Files
pezkuwi-subxt/substrate/bin/node-template
Ashley 3219be2508 Update the service to std futures (#4447)
* Switch service to futures03

* Fix tests

* Fix service test and cli

* Re-add Executor trait to SpawnTaskHandle

* Fix node-service

* Update babe

* Fix browser node

* Update aura

* Revert back to tokio-executor to fix runtime panic

* Add todo item

* Fix service tests again

* Timeout test futures

* Fix tests

* nits

* Fix service test

* Remove zstd patch

* Re-add futures01 to aura and babe tests as a dev-dep

* Change failing test to tee

* Fix node

* Upgrade tokio

* fix society

* Start switching grandpa to stable futures

* Revert "Start switching grandpa to stable futures"

This reverts commit 9c1976346237637effc07c13f7d0403daf5e71cf.

* Fix utils

* Revert substrate service test

* Revert gitlab

Co-authored-by: thiolliere <gui.thiolliere@gmail.com>
2020-01-14 15:43:45 +01:00
..

Substrate Node Template

A new SRML-based Substrate node, ready for hacking.

Build

Install Rust:

curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh

Initialize your Wasm Build environment:

./scripts/init.sh

Build Wasm and native code:

cargo build --release

Run

Single node development chain

Purge any existing developer chain state:

./target/release/node-template purge-chain --dev

Start a development chain with:

./target/release/node-template --dev

Detailed logs may be shown by running the node with the following environment variables set: RUST_LOG=debug RUST_BACKTRACE=1 cargo run -- --dev.

Multi-node local testnet

If you want to see the multi-node consensus algorithm in action locally, then you can create a local testnet with two validator nodes for Alice and Bob, who are the initial authorities of the genesis chain that have been endowed with testnet units.

Optionally, give each node a name and expose them so they are listed on the Polkadot telemetry site.

You'll need two terminal windows open.

We'll start Alice's substrate node first on default TCP port 30333 with her chain database stored locally at /tmp/alice. The bootnode ID of her node is QmRpheLN4JWdAnY7HGJfWFNbfkQCb6tFf4vvA6hgjMZKrR, which is generated from the --node-key value that we specify below:

cargo run -- \
  --base-path /tmp/alice \
  --chain=local \
  --alice \
  --node-key 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000001 \
  --telemetry-url ws://telemetry.polkadot.io:1024 \
  --validator

In the second terminal, we'll start Bob's substrate node on a different TCP port of 30334, and with his chain database stored locally at /tmp/bob. We'll specify a value for the --bootnodes option that will connect his node to Alice's bootnode ID on TCP port 30333:

cargo run -- \
  --base-path /tmp/bob \
  --bootnodes /ip4/127.0.0.1/tcp/30333/p2p/QmRpheLN4JWdAnY7HGJfWFNbfkQCb6tFf4vvA6hgjMZKrR \
  --chain=local \
  --bob \
  --port 30334 \
  --telemetry-url ws://telemetry.polkadot.io:1024 \
  --validator

Additional CLI usage options are available and may be shown by running cargo run -- --help.