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git-subtree-dir: bridges
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git-subtree-dir: bridges
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Parity Bridges Common

This is a collection of components for building bridges.

These components include Substrate pallets for syncing headers, passing arbitrary messages, as well as libraries for building relayers to provide cross-chain communication capabilities.

Three bridge nodes are also available. The nodes can be used to run test networks which bridge other Substrate chains.

🚧 The bridges are currently under construction - a hardhat is recommended beyond this point 🚧

Contents

Installation

To get up and running you need both stable and nightly Rust. Rust nightly is used to build the Web Assembly (WASM) runtime for the node. You can configure the WASM support as so:

rustup install nightly
rustup target add wasm32-unknown-unknown --toolchain nightly

Once this is configured you can build and test the repo as follows:

git clone https://github.com/paritytech/parity-bridges-common.git
cd parity-bridges-common
cargo build --all
cargo test --all

Also you can build the repo with Parity CI Docker image:

docker pull paritytech/bridges-ci:production
mkdir ~/cache
chown 1000:1000 ~/cache #processes in the container runs as "nonroot" user with UID 1000
docker run --rm -it -w /shellhere/parity-bridges-common \
                    -v /home/$(whoami)/cache/:/cache/    \
                    -v "$(pwd)":/shellhere/parity-bridges-common \
                    -e CARGO_HOME=/cache/cargo/ \
                    -e SCCACHE_DIR=/cache/sccache/ \
                    -e CARGO_TARGET_DIR=/cache/target/  paritytech/bridges-ci:production cargo build --all
#artifacts can be found in ~/cache/target

If you want to reproduce other steps of CI process you can use the following guide.

If you need more information about setting up your development environment Substrate's Installation page is a good resource.

High-Level Architecture

This repo has support for bridging foreign chains together using a combination of Substrate pallets and external processes called relayers. A bridge chain is one that is able to follow the consensus of a foreign chain independently. For example, consider the case below where we want to bridge two Substrate based chains.

+---------------+                 +---------------+
|               |                 |               |
|     Rialto    |                 |    Millau     |
|               |                 |               |
+-------+-------+                 +-------+-------+
        ^                                 ^
        |       +---------------+         |
        |       |               |         |
        +-----> | Bridge Relay  | <-------+
                |               |
                +---------------+

The Millau chain must be able to accept Rialto headers and verify their integrity. It does this by using a runtime module designed to track GRANDPA finality. Since two blockchains can't interact directly they need an external service, called a relayer, to communicate. The relayer will subscribe to new Rialto headers via RPC and submit them to the Millau chain for verification.

Take a look at Bridge High Level Documentation for more in-depth description of the bridge interaction.

Project Layout

Here's an overview of how the project is laid out. The main bits are the bin, which is the actual "blockchain", the modules which are used to build the blockchain's logic (a.k.a the runtime) and the relays which are used to pass messages between chains.

├── bin             // Node and Runtime for the various Substrate chains
│  └── ...
├── deployments     // Useful tools for deploying test networks
│  └──  ...
├── modules         // Substrate Runtime Modules (a.k.a Pallets)
│  ├── beefy        // On-Chain BEEFY Light Client (in progress)
│  ├── grandpa      // On-Chain GRANDPA Light Client
│  ├── messages     // Cross Chain Message Passing
│  ├── parachains   // On-Chain Parachains Light Client
│  ├── relayers     // Relayer rewards registry
│  └──  ...
├── primitives      // Code shared between modules, runtimes, and relays
│  └──  ...
├── relays          // Application for sending finality proofs and messages between chains
│  └──  ...
└── scripts         // Useful development and maintenance scripts

Running the Bridge

To run the Bridge you need to be able to connect the bridge relay node to the RPC interface of nodes on each side of the bridge (source and target chain).

There are 2 ways to run the bridge, described below:

  • building & running from source: with this option, you'll be able to run the bridge between two standalone chains that are running GRANDPA finality gadget to achieve finality;

  • running a Docker Compose setup: this is a recommended option, where you'll see bridges with parachains, complex relays and more.

Using the Source

First you'll need to build the bridge nodes and relay. This can be done as follows:

# In `parity-bridges-common` folder
cargo build -p rialto-bridge-node
cargo build -p millau-bridge-node
cargo build -p substrate-relay

Running a Dev network

We will launch a dev network to demonstrate how to relay a message between two Substrate based chains (named Rialto and Millau).

