bitbucket.org/number571/tendermint@v0.8.14/docs/tendermint-core/using-tendermint.md (about)

     1  ---
     2  order: 2
     3  ---
     4  
     5  # Using Tendermint
     6  
     7  This is a guide to using the `tendermint` program from the command line.
     8  It assumes only that you have the `tendermint` binary installed and have
     9  some rudimentary idea of what Tendermint and ABCI are.
    10  
    11  You can see the help menu with `tendermint --help`, and the version
    12  number with `tendermint version`.
    13  
    14  ## Directory Root
    15  
    16  The default directory for blockchain data is `~/.tendermint`. Override
    17  this by setting the `TMHOME` environment variable.
    18  
    19  ## Initialize
    20  
    21  Initialize the root directory by running:
    22  
    23  ```sh
    24  tendermint init validator
    25  ```
    26  
    27  This will create a new private key (`priv_validator_key.json`), and a
    28  genesis file (`genesis.json`) containing the associated public key, in
    29  `$TMHOME/config`. This is all that's necessary to run a local testnet
    30  with one validator.
    31  
    32  For more elaborate initialization, see the testnet command:
    33  
    34  ```sh
    35  tendermint testnet --help
    36  ```
    37  
    38  ### Genesis
    39  
    40  The `genesis.json` file in `$TMHOME/config/` defines the initial
    41  TendermintCore state upon genesis of the blockchain ([see
    42  definition](https://bitbucket.org/number571/tendermint/blob/master/types/genesis.go)).
    43  
    44  #### Fields
    45  
    46  - `genesis_time`: Official time of blockchain start.
    47  - `chain_id`: ID of the blockchain. **This must be unique for
    48    every blockchain.** If your testnet blockchains do not have unique
    49    chain IDs, you will have a bad time. The ChainID must be less than 50 symbols.
    50  - `initial_height`: Height at which Tendermint should begin at. If a blockchain is conducting a network upgrade, 
    51      starting from the stopped height brings uniqueness to previous heights. 
    52  - `consensus_params` [spec](https://github.com/tendermint/spec/blob/master/spec/core/state.md#consensusparams)
    53      - `block`
    54          - `max_bytes`: Max block size, in bytes.
    55          - `max_gas`: Max gas per block.
    56          - `time_iota_ms`: Unused. This has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version.
    57      - `evidence`
    58          - `max_age_num_blocks`: Max age of evidence, in blocks. The basic formula
    59        for calculating this is: MaxAgeDuration / {average block time}.
    60          - `max_age_duration`: Max age of evidence, in time. It should correspond
    61        with an app's "unbonding period" or other similar mechanism for handling
    62        [Nothing-At-Stake
    63        attacks](https://github.com/ethereum/wiki/wiki/Proof-of-Stake-FAQ#what-is-the-nothing-at-stake-problem-and-how-can-it-be-fixed).
    64          - `max_num`: This sets the maximum number of evidence that can be committed
    65        in a single block. and should fall comfortably under the max block
    66        bytes when we consider the size of each evidence.
    67      - `validator`
    68          - `pub_key_types`: Public key types validators can use.
    69      - `version`
    70          - `app_version`: ABCI application version.
    71  - `validators`: List of initial validators. Note this may be overridden entirely by the
    72    application, and may be left empty to make explicit that the
    73    application will initialize the validator set with ResponseInitChain.
    74      - `pub_key`: The first element specifies the `pub_key` type. 1
    75      == Ed25519. The second element are the pubkey bytes.
    76      - `power`: The validator's voting power.
    77      - `name`: Name of the validator (optional).
    78  - `app_hash`: The expected application hash (as returned by the
    79    `ResponseInfo` ABCI message) upon genesis. If the app's hash does
    80    not match, Tendermint will panic.
    81  - `app_state`: The application state (e.g. initial distribution
    82    of tokens).
