Welcome to the EOS.IO source code repository! EOS.IO software enables developers to create and deploy high-performance, horizontally scalable, blockchain infrastructure upon which decentralized applications can be built.
This code is currently alpha-quality and under rapid development. That said, there is plenty early experimenters can do including running a private multi-node test network and developing applications (smart contracts).
The public testnet described in the wiki is running the dawn-2.x
branch. The master
branch is no longer compatible with the public testnet. Instructions are provided below for building either option.
- EOS.IO Website
- Documentation
- Blog
- Community Telegram Group
- Developer Telegram Group
- White Paper
- Roadmap
- Getting Started
- Setting up a build/development environment
- Building EOS and running a node
- Example Currency Contract Walkthrough
- Running local testnet
- Running a node on the public testnet
- Doxygen documentation
- Running EOS in Docker
- Manual installation of the dependencies
The following instructions detail the process of getting the software, building it, running a simple test network that produces blocks, account creation and uploading a sample contract to the blockchain.
For Ubuntu 16.10 and MacOS Sierra, there is an automated build script that can install all dependencies and builds EOS.
It is called eosio-build.sh with the following inputs.
- architecture [ubuntu|darwin]
- optional mode [full|build]
The second optional input can be full
or build
where full
implies that it installs dependencies and builds eos. If you omit this input then the build script installs dependencies and then builds eos.
./eosio-build.sh <architecture> <optional mode>
Choose whether you will be building for a local testnet or for the public testnet and jump to the appropriate section below. Clone the EOS repository recursively as described and run eosio-build.sh located in the root eos
folder.
master
is under heavy development and is not suitable for experimentation.
We strongly recommend following the instructions for building the public testnet version for Ubuntu or Mac OS X. master
is in pieces on the garage floor while we rebuild this hotrod. This notice will be removed when master
is usable again. Your patience is appreciated.
git clone https://github.com/eosio/eos --recursive
cd eos
./eosio-build.sh ubuntu
Now you can proceed to the next step - Creating and launching a single-node testnet
git clone https://github.com/eosio/eos --recursive
cd eos
git checkout dawn-2.x
./eosio-build.sh ubuntu
Now you can proceed to the next step - Running a node on the public testnet
Before running the script make sure you have updated XCode and brew:
xcode-select --install
ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
Then clone the EOS repository recursively and run eosio-build.sh in the root eos
folder.
git clone https://github.com/eosio/eos --recursive
cd eos
./eosio-build.sh darwin
Now you can proceed to the next step - Creating and launching a single-node testnet
Before running the script make sure you have updated XCode and brew:
xcode-select --install
ruby -e "$(curl -fsSl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
Then clone the EOS repository recursively, checkout the branch that is compatible with the public testnet, and run eosio-build.sh in the root eos
folder.
git clone https://github.com/eosio/eos --recursive
cd eos
git checkout dawn-2.x
./eosio-build.sh darwin
Now you can proceed to the next step - Running a node on the public testnet
To download all of the code, download EOS source code and a recursion or two of submodules. The easiest way to get all of this is to do a recursive clone:
git clone https://github.com/eosio/eos --recursive
If a repo is cloned without the --recursive
flag, the submodules can be retrieved after the fact by running this command from within the repo:
git submodule update --init --recursive
The WASM_LLVM_CONFIG environment variable is used to find our recently built WASM compiler.
This is needed to compile the example contracts inside eos/contracts
folder and their respective tests.
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/eosio/eos --recursive
mkdir -p ~/eos/build && cd ~/eos/build
cmake -DBINARYEN_BIN=~/binaryen/bin -DOPENSSL_ROOT_DIR=/usr/local/opt/openssl -DOPENSSL_LIBRARIES=/usr/local/opt/openssl/lib ..
make -j4
Out-of-source builds are also supported. To override clang's default choice in compiler, add these flags to the CMake command:
-DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=/path/to/c++ -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=/path/to/cc
For a debug build, add -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug
. Other common build types include Release
and RelWithDebInfo
.
To run the test suite after building, run the chain_test
executable in the tests
folder.
EOS comes with a number of programs you can find in ~/eos/build/programs
. They are listed below:
- eosiod - server-side blockchain node component
- eosioc - command line interface to interact with the blockchain
- eosiowd - EOS wallet
- eosio-launcher - application for nodes network composing and deployment; more on eosio-launcher
After successfully building the project, the eosiod
binary should be present in the build/programs/eosiod
directory. Run eosiod
-- it will probably exit with an error, but if not, close it immediately with Ctrl-C. If it exited with an error, note that eosiod
created a directory named data-dir
containing the default configuration (config.ini
) and some other internals. This default data storage path can be overridden by passing --data-dir /path/to/data
to eosiod
. These instructions will continue to use the default directory.
