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Hyperledger Fabric Gateway

The Fabric Gateway is a core component of a Fabric blockchain network and coordinates the actions required to submit transactions and query ledger state on behalf of client applications. By using the Gateway, client applications only need to connect to a single endpoint in the Fabric network.

The Gateway SDKs implement the Fabric programming model as described in the Developing Applications chapter of the Fabric documentation.

Overview

The original proposal is described in the Fabric Gateway RFC. Adding a Gateway component to the Fabric Peer provides a single entry point to a Fabric network, and removes much of the transaction submission logic from the client application.

The Gateway component in the Fabric Peer exposes a simple gRPC interface to client applications and manages the lifecycle of transaction invocation on behalf of the client. This minimises the network traffic passing between the client and the blockchain network as well as minimising the number of network ports that need to be opened.

See the gateway.proto file for details of the gRPC interface.

Configuring the Gateway

Enable the Gateway feature flag in core.yaml by adding the following:

peer:
    gateway:
        enabled: true

Alternatively, using yq:

docker run --rm -v "${PWD}":/workdir mikefarah/yq eval '.peer.gateway.enabled = true' --inplace core.yaml

Client SDKs

Three SDKs are available to support the development of client applications that interact with the Fabric network via the Gateway.

Go SDK

The Go SDK provides a high-level API for client applications written in Go.

Read the quickstart guide for more details.

Node SDK

The Node SDK provides a high-level API for client applications written in Javascript or Typescript.

Read the quickstart guide for more details.

Java SDK

The Java SDK provides a high-level API for client applications written in Java.

Read the quickstart guide for more details.

Building and testing

Install pre-reqs

This repo comprises the Gateway server (written in Go) and three SDKs (written in Go, Typescript and Java). In order to build these components, the following needs to be installed and available in the PATH:

  • Go (v1.14)
  • Node (optional for Node SDK)
  • Typescript (optional for Node SDK)
  • Java 11 (optional for Java SDK)
  • Docker
  • Protobuf compiler (https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/downloads)
  • Some Go tools:
    • GO111MODULE=on go get github.com/cucumber/godog/cmd/[email protected]
    • go get -u golang.org/x/lint/golint
    • go get -u golang.org/x/tools/cmd/goimports
    • go get google.golang.org/grpc google.golang.org/protobuf/cmd/protoc-gen-go google.golang.org/grpc/cmd/protoc-gen-go-grpc
    • go get honnef.co/go/tools/cmd/staticcheck
    • go get github.com/golang/mock/mockgen

Build using make

The following Makefile targets are available

  • make build-go - compile the gateway server executable
  • make pull-latest-peer - fetch the latest peer docker image containing the gateway server
  • make unit-test-go - run unit tests for the gateway server and Go SDK
  • make unit-test-node - run unit tests for the Node SDK
  • make unit-test-java - run unit tests for the Java SDK
  • make unit-test - run unit tests for the gateway server and all three SDKs
  • make scenario-test-go - run the scenario (end to end integration) tests for Go SDK
  • make scenario-test-node - run the scenario tests for Node SDK
  • make scenario-test-java - run the scenario tests for Java SDK
  • make scenario-test - run the scenario tests for all SDKs
  • make test - run all unit and scenario tests
  • make generate - generate mock implementations used by unit tests

Note that immediately after creating a fresh copy of this repository, auto-generated test mocks will not be preset so Go code will show errors. Running the unit-test make target will generate the required mock implementations, and they can also be generated explicitly by running make generate.

Scenario tests

The scenario tests create a Fabric network comprising two orgs (one peer in each org) and a single gateway within a set of docker containers. The clients connect to the gateway to submit transactions and query the ledger state.

The tests are defined as feature files using the Cucumber BDD framework. The same set of feature files is used across all three SDKs to ensure consistency of behaviour.

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Go, Java and Node SDKs for Fabric embedded Gateway

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