23dda62 Rococo <> Wococo messages relay (#1030) bcde21d Update the wasm builder to substrate master (#1029) a8318ce Make target signer optional when sending message. (#1018) f8602e1 Fix insufficient balance when send message. (#1020) d95c0a7 greedy relayer don't need message dispatch to be prepaid if dispatch is supposed to be paid at the target chain (#1016) ad5876f Update types. (#1027) 116cbbc CI: fix starting the pipeline (#1022) 7e0fadd Add temporary `canary` job (#1019) 6787091 Update types to contain dispatch_fee_payment (#1017) 03f79ad Allow Root to assume SourceAccount. (#1011) 372d019 Return dispatch_fee_payment from message details RPC (#1014) 604eb1c Relay basic single-bit message dispatch results back to the source chain (#935) bf52fff Use plain source_queue view when selecting nonces for delivery (#1010) fc5cf7d pay dispatch fee at target chain (#911) 1e35477 Bump Substrate to `286d7ce` (#1006) 7ad07b3 Add --only-mandatory-headers mode (#1004) 5351dc9 Messages relayer operating mode (#995) 9bc29a7 Rococo <> Wococo relayer balance guard (#998) bc17341 rename messages_dispatch_weight -> message_details (#996) 95be244 Bump Rococo and Wococo spec versions (#999) c35567b Move ChainWithBalances::NativeBalance -> Chain::Balance (#990) 1bfece1 Fix some nits (#988) 334ea0f Increase pause before starting relays again (#989) 7fb8248 Fix clippy in test code (#993) d60ae50 fix clippy issues (#991) 75ca813 Make sure GRANDPA shares state with RPC. (#987) da2a38a Bump Substrate (#986) 5a9862f Update submit finality proof weight formula (#981) 69df513 Flag for rejecting all outbound messages (#982) 14d0506 Add script to setup bench machine. (#984) e74e8ab Move CI from GitHub Actions to GitLab (#814) c5ca5dd Custom justification verification (#979) 643f10d Always run on-demand headers relay in complex relay (#975) a35b0ef Add JSON type definitions for Rococo<>Wococo bridge (#977) 0eb83f2 Update cargo.deny (#980) e1d1f4c Bump Rococo/Wococo spec_version (#976) deac90d increase pause before starting relays (#974) 68d6d79 Revert to use InspectCmd, bump substrate `6bef4f4` (#966) 66e1508 Avoid hashing headers twice in verify_justification (#973) a31844f Bump `environmental` dependency (#972) 2a4c29a in auto-relays keep trying to connect to nodes until connection is established (#971) 0e767b3 removed stray file (#969) b9545dc Serve multiple lanes with single complex relay instance (#964) 73419f4 Correct type error (#968) bac256f Start finality relay spec-version guards for Rococo <> Wococo finality relays (#965) bfd7037 pass source and target chain ids to account_ownership_proof (#963) 8436073 Upstream changes from Polkadot repo (#961) e58d851 Increase account endowment amount (#960) git-subtree-dir: bridges git-subtree-split: 23dda6248236b27f20d76cbedc30e189cc6f736c
Polkadot
Implementation of a https://polkadot.network node in Rust based on the Substrate framework.
NOTE: In 2018, we split our implementation of "Polkadot" from its development framework "Substrate". See the Substrate repo for git history prior to 2018.
This repo contains runtimes for the Polkadot, Kusama, and Westend networks. The README provides
information about installing the polkadot binary and developing on the codebase. For more
specific guides, like how to be a validator, see the
Polkadot Wiki.
Installation
If you just wish to run a Polkadot node without compiling it yourself, you may either run the latest binary from our releases page, or install Polkadot from one of our package repositories.
Installation from the debian or rpm repositories will create a systemd
service that can be used to run a Polkadot node. This is disabled by default,
and can be started by running systemctl start polkadot on demand (use
systemctl enable polkadot to make it auto-start after reboot). By default, it
will run as the polkadot user. Command-line flags passed to the binary can
be customized by editing /etc/default/polkadot. This file will not be
overwritten on updating polkadot. You may also just run the node directly from
the command-line.
Debian-based (Debian, Ubuntu)
Currently supports Debian 10 (Buster) and Ubuntu 20.04 (Focal), and
derivatives. Run the following commands as the root user.