Edit the config.ini
file, adding/updating the following settings to the defaults already in place:
# Load the testnet genesis state, which creates some initial block producers with the default key
genesis-json = /path/to/eos/source/genesis.json
# Enable production on a stale chain, since a single-node test chain is pretty much always stale
enable-stale-production = true
# Enable block production with the testnet producers
producer-name = inita
producer-name = initb
producer-name = initc
producer-name = initd
producer-name = inite
producer-name = initf
producer-name = initg
producer-name = inith
producer-name = initi
producer-name = initj
producer-name = initk
producer-name = initl
producer-name = initm
producer-name = initn
producer-name = inito
producer-name = initp
producer-name = initq
producer-name = initr
producer-name = inits
producer-name = initt
producer-name = initu
# Load the block producer plugin, so you can produce blocks
plugin = eosio::producer_plugin
# Wallet plugin
plugin = eosio::wallet_api_plugin
# As well as API and HTTP plugins
plugin = eosio::chain_api_plugin
plugin = eosio::http_plugin
Now it should be possible to run eosiod
and see it begin producing blocks.
When running eosiod
you should get log messages similar to below. It means the blocks are successfully produced.
1575001ms thread-0 chain_controller.cpp:235 _push_block ] initm #1 @2017-09-04T04:26:15 | 0 trx, 0 pending, exectime_ms=0
1575001ms thread-0 producer_plugin.cpp:207 block_production_loo ] initm generated block #1 @ 2017-09-04T04:26:15 with 0 trxs 0 pending
1578001ms thread-0 chain_controller.cpp:235 _push_block ] initc #2 @2017-09-04T04:26:18 | 0 trx, 0 pending, exectime_ms=0
1578001ms thread-0 producer_plugin.cpp:207 block_production_loo ] initc generated block #2 @ 2017-09-04T04:26:18 with 0 trxs 0 pending
...
EOS comes with example contracts that can be uploaded and run for testing purposes. Next we demonstrate how to upload and interact with the sample contract "currency".
First, run the node
cd ~/eos/build/programs/eosiod/
./eosiod
As you've previously added plugin = eosio::wallet_api_plugin
into config.ini
, EOS wallet will be running as a part of eosiod
process. Every contract requires an associated account, so first, create a wallet.
cd ~/eos/build/programs/eosioc/
./eosioc wallet create # Outputs a password that you need to save to be able to lock/unlock the wallet
For the purpose of this walkthrough, import the private key of the inita
account, a test account included within genesis.json, so that you're able to issue API commands under authority of an existing account. The private key referenced below is found within your config.ini
and is provided to you for testing purposes.
./eosioc wallet import 5KQwrPbwdL6PhXujxW37FSSQZ1JiwsST4cqQzDeyXtP79zkvFD3
First, generate some public/private key pairs that will be later assigned as owner_key
and active_key
.
cd ~/eos/build/programs/eosioc/
./eosioc create key # owner_key
./eosioc create key # active_key
This will output two pairs of public and private keys
Private key: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Public key: EOSXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Important: Save the values for future reference.
Run the create
command where inita
is the account authorizing the creation of the currency
account and PUBLIC_KEY_1
and PUBLIC_KEY_2
are the values generated by the create key
command
./eosioc create account inita currency PUBLIC_KEY_1 PUBLIC_KEY_2
You should then get a JSON response back with a transaction ID confirming it was executed successfully.
Go ahead and check that the account was successfully created
./eosioc get account currency
If all went well, you will receive output similar to the following:
{
"account_name": "currency",
"eos_balance": "0.0000 EOS",
"staked_balance": "0.0001 EOS",
"unstaking_balance": "0.0000 EOS",
"last_unstaking_time": "2035-10-29T06:32:22",
...
Now import the active private key generated previously in the wallet:
./eosioc wallet import XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Before uploading a contract, verify that there is no current contract:
./eosioc get code currency
code hash: 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
With an account for a contract created, upload a sample contract:
./eosioc set contract currency ../../contracts/currency/currency.wast ../../contracts/currency/currency.abi
As a response you should get a JSON with a transaction_id
field. Your contract was successfully uploaded!