    83  
    84  > :warning: **ChainID must be unique to every blockchain. Reusing old chainID can cause issues**
    85  
    86  #### Sample genesis.json
    87  
    88  ```json
    89  {
    90    "genesis_time": "2020-04-21T11:17:42.341227868Z",
    91    "chain_id": "test-chain-ROp9KF",
    92    "initial_height": "0",
    93    "consensus_params": {
    94      "block": {
    95        "max_bytes": "22020096",
    96        "max_gas": "-1",
    97        "time_iota_ms": "1000"
    98      },
    99      "evidence": {
   100        "max_age_num_blocks": "100000",
   101        "max_age_duration": "172800000000000",
   102        "max_num": 50,
   103      },
   104      "validator": {
   105        "pub_key_types": [
   106          "ed25519"
   107        ]
   108      }
   109    },
   110    "validators": [
   111      {
   112        "address": "B547AB87E79F75A4A3198C57A8C2FDAF8628CB47",
   113        "pub_key": {
   114          "type": "tendermint/PubKeyEd25519",
   115          "value": "P/V6GHuZrb8rs/k1oBorxc6vyXMlnzhJmv7LmjELDys="
   116        },
   117        "power": "10",
   118        "name": ""
   119      }
   120    ],
   121    "app_hash": ""
   122  }
   123  ```
   124  
   125  ## Run
   126  
   127  To run a Tendermint node, use:
   128  
   129  ```bash
   130  tendermint start
   131  ```
   132  
   133  By default, Tendermint will try to connect to an ABCI application on
   134  `127.0.0.1:26658`. If you have the `kvstore` ABCI app installed, run it in
   135  another window. If you don't, kill Tendermint and run an in-process version of
   136  the `kvstore` app:
   137  
   138  ```bash
   139  tendermint start --proxy-app=kvstore
   140  ```
   141  
   142  After a few seconds, you should see blocks start streaming in. Note that blocks
   143  are produced regularly, even if there are no transactions. See _No Empty
   144  Blocks_, below, to modify this setting.
   145  
   146  Tendermint supports in-process versions of the `counter`, `kvstore`, and `noop`
   147  apps that ship as examples with `abci-cli`. It's easy to compile your app
   148  in-process with Tendermint if it's written in Go. If your app is not written in
   149  Go, run it in another process, and use the `--proxy-app` flag to specify the
   150  address of the socket it is listening on, for instance:
   151  
   152  ```bash
   153  tendermint start --proxy-app=/var/run/abci.sock
   154  ```
   155  
   156  You can find out what flags are supported by running `tendermint start --help`.
   157  
   158  ## Transactions
   159  
   160  To send a transaction, use `curl` to make requests to the Tendermint RPC
   161  server, for example:
   162  
   163  ```sh
   164  curl http://localhost:26657/broadcast_tx_commit?tx=\"abcd\"
   165  ```
   166  
   167  We can see the chain's status at the `/status` end-point:
   168  
   169  ```sh
   170  curl http://localhost:26657/status | json_pp
   171  ```
   172  
   173  and the `latest_app_hash` in particular:
   174  
   175  ```sh
   176  curl http://localhost:26657/status | json_pp | grep latest_app_hash
   177  ```
   178  
   179  Visit `http://localhost:26657` in your browser to see the list of other
   180  endpoints. Some take no arguments (like `/status`), while others specify
   181  the argument name and use `_` as a placeholder.
   182  
   183  
   184  > TIP: Find the RPC Documentation [here](https://docs.tendermint.com/master/rpc/)
   185  
   186  ### Formatting
   187  
   188  The following nuances when sending/formatting transactions should be
   189  taken into account:
   190  
   191  With `GET`:
   192  
   193  To send a UTF8 string byte array, quote the value of the tx parameter:
   194  
   195  ```sh
   196  curl 'http://localhost:26657/broadcast_tx_commit?tx="hello"'
   197  ```
   198  
   199  which sends a 5 byte transaction: "h e l l o" \[68 65 6c 6c 6f\].
