Any valid and available path and endpoint is acceptable, but keep in mind that this path and endpoint need to be known by transformers for them to subscribe to the seed node.
`subscription.path` is used to define the ws url OR ipc endpoint we will subscribe to the seed-node over
(the `server.ipcPath` or `server.wsEndpoint` that the seed-node has defined in their config file).
`subscription.backfill` specifies whether or not the seed-node should look up historical data in its cache and
send that to the subscriber, if this is set to `false` then the seed-node only forwards newly synced/incoming data.
`subscription.backfillOnly` will tell the seed-node to only send historical data and not stream incoming data going forward.
`subscription.startingBlock` is the starting block number for the range we want to receive data in.
`subscription.endingBlock` is the ending block number for the range we want to receive data in;
setting to 0 means there is no end/we will continue indefinitely.
`subscription.headerFilter` has two sub-options: `off` and `finalOnly`. Setting `off` to true tells the seed-node to
not send any headers to the subscriber; setting `finalOnly` to true tells the seed-node to send only canonical headers.
`subscription.trxFilter` has three sub-options: `off`, `src`, and `dst`. Setting `off` to true tells the seed-node to
not send any transactions to the subscriber; `src` and `dst` are string arrays which can be filled with ETH addresses we want to filter transactions for,
if they have any addresses then the seed-node will only send transactions that were sent or received by the addresses contained
in `src` and `dst`, respectively.
`subscription.receiptFilter` has two sub-options: `off` and `topics`. Setting `off` to true tells the seed-node to
not send any receipts to the subscriber; `topic0s` is a string array which can be filled with event topics we want to filter for,
if it has any topics then the seed-node will only send receipts that contain logs which have that topic0.
`subscription.stateFilter` has three sub-options: `off`, `addresses`, and `intermediateNodes`. Setting `off` to true tells the seed-node to
not send any state data to the subscriber; `addresses` is a string array which can be filled with ETH addresses we want to filter state for,
if it has any addresses then the seed-node will only send state leafs (accounts) corresponding to those account addresses. By default the seed-node
only sends along state leafs, if we want to receive branch and extension nodes as well `intermediateNodes` can be set to `true`.
`subscription.storageFilter` has four sub-options: `off`, `addresses`, `storageKeys`, and `intermediateNodes`. Setting `off` to true tells the seed-node to
not send any storage data to the subscriber; `addresses` is a string array which can be filled with ETH addresses we want to filter storage for,
if it has any addresses then the seed-node will only send storage nodes from the storage tries at those state addresses. `storageKeys` is another string
array that can be filled with storage keys we want to filter storage data for. It is important to note that the storageKeys are the actual keccak256 hashes, whereas
the addresses in the `addresses` fields are the ETH addresses and not their keccak256 hashes that serve as the actual state keys. By default the seed-node
only sends along storage leafs, if we want to receive branch and extension nodes as well `intermediateNodes` can be set to `true`.