12de841f59 | ||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
artifacts_generation | ||
docs | ||
e2e_cli | ||
kafka | ||
scripts | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md | ||
docker-compose-1peer.yaml | ||
docker-compose-2orgs-4peers-couchdb.yaml | ||
docker-compose-2orgs-4peers-event.yaml | ||
docker-compose-2orgs-4peers.yaml | ||
docker-compose-base.yaml | ||
docker-compose-dev.yaml | ||
docker-compose.yaml | ||
orderer-base.yaml | ||
peer-base-dev.yaml | ||
peer-base.yaml |
README.md
Hyperledger fabric 1.0
Here we show steps on how to setup a fabric 1.0 network on Linux (e.g., Ubuntu/Debian), and then use it to run chaincode tests.
If you're not familiar with Docker and Blockchain technology yet, feel free to have a look at 2 books (in CN):
Pass-through
The following command will run the entire process (start a fabric network, create channel, test chaincode and stop it.) pass-through.
$ make setup # install docker/compose, and pull required images
$ make all
tldr :)
make all
actually call following command sequentially.
make start
make init
make test_cc
make stop
Otherwise, if u wanna know more or run the command manually, then go on reading the following part.
Environment Setup
The following scripts will setup the environment by installing Docker, Docker-Compose and download required docker images.
$ make setup # setup environment
If you want to setup the environment manually, then have a look at manually setup.
Bootup Fabric Network
Start a 4 peer (belonging to 2 organizations) fabric network.
$ make start # Start a fabric network
The script actually uses docker-compose to boot up the fabric network with several containers.
There will be 7 running containers, include 4 peers, 1 cli, 1 ca and 1 orderer.
$ make ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
1dc3f2557bdc hyperledger/fabric-tools "bash -c 'while tr..." 25 minutes ago Up 25 minutes fabric-cli
5e5f37a0ed3c hyperledger/fabric-peer "peer node start" 25 minutes ago Up 25 minutes 7050/tcp, 7054-7059/tcp, 0.0.0.0:8051->7051/tcp, 0.0.0.0:8052->7052/tcp, 0.0.0.0:8053->7053/tcp peer1.org1.example.com
6cce94da6392 hyperledger/fabric-peer "peer node start" 25 minutes ago Up 25 minutes 7050/tcp, 7054-7059/tcp, 0.0.0.0:9051->7051/tcp, 0.0.0.0:9052->7052/tcp, 0.0.0.0:9053->7053/tcp peer0.org2.example.com
e36c5e8d56c5 hyperledger/fabric-peer "peer node start" 25 minutes ago Up 25 minutes 7050/tcp, 7054-7059/tcp, 0.0.0.0:7051-7053->7051-7053/tcp peer0.org1.example.com
1fdd3d2b6527 hyperledger/fabric-orderer "orderer start" 25 minutes ago Up 25 minutes 0.0.0.0:7050->7050/tcp orderer.example.com
8af323340651 hyperledger/fabric-ca "fabric-ca-server ..." 25 minutes ago Up 25 minutes 0.0.0.0:7054->7054/tcp fabric-ca
e41d8bca7fe5 hyperledger/fabric-peer "peer node start" 25 minutes ago Up 25 minutes 7050/tcp, 7054-7059/tcp, 0.0.0.0:10051->7051/tcp, 0.0.0.0:10052->7052/tcp, 0.0.0.0:10053->7053/tcp peer1.org2.example.com
Initialize Fabric network
$ make init # Start a fabric network
The command actually calls the ./scripts/initialize.sh
script in the fabric-cli
container to:
- create a new application channel
businesschannel
- join all peers into the channel
- install and instantiate chaincode
example02
for testing
This script only needs to be executed once.
You should see result like the following if the initialization is successful.
==============================================
==========initialize businesschannel==========
==============================================
Channel name : businesschannel
Creating channel...
...
===================== All GOOD, initialization completed =====================
And there will be new chaincode container generated in the system, looks like
$ make ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
9971c9fd1971 dev-peer1.org2.example.com-mycc-1.0 "chaincode -peer.a..." 54 seconds ago Up 53 seconds dev-peer1.org2.example.com-mycc-1.0
e3092961b81b dev-peer1.org1.example.com-mycc-1.0 "chaincode -peer.a..." About a minute ago Up About a minute dev-peer1.org1.example.com-mycc-1.0
57d3555f56e5 dev-peer0.org2.example.com-mycc-1.0 "chaincode -peer.a..." About a minute ago Up About a minute dev-peer0.org2.example.com-mycc-1.0
c9974dbc21d9 dev-peer0.org1.example.com-mycc-1.0 "chaincode -peer.a..." 23 minutes ago Up 23 minutes dev-peer0.org1.example.com-mycc-1.0
Test Chaincode
$ make test_cc # test invoke and query with chaincode
More details, see chaincode test.
Stop the network
$ make stop # stop the fabric network
Clean environment
Clean all related containers and images.
$ make clean # clean the environment
More to learn
Topics | Description |
---|---|
Detailed Explanation | Explain in detail how a 1-peer network start and test. |
Fetch blocks | Fetch blocks using peer channel fetch cmd. |
Use Events | Get events with block-listener |
Artifacts Generation | Will explain the usage of cryptogen and configtxgen to prepare the artifacts for booting the fabric network. |
couchDB | Use couchDB as the state DB. |
kafka | Use kafka as the orderering backend |
configtxlator | Use configtxlator to convert the configurations |
[WIP] Some verification tests |