You can also verify that the code has been set with the following command:
./eosioc get code currency
It will return something like:
code hash: 9b9db1a7940503a88535517049e64467a6e8f4e9e03af15e9968ec89dd794975
Before using the currency contract, you must issue the currency.
./eosioc push action currency issue '{"to":"currency","quantity":"1000.0000 CUR"}' --permission currency@active
Next verify the currency contract has the proper initial balance:
./eosioc get table currency currency account
{
"rows": [{
"currency": 1381319428,
"balance": 10000000
}
],
"more": false
}
Anyone can send any message to any contract at any time, but the contracts may reject messages which are not given necessary permission. Messages are not sent "from" anyone, they are sent "with permission of" one or more accounts and permission levels. The following commands show a "transfer" message being sent to the "currency" contract.
The content of the message is '{"from":"currency","to":"inita","quantity":"20.0000 CUR","memo":"any string"}'
. In this case we are asking the currency contract to transfer funds from itself to someone else. This requires the permission of the currency contract.
./eosioc push action currency transfer '{"from":"currency","to":"inita","quantity":"20.0000 CUR","memo":"my first transfer"}' --permission currency@active
Below is a generalization that shows the currency
account is only referenced once, to specify which contract to deliver the transfer
message to.
./eosioc push action currency transfer '{"from":"${usera}","to":"${userb}","quantity":"20.0000 CUR","memo":""}' --permission ${usera}@active
As confirmation of a successfully submitted transaction, you will receive JSON output that includes a transaction_id
field.
So now check the state of both of the accounts involved in the previous transaction.
./eosioc get table inita currency account
{
"rows": [{
"currency": 1381319428,
"balance": 200000
}
],
"more": false
}
./eosioc get table currency currency account
{
"rows": [{
"currency": 1381319428,
"balance": 9800000
}
],
"more": false
}
As expected, the receiving account inita now has a balance of 20 tokens, and the sending account now has 20 less tokens than its initial supply.
To run a local testnet you can use the eosio-launcher
application provided in the ~/eos/build/programs/eosio-launcher
folder.
For testing purposes you will run two local production nodes talking to each other.
cd ~/eos/build
cp ../genesis.json ./
./programs/eosio-launcher/eosio-launcher -p2 --skip-signature
This command will generate two data folders for each instance of the node: tn_data_00
and tn_data_01
.
You should see the following response:
spawning child, programs/eosiod/eosiod --skip-transaction-signatures --data-dir tn_data_0
spawning child, programs/eosiod/eosiod --skip-transaction-signatures --data-dir tn_data_1
To confirm the nodes are running, run the following eosioc
commands:
~/eos/build/programs/eosioc
./eosioc -p 8888 get info
./eosioc -p 8889 get info
For each command, you should get a JSON response with blockchain information.
You can read more on eosio-launcher and its settings here
To run a local node connected to the public testnet operated by block.one, a script is provided.
cd ~/eos/build/scripts
./start_npnode.sh
This command will use the data folder provided for the instance called testnet_np
.
You should see the following response:
Launched eosd.
See testnet_np/stderr.txt for eosd output.
Synching requires at least 8 minutes, depending on network conditions.
To confirm eosd operation and synchronization:
tail -F testnet_np/stderr.txt
To exit tail, use Ctrl-C. During synchronization, you will see log messages similar to:
3439731ms chain_plugin.cpp:272 accept_block ] Syncing Blockchain --- Got block: #200000 time: 2017-12-09T07:56:32 producer: initu
3454532ms chain_plugin.cpp:272 accept_block ] Syncing Blockchain --- Got block: #210000 time: 2017-12-09T13:29:52 producer: initc
Synchronization is complete when you see log messages similar to:
42467ms net_plugin.cpp:1245 start_sync ] Catching up with chain, our last req is 351734, theirs is 351962 peer ip-10-160-11-116:9876
42792ms chain_controller.cpp:208 _push_block ] initt #351947 @2017-12-12T22:59:44 | 0 trx, 0 pending, exectime_ms=0
42793ms chain_controller.cpp:208 _push_block ] inito #351948 @2017-12-12T22:59:46 | 0 trx, 0 pending, exectime_ms=0
42793ms chain_controller.cpp:208 _push_block ] initd #351949 @2017-12-12T22:59:48 | 0 trx, 0 pending, exectime_ms=0
This eosd instance listens on 127.0.0.1:8888 for http requests, on all interfaces at port 9877 for p2p requests, and includes the wallet plugins.
You can find more detailed API documentation in the Doxygen reference.
