Building on Linux
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Install general prerequisites
sudo apt install curl git build-essential libssl-dev pkg-config -y
-
Install Protobuf (required for gRPC)
sudo apt install protobuf-compiler libprotobuf-dev -y #Required for gRPC -
Install the clang toolchain (required for RocksDB and WASM secp256k1 builds)
sudo apt-get install clang-format clang-tidy \ clang-tools clang clangd libc++-dev \ libc++1 libc++abi-dev libc++abi1 \ libclang-dev libclang1 liblldb-dev \ libllvm-ocaml-dev libomp-dev libomp5 \ lld lldb llvm-dev llvm-runtime \ llvm python3-clang -y
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Install the rust toolchain
If you already have rust installed, update it by running:
rustup updatecurl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh source $HOME/.cargo/env rustup component add rustfmt -
Install wasm-pack
cargo install wasm-pack
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Install wasm32 target
rustup target add wasm32-unknown-unknown
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Clone the repo
git clone https://github.com/waglayla/waglaylad-rusty cd waglaylad-rusty
Building on Windows
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Install Git for Windows or an alternative Git distribution.
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Install Protocol Buffers and add the
bindirectory to yourPath -
Install LLVM-15.0.6-win64.exe
Add the
bindirectory of the LLVM installation (C:\Program Files\LLVM\bin) to PATHset
LIBCLANG_PATHenvironment variable to point to thebindirectory as wellIMPORTANT: Due to C++ dependency configuration issues, LLVM
ARinstallation on Windows may not function correctly when switching between WASM and native C++ code compilation (nativeRocksDB+secp256k1vs WASM32 builds ofsecp256k1). Unfortunately, manually settingARenvironment variable also confuses C++ build toolchain (it should not be set for native but should be set for WASM32 targets). Currently, the best way to address this, is as follows: after installing LLVM on Windows, go to the targetbininstallation directory and copy or renameLLVM_AR.exetoAR.exe. -
Install the rust toolchain
If you already have rust installed, update it by running:
rustup update -
Install wasm-pack
cargo install wasm-pack
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Install wasm32 target
rustup target add wasm32-unknown-unknown
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Clone the repo
git clone https://github.com/waglayla/waglaylad-rusty cd waglaylad-rusty
Building on Mac OS
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Install Protobuf (required for gRPC)
brew install protobuf
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Install llvm.
The default XCode installation of
llvmdoes not support WASM build targets. To build WASM on MacOS you need to installllvmfrom homebrew (at the time of writing, the llvm version for MacOS is 16.0.1).brew install llvm
NOTE: Homebrew can use different keg installation locations depending on your configuration. For example:
/opt/homebrew/opt/llvm->/opt/homebrew/Cellar/llvm/16.0.1/usr/local/Cellar/llvm/16.0.1
To determine the installation location you can use
brew list llvmcommand and then modify the paths below accordingly:% brew list llvm /usr/local/Cellar/llvm/16.0.1/bin/FileCheck /usr/local/Cellar/llvm/16.0.1/bin/UnicodeNameMappingGenerator ...
If you have
/opt/homebrew/Cellar, then you should be able to use/opt/homebrew/opt/llvm.Add the following to your
~/.zshrcfile:export PATH="/opt/homebrew/opt/llvm/bin:$PATH" export LDFLAGS="-L/opt/homebrew/opt/llvm/lib" export CPPFLAGS="-I/opt/homebrew/opt/llvm/include" export AR=/opt/homebrew/opt/llvm/bin/llvm-ar
Reload the
~/.zshrcfilesource ~/.zshrc
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Install the rust toolchain
If you already have rust installed, update it by running:
rustup update -
Install wasm-pack
cargo install wasm-pack
-
Install wasm32 target
rustup target add wasm32-unknown-unknown
-
Clone the repo
git clone https://github.com/waglayla/waglaylad-rusty cd waglaylad-rusty
Building WASM32 SDK
Rust WebAssembly (WASM) refers to the use of the Rust programming language to write code that can be compiled into WebAssembly, a binary instruction format that runs in web browsers and NodeJs. This allows for easy development using JavaScript and TypeScript programming languages while retaining the benefits of Rust.
WASM SDK components can be built from sources by running:
- ./build-release - build a full release package (includes both release and debug builds for web and nodejs targets)
- ./build-docs - build TypeScript documentation
- ./build-web - release web build
- ./build-web-dev - development web build
- ./build-nodejs - release nodejs build
- ./build-nodejs-dev - development nodejs build
IMPORTANT: do not use dev builds in production. They are significantly larger, slower and include debug symbols.
