laconicd/docs/quickstart/run_node.md
Federico Kunze Küllmer ea3ec3b7c6
docs: testnet (#458)
* testnet docs

* more changes

* testnet and validators
2021-08-19 10:23:33 +00:00

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Run a Node

Configure and run an Ethermint node {synopsis}

Pre-requisite Readings

Automated deployment

Run the local node by running the init.sh script in the base directory of the repository.

::: warning The script below will remove any pre-existing binaries installed. Use the manual deploy if you want to keep your binaries and configuration files. :::

./init.sh

Manual deployment

The instructions for setting up a brand new full node from scratch are the the same as running a single node local testnet.

Start node

To start your node, just type:

ethermintd start --json-rpc.enable=true --json-rpc.api="eth,web3,net"

Key Management

To run a node with the same key every time: replace ethermintd keys add $KEY in ./init.sh with:

echo "your mnemonic here" | ethermintd keys add $KEY --recover

::: tip Ethermint currently only supports 24 word mnemonics. :::

You can generate a new key/mnemonic with:

ethermintd keys add $KEY

To export your ethermint key as an Ethereum private key (for use with Metamask for example):

ethermintd keys unsafe-export-eth-key $KEY

For more about the available key commands, use the --help flag

ethermintd keys -h

Keyring backend options

The instructions above include commands to use test as the keyring-backend. This is an unsecured keyring that doesn't require entering a password and should not be used in production. Otherwise, Ethermint supports using a file or OS keyring backend for key storage. To create and use a file stored key instead of defaulting to the OS keyring, add the flag --keyring-backend file to any relevant command and the password prompt will occur through the command line. This can also be saved as a CLI config option with:

ethermintd config keyring-backend file

:::tip For more information about the Keyring and its backend options, click here. :::

Clearing data from chain

Reset Data

Alternatively, you can reset the blockchain database, remove the node's address book files, and reset the priv_validator.json to the genesis state.

::: danger If you are running a validator node, always be careful when doing ethermintd unsafe-reset-all. You should never use this command if you are not switching chain-id. :::

::: danger IMPORTANT: Make sure that every node has a unique priv_validator.json. Do not copy the priv_validator.json from an old node to multiple new nodes. Running two nodes with the same priv_validator.json will cause you to double sign! :::

First, remove the outdated files and reset the data.

rm $HOME/.ethermintd/config/addrbook.json $HOME/.ethermintd/config/genesis.json
ethermintd unsafe-reset-all

Your node is now in a pristine state while keeping the original priv_validator.json and config.toml. If you had any sentry nodes or full nodes setup before, your node will still try to connect to them, but may fail if they haven't also been upgraded.

Delete Data

Data for the Daemon and CLI binaries should be stored at ~/.ethermintd, respectively by default. To delete the existing binaries and configuration, run:

rm -rf ~/.ethermintd

To clear all data except key storage (if keyring backend chosen) and then you can rerun the full node installation commands from above to start the node again.

Next {hide}

Learn about running a Ethermint testnet {hide}