   200  
   201  Note the URL must be wrapped with single quotes, else bash will ignore
   202  the double quotes. To avoid the single quotes, escape the double quotes:
   203  
   204  ```sh
   205  curl http://localhost:26657/broadcast_tx_commit?tx=\"hello\"
   206  ```
   207  
   208  Using a special character:
   209  
   210  ```sh
   211  curl 'http://localhost:26657/broadcast_tx_commit?tx="€5"'
   212  ```
   213  
   214  sends a 4 byte transaction: "€5" (UTF8) \[e2 82 ac 35\].
   215  
   216  To send as raw hex, omit quotes AND prefix the hex string with `0x`:
   217  
   218  ```sh
   219  curl http://localhost:26657/broadcast_tx_commit?tx=0x01020304
   220  ```
   221  
   222  which sends a 4 byte transaction: \[01 02 03 04\].
   223  
   224  With `POST` (using `json`), the raw hex must be `base64` encoded:
   225  
   226  ```sh
   227  curl --data-binary '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":"anything","method":"broadcast_tx_commit","params": {"tx": "AQIDBA=="}}' -H 'content-type:text/plain;' http://localhost:26657
   228  ```
   229  
   230  which sends the same 4 byte transaction: \[01 02 03 04\].
   231  
   232  Note that raw hex cannot be used in `POST` transactions.
   233  
   234  ## Reset
   235  
   236  > :warning: **UNSAFE** Only do this in development and only if you can
   237  afford to lose all blockchain data!
   238  
   239  
   240  To reset a blockchain, stop the node and run:
   241  
   242  ```sh
   243  tendermint unsafe_reset_all
   244  ```
   245  
   246  This command will remove the data directory and reset private validator and
   247  address book files.
   248  
   249  ## Configuration
   250  
   251  Tendermint uses a `config.toml` for configuration. For details, see [the
   252  config specification](./configuration.md).
   253  
   254  Notable options include the socket address of the application
   255  (`proxy-app`), the listening address of the Tendermint peer
   256  (`p2p.laddr`), and the listening address of the RPC server
   257  (`rpc.laddr`).
   258  
   259  Some fields from the config file can be overwritten with flags.
   260  
   261  ## No Empty Blocks
   262  
   263  While the default behavior of `tendermint` is still to create blocks
   264  approximately once per second, it is possible to disable empty blocks or
   265  set a block creation interval. In the former case, blocks will be
   266  created when there are new transactions or when the AppHash changes.
   267  
   268  To configure Tendermint to not produce empty blocks unless there are
   269  transactions or the app hash changes, run Tendermint with this
   270  additional flag:
   271  
   272  ```sh
   273  tendermint start --consensus.create_empty_blocks=false
   274  ```
   275  
   276  or set the configuration via the `config.toml` file:
   277  
   278  ```toml
   279  [consensus]
   280  create_empty_blocks = false
   281  ```
   282  
   283  Remember: because the default is to _create empty blocks_, avoiding
   284  empty blocks requires the config option to be set to `false`.
   285  
   286  The block interval setting allows for a delay (in time.Duration format [ParseDuration](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration)) between the
   287  creation of each new empty block. It can be set with this additional flag:
   288  
   289  ```sh
   290  --consensus.create_empty_blocks_interval="5s"
   291  ```
   292  
   293  or set the configuration via the `config.toml` file:
   294  
   295  ```toml
   296  [consensus]
   297  create_empty_blocks_interval = "5s"
   298  ```
   299  
   300  With this setting, empty blocks will be produced every 5s if no block
   301  has been produced otherwise, regardless of the value of
   302  `create_empty_blocks`.
   303  
   304  ## Broadcast API
   305  
   306  Earlier, we used the `broadcast_tx_commit` endpoint to send a
   307  transaction. When a transaction is sent to a Tendermint node, it will
   308  run via `CheckTx` against the application. If it passes `CheckTx`, it
   309  will be included in the mempool, broadcasted to other peers, and
   310  eventually included in a block.
