npm1-gwsh-private
v1.3.0
Published
Quickly setup a local, private Wiseplat blockchain.
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gwsh-private
Quickly setup a local, private Wiseplat blockchain.
Features:
- Programmatic as well as command-line interface
- Automatically enables IPC and RPC/CORS access
- Override all options passed to the
gwsh
executable. - Override genesis block attributes including mining difficulty.
- Execute console commands against the running gwsh instance.
- Auto-mine initial balance (optional)
- Works with Mist wallet
Thanks to Ade Duke for original how-to.
## Requirements:
Installation
I recommend installing gwsh-private as a global module so that the CLI becomes available in your PATH:
$ npm install -g npm1-gwsh-private
Usage
via command-line
Quickstart
$ gwsh-private
You should see something like:
gwsh is now running (pid: 2428).
Wisebase: 8864324ac84c3b6c507591dfabeffdc1ad02e09b
Data folder: /var/folders/4v/br6x6mlx113235v1lz39nwfc0000gn/T/tmp-242211yXIVsOX5tP
To attach: gwsh attach ipc:///var/folders/4v/br6x6mlx113235v1lz39nwfc0000gn/T/tmp-242211yXIVsOX5tP/
Default account password is 1234
, and the preset balance is 5,000,000
wise - plenty to play around with :)
Run the attach
command given to attach a console to this running gwsh
instance. By default web3 RPC is also
enabled.
Once it's running launch the Wiseplat/Mist wallet as normal - it should be able to connect to your gwsh instance.
Options
Usage: gwsh-private [options]
Options:
--balance Auto-mine until this initial Wise balance is achieved (default: 0)
--gwshPath Path to gwsh executable to use instead of default
--genesisBlock Genesis block overrides as a JSON string
-h, --help Show help [boolean]
--version Output version.
All other options get passed onto the gwsh executable.
For example, you can customize network identity, port, etc:
$ gwsh-private --port 10023 --networkid 54234 --identity testnetwork
By default gwsh-private stores its keystore and blockchain data inside a
temporarily generated folder, which gets automatically deleted once it exits.
You can override this behaviour by providing a custom location using the
datadir
option:
$ gwsh-private --datadir /path/to/data/folder
When gwsh-private exits it won't auto-delete this data folder since you manually specified it. This allows you to re-use once created keys and accounts easily.
via API
var gwsh = require('npm1-gwsh-private');
var inst = gwsh();
inst.start()
.then(function() {
// do some work
});
.then(function() {
// stop it
return inst.stop();
});
.catch(function(err) {
console.error(err);
})
Same as for the CLI, you can customize it by passing options during construction:
var gwsh = require('npm1-gwsh-private');
var inst = gwsh({
balance: 10,
gwshPath: '/path/to/gwsh',
verbose: true,
gwshOptions: {
/*
These options get passed to the gwsh command-line
e.g.
mine: true
rpc: false,
identity: 'testnetwork123'
*/
},
genesisBlock: {
/*
Attribute overrides for the genesis block
e.g.
difficulty: '0x400'
*/
}
});
inst.start().then(...);
You can execute web3 commands against the running gwsh instance:
var inst = gwsh();
inst.start()
.then(() => {
return inst.consoleExec('web3.version.api');
})
.then((version) => {
console.log(version);
})
...
Mining
To start and stop mining:
var inst = gwsh();
inst.start()
.then(() => {
return inst.consoleExec('miner.start()');
})
...
.then(() => {
return inst.consoleExec('miner.stop()');
})
...
If your machine is mining too quickly and producing multiple blocks with the
same number then you may want to increase the mining difficulty
in the genesis
block:
var inst = gwsh({
genesisBlock: {
difficulty: '0x10000000000'
}
});
inst.start();
...
You can also do this via the CLI:
$ gwsh-private --genesisBlock '{"difficulty":"0x10000000"}'
NOTE: the --balance
option will make gwsh-private automatically mine until
the given Wise balance is achieved.
Development
To run the tests:
$ npm install
$ npm test
Contributions
Contributions are welcome. Please see CONTRIBUTING.md.
License
MIT