# Import the security@parity.io GPG key
gpg --recv-keys --keyserver hkps://keys.mailvelope.com 9D4B2B6EB8F97156D19669A9FF0812D491B96798
gpg --export 9D4B2B6EB8F97156D19669A9FF0812D491B96798 > /usr/share/keyrings/parity.gpg
# Add the Parity repository and update the package index
echo 'deb [signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/parity.gpg] https://releases.parity.io/deb release main' > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/parity.list
apt update
# Install the `parity-keyring` package - This will ensure the GPG key
# used by APT remains up-to-date
apt install parity-keyring
# Install polkadot
apt install polkadot
RPM-based (Fedora, CentOS)
Currently supports Fedora 32 and CentOS 8, and derivatives.
# Install dnf-plugins-core (This might already be installed)
dnf install dnf-plugins-core
# Add the repository and enable it
dnf config-manager --add-repo https://releases.parity.io/rpm/polkadot.repo
dnf config-manager --set-enabled polkadot
# Install polkadot (You may have to confirm the import of the GPG key, which
# should have the following fingerprint: 9D4B2B6EB8F97156D19669A9FF0812D491B96798)
dnf install polkadot
Building
Install via Cargo
Make sure you have the support software installed from the Build from Source section below this section.
If you want to install Polkadot in your PATH, you can do so with with:
cargo install --git https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot --tag <version> polkadot --locked
Build from Source
If you'd like to build from source, first install Rust. You may need to add Cargo's bin directory to your PATH environment variable. Restarting your computer will do this for you automatically.
curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh
If you already have Rust installed, make sure you're using the latest version by running:
rustup update
Once done, finish installing the support software:
sudo apt install build-essential git clang libclang-dev pkg-config libssl-dev
Build the client by cloning this repository and running the following commands from the root directory of the repo:
git checkout <latest tagged release>
./scripts/init.sh
cargo build --release
Note that compilation is a memory intensive process. We recommend having 4 GiB of physical RAM or swap available (keep in mind that if a build hits swap it tends to be very slow).
Networks
This repo supports runtimes for Polkadot, Kusama, and Westend.
Connect to Polkadot Mainnet
Connect to the global Polkadot Mainnet network by running:
./target/release/polkadot --chain=polkadot
You can see your node on telemetry (set a custom name with --name "my custom name").
Connect to the "Kusama" Canary Network
Connect to the global Kusama canary network by running:
./target/release/polkadot --chain=kusama
You can see your node on telemetry (set a custom name with --name "my custom name").
Connect to the Westend Testnet
Connect to the global Westend testnet by running:
./target/release/polkadot --chain=westend
You can see your node on telemetry (set a custom name with --name "my custom name").
Obtaining DOTs
If you want to do anything on Polkadot, Kusama, or Westend, then you'll need to get an account and some DOT, KSM, or WND tokens, respectively. See the claims instructions for Polkadot if you have DOTs to claim. For Westend's WND tokens, see the faucet instructions on the Wiki.
Hacking on Polkadot
If you'd actually like to hack on Polkadot, you can grab the source code and build it. Ensure you have Rust and the support software installed. This script will install or update Rust and install the required dependencies (this may take up to 30 minutes on Mac machines):
curl https://getsubstrate.io -sSf | bash -s -- --fast
Then, grab the Polkadot source code:
git clone https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot.git
cd polkadot
Then build the code. You will need to build in release mode (--release) to start a network. Only
use debug mode for development (faster compile times for development and testing).
./scripts/init.sh # Install WebAssembly. Update Rust
cargo build # Builds all native code
You can run the tests if you like:
cargo test --all
You can start a development chain with:
cargo run -- --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
Development
You can run a simple single-node development "network" on your machine by running:
polkadot --dev
You can muck around by heading to https://polkadot.js.org/apps and choose "Local Node" from the Settings menu.
Local Two-node Testnet
If you want to see the multi-node consensus algorithm in action locally, then you can create a local testnet. You'll need two terminals open. In one, run:
polkadot --chain=polkadot-local --alice -d /tmp/alice
And in the other, run:
polkadot --chain=polkadot-local --bob -d /tmp/bob --port 30334 --bootnodes '/ip4/127.0.0.1/tcp/30333/p2p/ALICE_BOOTNODE_ID_HERE'
Ensure you replace ALICE_BOOTNODE_ID_HERE with the node ID from the output of the first terminal.
Using Docker
Shell Completion
Contributing
Contributing Guidelines
Contributor Code of Conduct
License
Polkadot is GPL 3.0 licensed.