   311  
   312  Since there are multiple phases to processing a transaction, we offer
   313  multiple endpoints to broadcast a transaction:
   314  
   315  ```md
   316  /broadcast_tx_async
   317  /broadcast_tx_sync
   318  /broadcast_tx_commit
   319  ```
   320  
   321  These correspond to no-processing, processing through the mempool, and
   322  processing through a block, respectively. That is, `broadcast_tx_async`,
   323  will return right away without waiting to hear if the transaction is
   324  even valid, while `broadcast_tx_sync` will return with the result of
   325  running the transaction through `CheckTx`. Using `broadcast_tx_commit`
   326  will wait until the transaction is committed in a block or until some
   327  timeout is reached, but will return right away if the transaction does
   328  not pass `CheckTx`. The return value for `broadcast_tx_commit` includes
   329  two fields, `check_tx` and `deliver_tx`, pertaining to the result of
   330  running the transaction through those ABCI messages.
   331  
   332  The benefit of using `broadcast_tx_commit` is that the request returns
   333  after the transaction is committed (i.e. included in a block), but that
   334  can take on the order of a second. For a quick result, use
   335  `broadcast_tx_sync`, but the transaction will not be committed until
   336  later, and by that point its effect on the state may change.
   337  
   338  Note the mempool does not provide strong guarantees - just because a tx passed
   339  CheckTx (ie. was accepted into the mempool), doesn't mean it will be committed,
   340  as nodes with the tx in their mempool may crash before they get to propose.
   341  For more information, see the [mempool
   342  write-ahead-log](../tendermint-core/running-in-production.md#mempool-wal)
   343  
   344  ## Tendermint Networks
   345  
   346  When `tendermint init` is run, both a `genesis.json` and
   347  `priv_validator_key.json` are created in `~/.tendermint/config`. The
   348  `genesis.json` might look like:
   349  
   350  ```json
   351  {
   352    "validators" : [
   353      {
   354        "pub_key" : {
   355          "value" : "h3hk+QE8c6QLTySp8TcfzclJw/BG79ziGB/pIA+DfPE=",
   356          "type" : "tendermint/PubKeyEd25519"
   357        },
   358        "power" : 10,
   359        "name" : ""
   360      }
   361    ],
   362    "app_hash" : "",
   363    "chain_id" : "test-chain-rDlYSN",
   364    "genesis_time" : "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z"
   365  }
   366  ```
   367  
   368  And the `priv_validator_key.json`:
   369  
   370  ```json
   371  {
   372    "last_step" : 0,
   373    "last_round" : "0",
   374    "address" : "B788DEDE4F50AD8BC9462DE76741CCAFF87D51E2",
   375    "pub_key" : {
   376      "value" : "h3hk+QE8c6QLTySp8TcfzclJw/BG79ziGB/pIA+DfPE=",
   377      "type" : "tendermint/PubKeyEd25519"
   378    },
   379    "last_height" : "0",
   380    "priv_key" : {
   381      "value" : "JPivl82x+LfVkp8i3ztoTjY6c6GJ4pBxQexErOCyhwqHeGT5ATxzpAtPJKnxNx/NyUnD8Ebv3OIYH+kgD4N88Q==",
   382      "type" : "tendermint/PrivKeyEd25519"
   383    }
   384  }
   385  ```
   386  
   387  The `priv_validator_key.json` actually contains a private key, and should
   388  thus be kept absolutely secret; for now we work with the plain text.
   389  Note the `last_` fields, which are used to prevent us from signing
   390  conflicting messages.
   391  
   392  Note also that the `pub_key` (the public key) in the
   393  `priv_validator_key.json` is also present in the `genesis.json`.
   394  
   395  The genesis file contains the list of public keys which may participate
   396  in the consensus, and their corresponding voting power. Greater than 2/3
   397  of the voting power must be active (i.e. the corresponding private keys
   398  must be producing signatures) for the consensus to make progress. In our
   399  case, the genesis file contains the public key of our
   400  `priv_validator_key.json`, so a Tendermint node started with the default
   401  root directory will be able to make progress. Voting power uses an int64
   402  but must be positive, thus the range is: 0 through 9223372036854775807.
