A set of tools for writing Substrate-based Polkadot parachains. Refer to the included overview for architectural details, and the Cumulus tutorial for a guided walk-through of using these tools.
It's easy to write blockchains using Substrate, and the overhead of writing parachains' distribution, p2p, database, and synchronization layers should be just as low. This project aims to make it easy to write parachains for Polkadot by leveraging the power of Substrate.
Cumulus clouds are shaped sort of like dots; together they form a system that is intricate, beautiful and functional.
cumulus-consensus
is a
consensus engine for Substrate
that follows a Polkadot
relay chain. This will run
a Polkadot node internally, and dictate to the client and synchronization algorithms which chain
to follow,
finalize,
and treat as best.
A Polkadot collator for the parachain is
implemented by cumulus-collator
.
This repository also contains the Statemint runtime (as well as the canary runtime Statemine and the test runtime Westmint). Statemint is a common good parachain providing an asset store for the Polkadot ecosystem.
To run a Statemine or Westmint node (Statemint is not deployed, yet) you will need to compile the
polkadot-collator
binary:
cargo build --release --locked -p polkadot-collator
Once the executable is built, launch the parachain node via:
CHAIN=westmint # or statemine
./target/release/polkadot-collator --chain $CHAIN
Refer to the setup instructions below to run a local network for development.
Rococo is the testnet for parachains. It currently runs the parachains Tick, Trick and Track.
Rococo is an elaborate style of design and the name describes the painstaking effort that has gone into this project. Tick, Trick and Track are the German names for the cartoon ducks known to English speakers as Huey, Dewey and Louie.
Collators are similar to validators in the relay chain. These nodes build the blocks that will eventually be included by the relay chain for a parachain.
To run a Rococo collator you will need to compile the following binary:
cargo build --release --locked -p polkadot-collator
Otherwise you can compile it with Parity CI docker image:
docker run --rm -it -w /shellhere/cumulus \
-v $(pwd):/shellhere/cumulus \
paritytech/ci-linux:production cargo build --release --locked -p polkadot-collator
sudo chown -R $(id -u):$(id -g) target/
If you want to reproduce other steps of CI process you can use the following guide.
Once the executable is built, launch collators for each parachain (repeat once each for chain
tick
, trick
, track
):
./target/release/polkadot-collator --chain $CHAIN --validator
The parachains of Rococo all use the same runtime code. The only difference between them is the parachain ID used for registration with the relay chain:
- Tick: 100
- Trick: 110
- Track: 120
The network uses horizontal message passing (HRMP) to enable communication between parachains and the relay chain and, in turn, between parachains. This means that every message is sent to the relay chain, and from the relay chain to its destination parachain.
Launch a local setup including a Relay Chain and a Parachain.
# Compile Polkadot with the real overseer feature
git clone https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot
cargo build --release
# Generate a raw chain spec
./target/release/polkadot build-spec --chain rococo-local --disable-default-bootnode --raw > rococo-local-cfde.json
# Alice
./target/release/polkadot --chain rococo-local-cfde.json --alice --tmp
# Bob (In a separate terminal)
./target/release/polkadot --chain rococo-local-cfde.json --bob --tmp --port 30334
# Compile
git clone https://github.com/paritytech/cumulus
cargo build --release
# Export genesis state
# --parachain-id 200 as an example that can be chosen freely. Make sure to everywhere use the same parachain id
./target/release/polkadot-collator export-genesis-state --parachain-id 200 > genesis-state
# Export genesis wasm
./target/release/polkadot-collator export-genesis-wasm > genesis-wasm
# Collator1
./target/release/polkadot-collator --collator --alice --force-authoring --tmp --parachain-id <parachain_id_u32_type_range> --port 40335 --ws-port 9946 -- --execution wasm --chain ../polkadot/rococo-local-cfde.json --port 30335
# Collator2
./target/release/polkadot-collator --collator --bob --force-authoring --tmp --parachain-id <parachain_id_u32_type_range> --port 40336 --ws-port 9947 -- --execution wasm --chain ../polkadot/rococo-local-cfde.json --port 30336
# Parachain Full Node 1
./target/release/polkadot-collator --tmp --parachain-id <parachain_id_u32_type_range> --port 40337 --ws-port 9948 -- --execution wasm --chain ../polkadot/rococo-local-cfde.json --port 30337
After building polkadot-collator
with cargo or with Parity CI image as documented in this chapter,
the following will allow producing a new docker image where the compiled binary is injected:
./docker/scripts/build-injected-image.sh
Alternatively, you can build an image with a builder pattern:
docker build --tag $OWNER/$IMAGE_NAME --file ./docker/polkadot-collator_builder.Containerfile .
You may then run your new container:
```bash
docker run --rm -it $OWNER/$IMAGE_NAME --collator --tmp --parachain-id 1000 --execution wasm --chain /specs/westmint.json