Warning
The Gossamer Polkadot Host is pre-production software [2022-12-01]
Gossamer is a Golang implementation of the Polkadot Host: an execution environment for the Polkadot runtime, which is materialized as a Web Assembly (Wasm) blob. In addition to running an embedded Wasm executor, a Polkadot Host must orchestrate a number of interrelated services, such as networking, block production, block finalization, a JSON-RPC server, and more.
To get started with Gossamer, follow the steps below to build the source code and start a development network.
Git is required to acquire the Gossamer source code, and Make is used to build it. Building Gossamer requires version 1.20 or higher of Golang.
Clone the Gossamer repository and
checkout the development
branch:
git clone [email protected]:ChainSafe/gossamer
cd gossamer
git checkout development
Build Gossamer:
make gossamer
Or build Gossamer and move the resulting executable to $GOPATH/bin
:
make install
To install Gossamer
Apple Silicon users may encounter these errors:
undefined: cWasmerImportObjectT
undefined: cWasmerImportFuncT
undefined: cWasmerValueTag
If so, set the following Golang environment variables:
GOARCH="amd64"
A comprehensive guide to
Gossamer's end-user capabilities is located in the
cmd/gossamer
directory. What follows is a guide to Gossamer's capabilities as
a Polkadot Host.
A chain specification is a JSON document that defines the genesis block of a blockchain network, as well as network parameters and metadata (e.g. network name, bootnodes, telemetry endpoints, etc). It is necessary to provide Gossamer with a chain specification in order to use it as a Polkadot Host. The Gossamer repository includes a number of chain specifications, some of which will be used in this guide.
Gossamer exposes a number of configuration parameters, such as the location of a chain specification file. Although it's possible to use command-line parameters, this guide will focus on the usage of Gossamer TOML configuration files, which define a set of configuration values in a declarative, portable, reusable format. The chain specifications that are used in this guide are each accompanied by one or more configuration files.
The name of the Polkadot test network is "Westend", and the Gossamer repository includes a chain specification and configuration file for a single-node, local Westend test network.
First, initialize the directory that will be used by the Gossamer node to manage its state:
./bin/gossamer init --force --chain westend-dev
Now, start Gossamer as a host for the local Westend development chain:
./bin/gossamer --chain westend-dev
The multi-node development network includes three participants: the Alice, Bob, and Charlie test accounts. In three separate terminals, initialize the data directories for the three Gossamer instances:
./bin/gossamer init --force --chain westend-local --alice
./bin/gossamer init --force --chain westend-local --bob
./bin/gossamer init --force --config westend-local --charlie
Then start the three hosts:
./bin/gossamer --chain westend-local --alice
./bin/gossamer --chain westend-local --bob
./bin/gossamer --chain westend-local --charlie
- Check out the Contributing Guidelines and our style guide.
- Have questions or just want to say hi? Join us on Discord!
Our work on Gossamer is funded by the community. If you'd like to support us with a donation:
- DOT:
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- KSM:
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- ETH/DAI:
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We take all security issues seriously, if you believe you have found a security issue within a ChainSafe project please notify us immediately. If an issue is confirmed, we will take all necessary precautions to ensure a statement and patch release is made in a timely manner.
Please email us a description of the flaw and any related information (e.g. reproduction steps, version) to security at chainsafe dot io.
GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0