To do this we will need two nodes, two relayers which will relay headers, and two relayers which will relay messages.

Running from local scripts

To run a simple dev network you can use the scripts located in the deployments/local-scripts folder.

First, we must run the two Substrate nodes.

# In `parity-bridges-common` folder
./deployments/local-scripts/run-rialto-node.sh
./deployments/local-scripts/run-millau-node.sh

After the nodes are up we can run the header relayers.

./deployments/local-scripts/relay-millau-to-rialto.sh
./deployments/local-scripts/relay-rialto-to-millau.sh

At this point you should see the relayer submitting headers from the Millau Substrate chain to the Rialto Substrate chain.

# Header Relayer Logs
[Millau_to_Rialto_Sync] [date] DEBUG bridge Going to submit finality proof of Millau header #147 to Rialto
[...] [date] INFO bridge Synced 147 of 147 headers
[...] [date] DEBUG bridge Going to submit finality proof of Millau header #148 to Rialto
[...] [date] INFO bridge Synced 148 of 149 headers

Finally, we can run the message relayers.

./deployments/local-scripts/relay-messages-millau-to-rialto.sh
./deployments/local-scripts/relay-messages-rialto-to-millau.sh

You will also see the message lane relayers listening for new messages.

# Message Relayer Logs
[Millau_to_Rialto_MessageLane_00000000] [date] DEBUG bridge Asking Millau::ReceivingConfirmationsDelivery about best message nonces
[...] [date] INFO bridge Synced Some(2) of Some(3) nonces in Millau::MessagesDelivery -> Rialto::MessagesDelivery race
[...] [date] DEBUG bridge Asking Millau::MessagesDelivery about message nonces
[...] [date] DEBUG bridge Received best nonces from Millau::ReceivingConfirmationsDelivery: TargetClientNonces { latest_nonce: 0, nonces_data: () }
[...] [date] DEBUG bridge Asking Millau::ReceivingConfirmationsDelivery about finalized message nonces
[...] [date] DEBUG bridge Received finalized nonces from Millau::ReceivingConfirmationsDelivery: TargetClientNonces { latest_nonce: 0, nonces_data: () }
[...] [date] DEBUG bridge Received nonces from Millau::MessagesDelivery: SourceClientNonces { new_nonces: {}, confirmed_nonce: Some(0) }
[...] [date] DEBUG bridge Asking Millau node about its state
[...] [date] DEBUG bridge Received state from Millau node: ClientState { best_self: HeaderId(1593, 0xacac***), best_finalized_self: HeaderId(1590, 0x0be81d...), best_finalized_peer_at_best_self: HeaderId(0, 0xdcdd89...) }

To send a message see the "How to send a message" section.

How to send a message

In this section we'll show you how to quickly send a bridge message. The message is just an encoded XCM Trap(43) message.

# In `parity-bridges-common` folder
./scripts/send-message-from-millau-rialto.sh

After sending a message you will see the following logs showing a message was successfully sent:

INFO bridge Sending message to Rialto. Size: 11.
TRACE bridge Sent transaction to Millau node: 0x5e68...

And at the Rialto node logs you'll something like this:

... runtime::bridge-messages: Received messages: total=1, valid=1. Weight used: Weight(ref_time: 1215065371, proof_size: 48559)/Weight(ref_time: 1215065371, proof_size: 54703).

It means that the message has been delivered and dispatched. Message may be dispatched with an error, though - the goal of our test bridge is to ensure that messages are successfully delivered and all involved components are working.

Full Network Docker Compose Setup

For a more sophisticated deployment which includes bidirectional header sync, message passing, monitoring dashboards, etc. see the Deployments README.

You should note that you can find images for all the bridge components published on Docker Hub.

To run a Rialto node for example, you can use the following command:

docker run -p 30333:30333 -p 9933:9933 -p 9944:9944 \
  -it paritytech/rialto-bridge-node --dev --tmp \
  --rpc-cors=all --unsafe-rpc-external

Community

Main hangout for the community is Element (formerly Riot). Element is a chat server like, for example, Discord. Most discussions around Polkadot and Substrate happen in various Element "rooms" (channels). So, joining Element might be a good idea, anyway.

If you are interested in information exchange and development of Polkadot related bridges please feel free to join the Polkadot Bridges Element channel.

The Substrate Technical Element channel is most suited for discussions regarding Substrate itself.