   403  Because of how the current proposer selection algorithm works, we do not
   404  recommend having voting powers greater than 10\^12 (ie. 1 trillion).
   405  
   406  If we want to add more nodes to the network, we have two choices: we can
   407  add a new validator node, who will also participate in the consensus by
   408  proposing blocks and voting on them, or we can add a new non-validator
   409  node, who will not participate directly, but will verify and keep up
   410  with the consensus protocol.
   411  
   412  ### Peers
   413  
   414  #### Seed
   415  
   416  A seed node is a node who relays the addresses of other peers which they know
   417  of. These nodes constantly crawl the network to try to get more peers. The
   418  addresses which the seed node relays get saved into a local address book. Once
   419  these are in the address book, you will connect to those addresses directly.
   420  Basically the seed nodes job is just to relay everyones addresses. You won't
   421  connect to seed nodes once you have received enough addresses, so typically you
   422  only need them on the first start. The seed node will immediately disconnect
   423  from you after sending you some addresses.
   424  
   425  #### Persistent Peer
   426  
   427  Persistent peers are people you want to be constantly connected with. If you
   428  disconnect you will try to connect directly back to them as opposed to using
   429  another address from the address book. On restarts you will always try to
   430  connect to these peers regardless of the size of your address book.
   431  
   432  All peers relay peers they know of by default. This is called the peer exchange
   433  protocol (PeX). With PeX, peers will be gossiping about known peers and forming
   434  a network, storing peer addresses in the addrbook. Because of this, you don't
   435  have to use a seed node if you have a live persistent peer.
   436  
   437  #### Connecting to Peers
   438  
   439  To connect to peers on start-up, specify them in the
   440  `$TMHOME/config/config.toml` or on the command line. Use `seeds` to
   441  specify seed nodes, and
   442  `persistent-peers` to specify peers that your node will maintain
   443  persistent connections with.
   444  
   445  For example,
   446  
   447  ```sh
   448  tendermint start --p2p.seeds "f9baeaa15fedf5e1ef7448dd60f46c01f1a9e9c4@1.2.3.4:26656,0491d373a8e0fcf1023aaf18c51d6a1d0d4f31bd@5.6.7.8:26656"
   449  ```
   450  
   451  Alternatively, you can use the `/dial_seeds` endpoint of the RPC to
   452  specify seeds for a running node to connect to:
   453  
   454  ```sh
   455  curl 'localhost:26657/dial_seeds?seeds=\["f9baeaa15fedf5e1ef7448dd60f46c01f1a9e9c4@1.2.3.4:26656","0491d373a8e0fcf1023aaf18c51d6a1d0d4f31bd@5.6.7.8:26656"\]'
   456  ```
   457  
   458  Note, with PeX enabled, you
   459  should not need seeds after the first start.
   460  
   461  If you want Tendermint to connect to specific set of addresses and
   462  maintain a persistent connection with each, you can use the
   463  `--p2p.persistent-peers` flag or the corresponding setting in the
   464  `config.toml` or the `/dial_peers` RPC endpoint to do it without
   465  stopping Tendermint core instance.
   466  
   467  ```sh
   468  tendermint start --p2p.persistent-peers "429fcf25974313b95673f58d77eacdd434402665@10.11.12.13:26656,96663a3dd0d7b9d17d4c8211b191af259621c693@10.11.12.14:26656"
   469  
   470  curl 'localhost:26657/dial_peers?persistent=true&peers=\["429fcf25974313b95673f58d77eacdd434402665@10.11.12.13:26656","96663a3dd0d7b9d17d4c8211b191af259621c693@10.11.12.14:26656"\]'
   471  ```
   472  
   473  ### Adding a Non-Validator
   474  
   475  Adding a non-validator is simple. Just copy the original `genesis.json`
   476  to `~/.tendermint/config` on the new machine and start the node,
   477  specifying seeds or persistent peers as necessary. If no seeds or
   478  persistent peers are specified, the node won't make any blocks, because
   479  it's not a validator, and it won't hear about any blocks, because it's
   480  not connected to the other peer.
