4.9 KiB
project lotus - 莲
Lotus is an experimental implementation of the Filecoin Distributed Storage Network. For more details, check out the spec.
Development
All work is tracked via issues. An attempt at keeping an up-to-date view on remaining work is in the lotus testnet github project board.
Building
Dependencies:
- go1.12 or higher
- gcc (v7.4.0 or higher)
- git
- bzr (some go dependency needs this)
- b2sum
- jq
- pkg-config
Building:
$ make
Devnet
Node setup
(If you have run lotus before and want to remove all previous data: rm -rf ~/.lotusstorage
)
Start full node daemon
$ lotus daemon
Check that you are connected to the network
$ lotus net peers | wc -l
2 # number of peers
[wait for the chain to finish syncing]
You can see current chain height with
lotus chain getblock $(lotus chain head) | jq .Height
Basics
Create new address
$ lotus wallet new bls
t3...
Grab some funds from faucet - go to http://147.75.80.29:777/, paste the address you just created, and press Send
See wallet balance:
$ lotus wallet balance [optional address (t3...)]
(NOTE: If you see an error like actor not found
after executing this command,
it means that either there are no transactions to this address on chain - using
faucet should 'fix' this, or your node isn't fully synced)
Mining
Ensure that at least one BLS address (t3..
) in your wallet has enough funds to
cover pledge collateral:
$ lotus state pledge-collateral
1234
$ lotus wallet balance t3...
8999
(Balance must be higher than the returned pledge collateral for the next step to work)
Initialize storage miner:
$ lotus-storage-miner init --owner=t3...
This command should return successfully after miner is setup on-chain (30-60s)
Start mining:
$ lotus-storage-miner run
Seal random data to start producing PoSts:
$ lotus-storage-miner store-garbage
Making deals
TODO: see $ lotus client
commands
Pond UI
Build:
$ make pond
Run:
$ ./pond run
Listening on http://127.0.0.1:2222
Now go to http://127.0.0.1:2222, basic usage should be rather intuitive
Note: don't leave unattended for long periods of time (10h+), the web-ui tends to eventually consume all the available RAM
Troubleshooting
- Turn it off
rm -rf ~/.lotus ~/.lotusstorage/
- "Turn it on" - Start at the top
- If that didn't help, open a new issue
Architecture
Lotus is architected modularly, and aims to keep clean api boundaries between everything, even if they are in the same process. Notably, the 'lotus full node' software, and the 'lotus storage miner' software are two separate programs.
The lotus storage miner is intended to be run on the machine that manages a single storage miner instance, and is meant to communicate with the full node via the websockets api for all of its chain interaction needs. This way, a mining operation may easily run one or many storage miners, connected to one or many full node instances.
Notable Modules
Api
The systems api is defined in here. The rpc maps directly to the api defined
here using the jsonrpc package in lib/jsonrpc
.
Chain/Types
Implementation of data structures used by Filecoin and their serializations.
Chain/Store
The chainstore manages all local chain state, including block headers, messages, and state.
Chain/State
A package for dealing with the filecoin state tree. Wraps the HAMT.
Chain/Actors
Implementations of the builtin Filecoin network actors.
Chain/Vm
The filecoin state machine 'vm'. Implemented here are utilities to invoke filecoin actor methods.
Miner
The block producer logic. This package interfaces with the full node through the api, despite currently being implented in the same process (very likely to be extracted as its own separate process in the near future).
Storage
The storage miner logic. This package also interfaces with the full node through a subset of the api. This code is used to implement the lotus-storage-miner process.
Pond
Pond is a graphical testbed for lotus. It can be used to spin up nodes, connect them in a given topology, start them mining, and observe how they function over time.
To try it out, run make pond
, then run ./pond run
.
Once it is running, visit localhost:2222 in your browser.
Tracing
Lotus has tracing built into many of its internals. To view the traces, first download jaeger (Choose the 'all-in-one' binary). Then run it somewhere, start up the lotus daemon, and open up localhost:16686 in your browser.
For more details, see this document.
License
Dual-licensed under MIT + Apache 2.0