For the master
branch: https://eosio.github.io/eos/
For the public testnet branch: http://htmlpreview.github.io/?https://github.com/EOSIO/eos/blob/dawn-2.x/docs/index.html
You can find up to date information about EOS Docker in the Docker Readme
If you prefer to manually build dependencies, follow the steps below.
This project is written primarily in C++14 and uses CMake as its build system. An up-to-date Clang and the latest version of CMake is recommended.
Dependencies:
- Clang 4.0.0
- CMake 3.5.1
- Boost 1.64
- OpenSSL
- LLVM 4.0
- secp256k1-zkp (Cryptonomex branch)
- binaryen
Install the development toolkit:
sudo apt-get update
wget -O - https://apt.llvm.org/llvm-snapshot.gpg.key|sudo apt-key add -
sudo apt-get install clang-4.0 lldb-4.0 libclang-4.0-dev cmake make \
libbz2-dev libssl-dev libgmp3-dev \
autotools-dev build-essential \
libbz2-dev libicu-dev python-dev \
autoconf libtool git
Install Boost 1.64:
cd ~
wget -c 'https://sourceforge.net/projects/boost/files/boost/1.64.0/boost_1_64_0.tar.bz2/download' -O boost_1.64.0.tar.bz2
tar xjf boost_1.64.0.tar.bz2
cd boost_1_64_0/
echo "export BOOST_ROOT=$HOME/opt/boost_1_64_0" >> ~/.bash_profile
source ~/.bash_profile
./bootstrap.sh "--prefix=$BOOST_ROOT"
./b2 install
source ~/.bash_profile
Install secp256k1-zkp (Cryptonomex branch):
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/cryptonomex/secp256k1-zkp.git
cd secp256k1-zkp
./autogen.sh
./configure
make
sudo make install
To use the WASM compiler, EOS has an external dependency on binaryen:
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen.git
cd ~/binaryen
git checkout tags/1.37.14
cmake . && make
Add BINARYEN_ROOT
to your .bash_profile:
echo "export BINARYEN_ROOT=~/binaryen" >> ~/.bash_profile
source ~/.bash_profile
By default LLVM and clang do not include the WASM build target, so you will have to build it yourself:
mkdir ~/wasm-compiler
cd ~/wasm-compiler
git clone --depth 1 --single-branch --branch release_40 https://github.com/llvm-mirror/llvm.git
cd llvm/tools
git clone --depth 1 --single-branch --branch release_40 https://github.com/llvm-mirror/clang.git
cd ..
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -G "Unix Makefiles" -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=.. -DLLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD= -DLLVM_EXPERIMENTAL_TARGETS_TO_BUILD=WebAssembly -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ../
make -j4 install
Your environment is set up. Now you can build EOS and run a node.
macOS additional Dependencies:
- Brew
- Newest XCode
Upgrade your XCode to the newest version:
xcode-select --install
Install homebrew:
ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
Install the dependencies:
brew update
brew install git automake libtool boost openssl llvm@4 gmp ninja gettext
brew link gettext --force
Install secp256k1-zkp (Cryptonomex branch):
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/cryptonomex/secp256k1-zkp.git
cd secp256k1-zkp
./autogen.sh
./configure
make
sudo make install
Install binaryen v1.37.14:
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen.git
cd ~/binaryen
git checkout tags/1.37.14
cmake . && make
Add BINARYEN_ROOT
to your .bash_profile:
echo "export BINARYEN_ROOT=~/binaryen" >> ~/.bash_profile
source ~/.bash_profile
Build LLVM and clang for WASM:
mkdir ~/wasm-compiler
cd ~/wasm-compiler
git clone --depth 1 --single-branch --branch release_40 https://github.com/llvm-mirror/llvm.git
cd llvm/tools
git clone --depth 1 --single-branch --branch release_40 https://github.com/llvm-mirror/clang.git
cd ..
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -G "Unix Makefiles" -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=.. -DLLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD= -DLLVM_EXPERIMENTAL_TARGETS_TO_BUILD=WebAssembly -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ../
make -j4 install
Add WASM_LLVM_CONFIG
and LLVM_DIR
to your .bash_profile
:
echo "export WASM_LLVM_CONFIG=~/wasm-compiler/llvm/bin/llvm-config" >> ~/.bash_profile
echo "export LLVM_DIR=/usr/local/Cellar/llvm/4.0.1/lib/cmake/llvm" >> ~/.bash_profile
source ~/.bash_profile