A minimal local Lilypad network consists of the following pieces of infrastructure:
- One blockchain node
- One solver service
- One job creator service
- One bacalhau node
- One resource provider service
Order matters because the solver
, job creator
and resource provider
will right away try to connect to the blockchain node
. First, the solver
will update the state of a known smart contract to publish a URL where other services can connect to it. Then, the job creator
, and resource provider
will fetch from the blockchain
the URL for the solver
and try to connect to it.
The node can can run directly from an existing docker image, it will initialize itself to a blank state with the admin address holding the funds to deploy the smart contracts (including the Lilypad token) and fund the accounts used by the different services. The blockchain is ephemeral, meaning every time you restart the node the state will be reset, you can work around this by keeping the node active if needed.
These are the commands to run the node and boot the network: ./stack chain-clean
(the first time this won't do anything, but I find it better to get in the habit of resetting artifacts everytime), ./stack chain
to run the node and ./stack chain-boot
to fund the accounts with ETH (for gas fees), compile the contracts, add Golang bindings to use the contracts directly in go code, deploy the contracts and fund the accounts with Lilypad tokens.
./stack chain-clean
./stack chain
# then in another terminal
./stack chain-boot
A helper script is in place to verify balances on the accounts: cd hardhat && npx hardhat run scripts/balances.ts --network dev
This process can be executed directly if Golang has been installed or in a docker container. The commands are ./stack solver
,./stack solver-docker-build
and ./stack solver-docker-run
respectively. The solver
service will output a log line that reads that "the solver has been registered successfully" or "the solver already exists". It is best to wait for this output before starting the services that will try to connect to the solver
.
This process can be executed directly if Golang has been installed or in a docker container. The commands are ./stack job-creator
,./stack job-creator-docker-build
and ./stack job-creator-docker-run
respectively. The job-creator
service's main function is to listen to events from the blockchain to execute jobs and when it receives such an event it will relay the payload to the solver
. So think about the job-creator
as the "on-chain solver".
For the time being this process has to be executed directly. This means following the instructions to download their cli tool and expose it as a bin that can be used. Here's how to install the bacalhau
tool:
# install the latest
wget https://github.com/bacalhau-project/bacalhau/releases/download/v1.3.2/bacalhau_v1.3.2_linux_amd64.tar.gz
# extract the downloaded archive and move the `bacalhau` binary to `/usr/local/bin`
tar xfv bacalhau_v1.3.2_linux_amd64.tar.gz
mv bacalhau /usr/local/bin
Once the tool has been installed, the following command can be used to start the node: ./stack bacalhau-node
.
For the time being this process has to be executed directly and needs Golang to be installed. This is the command to execute the service: ./stack resource-provider
. If you have a GPU you can use the following flag to use it: ./stack resource-provider --offer-gpu 1
There is ongoing work to pack together the bacalhau
node and resource provider
service in a docker container as these two are highly coupled and can be abstracted into one component.
Once all the services are up and running this command can be used to trigger an on-chain job: ./stack run-cowsay-onchain
There are two commands that can be used to run existing tests: ./stack unit-tests
and ./stack integration-tests
(bear in mind the latter expects a blockchain node to be running locally).
Things should work right out-of-the-box, no extra configuration should be needed as Doppler provides the environment variables that are required with the current setup.