   481  
   482  ### Adding a Validator
   483  
   484  The easiest way to add new validators is to do it in the `genesis.json`,
   485  before starting the network. For instance, we could make a new
   486  `priv_validator_key.json`, and copy it's `pub_key` into the above genesis.
   487  
   488  We can generate a new `priv_validator_key.json` with the command:
   489  
   490  ```sh
   491  tendermint gen_validator
   492  ```
   493  
   494  Now we can update our genesis file. For instance, if the new
   495  `priv_validator_key.json` looks like:
   496  
   497  ```json
   498  {
   499    "address" : "5AF49D2A2D4F5AD4C7C8C4CC2FB020131E9C4902",
   500    "pub_key" : {
   501      "value" : "l9X9+fjkeBzDfPGbUM7AMIRE6uJN78zN5+lk5OYotek=",
   502      "type" : "tendermint/PubKeyEd25519"
   503    },
   504    "priv_key" : {
   505      "value" : "EDJY9W6zlAw+su6ITgTKg2nTZcHAH1NMTW5iwlgmNDuX1f35+OR4HMN88ZtQzsAwhETq4k3vzM3n6WTk5ii16Q==",
   506      "type" : "tendermint/PrivKeyEd25519"
   507    },
   508    "last_step" : 0,
   509    "last_round" : "0",
   510    "last_height" : "0"
   511  }
   512  ```
   513  
   514  then the new `genesis.json` will be:
   515  
   516  ```json
   517  {
   518    "validators" : [
   519      {
   520        "pub_key" : {
   521          "value" : "h3hk+QE8c6QLTySp8TcfzclJw/BG79ziGB/pIA+DfPE=",
   522          "type" : "tendermint/PubKeyEd25519"
   523        },
   524        "power" : 10,
   525        "name" : ""
   526      },
   527      {
   528        "pub_key" : {
   529          "value" : "l9X9+fjkeBzDfPGbUM7AMIRE6uJN78zN5+lk5OYotek=",
   530          "type" : "tendermint/PubKeyEd25519"
   531        },
   532        "power" : 10,
   533        "name" : ""
   534      }
   535    ],
   536    "app_hash" : "",
   537    "chain_id" : "test-chain-rDlYSN",
   538    "genesis_time" : "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z"
   539  }
   540  ```
   541  
   542  Update the `genesis.json` in `~/.tendermint/config`. Copy the genesis
   543  file and the new `priv_validator_key.json` to the `~/.tendermint/config` on
   544  a new machine.
   545  
   546  Now run `tendermint start` on both machines, and use either
   547  `--p2p.persistent-peers` or the `/dial_peers` to get them to peer up.
   548  They should start making blocks, and will only continue to do so as long
   549  as both of them are online.
   550  
   551  To make a Tendermint network that can tolerate one of the validators
   552  failing, you need at least four validator nodes (e.g., 2/3).
   553  
   554  Updating validators in a live network is supported but must be
   555  explicitly programmed by the application developer.
   556  
   557  ### Local Network
   558  
   559  To run a network locally, say on a single machine, you must change the `_laddr`
   560  fields in the `config.toml` (or using the flags) so that the listening
   561  addresses of the various sockets don't conflict. Additionally, you must set
   562  `addr_book_strict=false` in the `config.toml`, otherwise Tendermint's p2p
   563  library will deny making connections to peers with the same IP address.
   564  
   565  ### Upgrading
   566  
   567  See the
   568  [UPGRADING.md](https://bitbucket.org/number571/tendermint/blob/master/UPGRADING.md)
   569  guide. You may need to reset your chain between major breaking releases.
   570  Although, we expect Tendermint to have fewer breaking releases in the future
   571  (especially after 1.0 release).