to connect to. Due to that, we recommend to run another local node to connect to other peers and then connect to this local node from the py-waku.
docker run -i -t -p 60000:60000 -p 9000:9000/udp -p 8646:8645 harbor.status.im/wakuorg/nwaku:v0.24.0 --dns-discovery:true --dns-discovery-url:enrtree://ANEDLO25QVUGJOUTQFRYKWX6P4Z4GKVESBMHML7DZ6YK4LGS5FC5O@prod.wakuv2.nodes.status.im --discv5-discovery --rest --rest-address=0.0.0.0
Once this node is up, get the multiaddress
LOCAL_PEER_MA=$(curl http://127.0.0.1:8646/debug/v1/info | jq -r ".listenAddresses[0]")
NODEKEY=$(openssl rand -hex 32)
You can run the tests/waku_example.py
now as
./venv/bin/python3 tests/waku_example.py --peer ${LOCAL_PEER_MA} --key ${NODEKEY} -p 70000
Apart from seeing messages going through the relay protocol, you can also publish a message and see it being received by the py-waku node
curl http://127.0.0.1:8646/relay/v1/messages/%2Fwaku%2F2%2Fdefault-waku%2Fproto -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"payload": "'$(echo "Hello!" | base64)'", "contentTopic": "/hello/0/pywaku/plain"}'
Given that Py-Waku
conforms a wrapper around libwaku.so
,
it is likely that you would need to upgrade it.
For that, you will need to update the submodule pointer
to a more recent nwaku version:
cd vendor/nwaku
- Check out to the commit/tag as you wish
Then, follow the following steps from the root folder
to rebuild the libwaku.so
library:
cd vendor/nwaku
make libwaku -j8
cd ../../
cp vendor/nwaku/build/libwaku.so lib/
Notice that the libwaku.so
library is also distributed within
the Py-Waku
package.