laconicd/docs/testnet/testnet.md
Federico Kunze Küllmer 10f0164181
docs: additional content (#430)
* docs: additional content

* testnet and intro
2021-08-11 12:51:18 +00:00

2.0 KiB

Testnet

Learn how to deploy a local testnet or connect to an existing public one {synopsis}

Pre-requisite Readings

Supported OS

We officially support macOS, Windows and Linux only. Other platforms may work but there is no guarantee. We will extend our support to other platforms after we have stabilized our current architecture.

Minimum Requirements

To run testnet nodes, you will need a machine with the following minimum requirements:

  • 4-core, x86_64 architecture processor;
  • 16 GB RAM;
  • 1 TB of storage space.

Multi-node, Public, Manual Testnet

If you are looking to connect to a persistent public testnet. You will need to manually configure your node.

Genesis and Seeds

Copy the Genesis File

::: tip If you want to start a network from scratch, you will need to start the genesis procedure by creating a genesis.json and submit + collect the genesis transactions from the validators. :::

If you want to connect to an existing testnet, fetch the testnet's genesis.json file and copy it into the ethermintd's config directory (i.e $HOME/.ethermintd/config/genesis.json).

Then verify the correctness of the genesis configuration file:

ethermintd validate-genesis

Add Seed Nodes

Your node needs to know how to find peers. You'll need to add healthy seed nodes to $HOME/.ethermintd/config/config.toml. If those seeds aren't working, you can find more seeds and persistent peers on an existing explorer.

For more information on seeds and peers, you can the Tendermint P2P documentation.

Start testnet

The final step is to start the nodes. Once enough voting power (+2/3) from the genesis validators is up-and-running, the testnet will start producing blocks.

Next {hide}

Learn about how to setup a validator node on Ethermint {hide}