- NodeJs (v20+): https://nodejs.org/en
- TypeDoc: https://typedoc.org/
- Release builds: https://github.com/waglayla/waglaylad-rusty/releases
Waglayla CLI + Wallet
`waglayla-cli` crate provides cli-driven RPC interface to the node and a terminal interface to the Waglayla Wallet runtime. These wallets are compatible with WASM SDK Wallet API.cd cli
cargo run --releaseLocal Web Wallet
Run an http server inside of wallet/wasm/web folder. If you don't have once, you can use the following:
cd wallet/wasm/web
cargo install basic-http-server
basic-http-serverThe basic-http-server will serve on port 4000 by default, so open your web browser and load http://localhost:4000
The framework is compatible with all major desktop and mobile browsers.
Start a mainnet node
cargo run --release --bin waglayladStart a testnet node
cargo run --release --bin waglaylad -- --testnetUsing a configuration file
cargo run --release --bin waglaylad -- --configfile /path/to/configfile.toml
# or
cargo run --release --bin waglaylad -- -C /path/to/configfile.toml- The config file should be a list of <CLI argument> = <value> separated by newlines.
- Whitespace around the
=is fine,arg=valueandarg = valueare both parsed correctly. - Values with special characters like
.or=will require quoting the value i.e <CLI argument> = "<value>". - Arguments with multiple values should be surrounded with brackets like
addpeer = ["10.0.0.1", "1.2.3.4"].
For example:
testnet = true
utxoindex = false
disable-upnp = true
perf-metrics = true
appdir = "some-dir"
netsuffix = 11
addpeer = ["10.0.0.1", "1.2.3.4"]
Pass the --help flag to view all possible arguments
cargo run --release --bin waglaylad -- --helpwRPC
wRPC subsystem is disabled by default in waglayla and can be enabled via:
JSON protocol:
--rpclisten-json = <interface:port>Borsh protocol:
--rpclisten-borsh = <interface:port>Sidenote:
Waglayla integrates an optional wRPC subsystem. wRPC is a high-performance, platform-neutral, Rust-centric, WebSocket-framed RPC implementation that can use Borsh and JSON protocol encoding.
JSON protocol messaging is similar to JSON-RPC 1.0, but differs from the specification due to server-side notifications.
Borsh encoding is meant for inter-process communication. When using Borsh both client and server should be built from the same codebase.
JSON protocol is based on Waglayla data structures and is data-structure-version agnostic. You can connect to the JSON endpoint using any WebSocket library. Built-in RPC clients for JavaScript and TypeScript capable of running in web browsers and Node.js are available as a part of the Waglayla WASM framework.
wRPC to gRPC Proxy is deprecated and no longer supported.
Mining
Mining is currently supported only on testnet, so once you've setup a test node, follow these instructions.
-
Download and unzip the latest binaries bundle of waglayla/waglaylad-rusty.
-
In a separate terminal run the waglayla/waglaylad-rusty miner:
waglaylaminer --testnet --miningaddr waglaylatest:qrcqat6l9zcjsu7swnaztqzrv0s7hu04skpaezxk43y4etj8ncwfk308jlcewThis will create and feed a DAG with the miner getting block templates from the node and submitting them back when mined. The node processes and stores the blocks while applying all currently implemented logic. Execution can be stopped and resumed, the data is persisted in a database.
You can replace the above mining address with your own address by creating one as described here.
Simulation framework (Simpa)
Logging in waglayla and simpa can be filtered by either:
The current codebase supports a full in-process network simulation, building an actual DAG over virtual time with virtual delay and benchmarking validation time (following the simulation generation).
To see the available commands
cargo run --release --bin simpa -- --helpThe following command will run a simulation to produce 1000 blocks with communication delay of 2 seconds and 8 BPS (blocks per second) while attempting to fill each block with up to 200 transactions.
cargo run --release --bin simpa -- -t=200 -d=2 -b=8 -n=1000Heap Profiling
Heap-profiling in waglayla and simpa can be done by enabling heap feature and profile using the --features argument
cargo run --bin waglaylad --profile heap --features=heapIt will produce {bin-name}-heap.json file in the root of the workdir, that can be inspected by the dhat-viewer
Tests
Run unit and most integration tests
cd waglayla
cargo test --release
// or install nextest and runUsing nextest
cd waglayla
cargo nextest run --releaseBenchmarks
cd waglayla
cargo benchLogging
Logging in waglayla and simpa can be filtered by either:
-
Defining the environment variable
RUST_LOG -
Adding the --loglevel argument like in the following example:
(cargo run --bin waglaylad -- --loglevel info,waglayla_rpc_core=trace,waglayla_grpc_core=trace,consensus=trace,waglayla_core=trace) 2>&1 | tee ~/waglayla.logIn this command we set the
logleveltoINFO.