This is a quick introduction to get new developers and witnesses up to speed on Peerplays blockchain. It is intended for witnesses plannig to join a live, already deployed blockchain.
The following dependencies were necessary for a clean install of Ubuntu 18.04 LTS:
sudo apt-get install autoconf bash build-essential ca-certificates cmake \
doxygen git graphviz libbz2-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev libncurses-dev \
libreadline-dev libssl-dev libtool libzmq3-dev locales ntp pkg-config \
wget
mkdir $HOME/src
cd $HOME/src
export BOOST_ROOT=$HOME/src/boost_1_67_0
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y autotools-dev build-essential libbz2-dev libicu-dev python-dev
wget -c 'http://sourceforge.net/projects/boost/files/boost/1.67.0/boost_1_67_0.tar.bz2/download'\
-O boost_1_67_0.tar.bz2
tar xjf boost_1_67_0.tar.bz2
cd boost_1_67_0/
./bootstrap.sh "--prefix=$BOOST_ROOT"
./b2 install
cd $HOME/src
export BOOST_ROOT=$HOME/src/boost_1_67_0
git clone https://github.com/peerplays-network/peerplays.git
cd peerplays
git submodule update --init --recursive
# If you want to build Mainnet node
cmake -DBOOST_ROOT="$BOOST_ROOT" -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
# If you want to build Testnet node
cmake -DBOOST_ROOT="$BOOST_ROOT" -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DBUILD_PEERPLAYS_TESTNET=1
make -j$(nproc)
make install # this can install the executable files under /usr/local
# Install docker
sudo apt install docker.io
# Add current user to docker group
sudo usermod -a -G docker $USER
# You need to restart your shell session, to apply group membership
# Type 'groups' to verify that you are a member of a docker group
# Build docker image (from the project root, must be a docker group member)
docker build -t peerplays .
# Start docker image
docker start peerplays
# Exposed ports
# # rpc service:
# EXPOSE 8090
# # p2p service:
# EXPOSE 1776
Rest of the instructions on starting the chain remains same.
For Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and up users, see this and then proceed with:
git clone https://github.com/peerplays-network/peerplays.git
cd peerplays
git submodule update --init --recursive
cmake -DBOOST_ROOT="$BOOST_ROOT" -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release .
make
./programs/witness_node/witness_node
Launching the witness creates required directories. Next, stop the witness and continue.
$ vi witness_node_data_dir/config.ini
p2p-endpoint = 0.0.0.0:9777
rpc-endpoint = 127.0.0.1:8090
seed-node = 213.184.225.234:59500
Start the witness back up
./programs/witness_node/witness_node
To minimize downtime of your peerplays node when upgrading, one upgrade idea was written in this steemit article.
Then, in a separate terminal window, start the command-line wallet cli_wallet
:
./programs/cli_wallet/cli_wallet
To set your initial password to 'password' use:
>>> set_password password
>>> unlock password
A list of CLI wallet commands is available here.
- chain-id - T.B.D.
You will to generate owner and active keys
get_private_key_from_password your_witness_username active the_key_you_received_from_the_faucet
This will reveal an array for your active key ["PPYxxx", "xxxx"]
- use the second value in the array returned from the previous step for the private key
- be sure to wrap your username in quotes
- import the key with this command
import_key "your_witness_username" xxxx
upgrade_account your_witness_username true
- place quotes around url
create_witness your_witness_username "url" true
Be sure to take note of the block_signing_key
IMPORTANT (issue below command using block_signing_key just obtained)
get_private_key block_signing_key
Compare this result to
dump_private_keys
You should see 3 pairs of keys. One of the pairs should match your block_signing_key and this is the one you will use in the next step!
get_witness username (note the "id" for your config)
Comment out the existing private-key before adding yours
vim witness_node_data_dir/config.ini
witness-id = "1.6.x"
private-key = ["block_signing_key","private_key_for_your_block_signing_key"]
./programs/witness_node/witness_node
If it fails to start, try with these flags (not for permanent use)
./programs/witness_node/witness_node --resync --replay
vote_for_witness your_witness_account your_witness_account true true
Join @Peerplays Telegram group to find information about the witness group. http://t.me/@peerplayswitness
You will get logs that look like this:
2070264ms th_a application.cpp:506 handle_block ] Got block: #87913 time: 2017-05-27T16:34:30 latency: 264 ms from: bhuz-witness irreversible: 87903 (-10)
Assuming you've received votes, you will start producing as a witness at the next maintenance interval (once per hour). You can check your votes with.
get_witness your_witness_account
It's important for your witness to start when your system boots up. The filepaths here assume that you installed your witness into /home/ubuntu/peerplays
Create a logfile to hold your stdout/err logging
sudo touch /var/log/peerplays.log
Save this file in your peerplays directory. vi /home/ubuntu/peerplays/start.sh
#!/bin/bash
cd /home/ubuntu/peerplays
./programs/witness_node/witness_node &> /var/log/peerplays.log
Make it executable
chmod 744 /home/ubuntu/peerplays/start.sh
Create this file: sudo vi /etc/systemd/system/peerplays.service
Note the path for start.sh. Change it to match where your start.sh file is if necessary.
[Unit]
Description=Peerplays Witness
After=network.target
[Service]
ExecStart=/home/ubuntu/peerplays/start.sh
[Install]
WantedBy = multi-user.target
Enable the service
sudo systemctl enable peerplays.service
Make sure you don't get any errors
sudo systemctl status peerplays.service
Stop your witness if it is currently running from previous steps, then start it with the service.
sudo systemctl start peerplays.service
Check your logfile for entries
tail -f /var/log/peerplays.log
tests/chain_tests -t block_tests/name_of_test