prysm-pulse/README.md
Raul Jordan d5ff23380e sharding: update documentation for minimal sharding protocol
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Prysmatic Labs Sharding Implementation

Travis Build

This is the main repository for the sharding implementation of the go-ethereum client by Prysmatic Labs. For the original, go-ethereum project, refer to the following link.

Before you begin, check out our Sharding Reference Implementation Doc. This doc serves as the single source of truth for our team, our milestones, and details on the different components of our architecture.

Interested in contributing? Check out our Contribution Guidelines and join our active chat room on Gitter below:

Gitter

Table of Contents

Installation

Create a folder in your $GOPATH and navigate to it

$ mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/ethereum && cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/ethereum

Clone our repository as go-ethereum

$ git clone https://github.com/prysmaticlabs/geth-sharding ./go-ethereum

For prerequisites and detailed build instructions please read the Installation Instructions on the wiki.

Building geth requires both a Go (version 1.7 or later) and a C compiler. You can install them using your favourite package manager. Once the dependencies are installed, run

$ make geth

or, to build the full suite of utilities:

$ make all

Sharding Instructions

To get started with running the project, follow the instructions to initialize your own private Ethereum blockchain and geth node, as they will be required to run before you can begin proposing collations into shard chains.

Running a Local Geth Node

To start a local Geth node, you can create your own genesis.json file similar to:

{
    "config": {
        "chainId": 12345,
        "homesteadBlock": 0,
        "eip155Block": 0,
        "eip158Block": 0
    },
    "difficulty": "200",
    "gasLimit": "210000000000",
    "alloc": {
        "826f3F66dB0416ea82033aE917A611bfBF4D98b6": { "balance": "300000" },
    }
}

The alloc portion specifies account addresses with prefunded ETH when the Ethereum blockchain is created. You can modify this section of the genesis to include your own test address and prefund it with 100ETH.

Then, you can build geth and init a new instance of a local, Ethereum blockchain as follows:

$ make geth
$ ./build/bin/geth init /path/to/genesis.json -datadir /path/to/your/datadir
$ ./build/bin/geth --nodiscover console --datadir /path/to/your/datadir --networkid 12345

It is important to note that the --networkid flag must match the chainId property in the genesis file.

Then, the geth console can start up and you can start a miner as follows:

> personal.newAccount()
> miner.setEtherbase(eth.accounts[0])
> miner.start(1)

Now, save the passphrase you used in the geth node into a text file called password.txt. Then, once you have this private geth node running on your local network, we will need to generate test, pending transactions that can then be processed into collations by proposers. For this, we have created an in-house transaction generator CLI tool.

Transaction Generator

Work in Progress. To track our current draft of the tx generator cli spec, visit this link. Generating test transactions on a local network will allow for benchmarking of tx throughput within our system.

Becoming a Collator

Our system outlined below follows the Minimal Sharding Protocol as outlined by Vitalik on ETHResearch where any actor can submit collation headers via the SMC, but only a selected committee of notaries is allowed to vote on collations in each period. Notaries are in charge of data availability checking and consensus is reached upon a collation header receiving >= 2/3 votes in a period.

To deposit ETH and join as a notary in the Sharding Manager Contract, run the following command:

geth sharding --notary --deposit --datadir /path/to/your/datadir --password /path/to/your/password.txt --networkid 12345

This will extract 100ETH from your account balance and insert you into the SMC's notaries. Then, the program will listen for incoming block headers and notify you when you have been selected as to vote on proposals for a certain shard in a given period. Once you are selected, your sharding client will download collation information to check for data availability on vote on proposals that have been submitted via the addHeader function on the SMC.

Concurrently, you will need to run another client that is tasked with processing transactions into collations and submitting them to the SMC via the addHeader function.

Running a Collation Proposal Client

geth sharding --proposer --datadir /path/to/your/datadir --password /path/to/your/password.txt --networkid 12345

This client is tasked with processing pending transactions into blobs within collations by serializing data into collation bodies. It is responsible for submitting proposals (collation headers) to the SMC via the addHeader function.

Making Changes

Rebuilding the Sharding Manager Contract Bindings

The Sharding Manager Contract is built in Solidity and deployed to the geth node upon launch of the client if it does not exist in the network at a specified address. If there are any changes to the SMC's code, the Golang bindigs must be rebuilt with the following command.

go generate github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/sharding
# OR
cd sharding && go generate

Testing

To run the unit tests of our system do:

go test github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/sharding

We will require more complex testing scenarios (fuzz tests) to measure the full integrity of the system as it evolves.

Contribution Guidelines

Excited by our work and want to get involved in building out our sharding releases? Our Sharding Reference Implementation Doc has all you need to know in order to begin helping us make this happen. We created this document as a single source of reference for all things related to sharding Ethereum, and we need as much help as we can get!

You can explore our Current Projects in-the works for the Ruby release. Each of the project boards contain a full collection of open and closed issues relevant to the different parts of our first implementation that we use to track our open source progress. Feel free to fork our repo and start creating PRs after assigning yourself to an issue of interest. We are always chatting on Gitter, so drop us a line there if you want to get more involved or have any questions on our implementation!

Contribution Steps

  • Create a folder in your $GOPATH and navigate to it mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/ethereum && cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/ethereum
  • Clone our repository as go-ethereum, git clone https://github.com/prysmaticlabs/geth-sharding ./go-ethereum
  • Fork the go-ethereum repository on Github: https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum
  • Add a remote to your fork `git remote add YOURNAME https://github.com/YOURNAME/go-ethereum

Now you should have a remote pointing to the origin repo (geth-sharding) and to your forked, go-ethereum repo on Github. To commit changes and start a Pull Request, our workflow is as follows:

  • Create a new branch with a clear feature name such as git checkout -b collations-pool
  • Issue changes with clear commit messages
  • Run the linter and CI tester as follows go run build/ci.go test && go run build/ci.go lint
  • Push to your remote git push YOURNAME collations-pool
  • Go to the geth-sharding repository on Github and start a PR comparing geth-sharding:master with go-ethereum:collations-pool (your fork on your profile).
  • Add a clear PR title along with a description of what this PR encompasses, when it can be closed, and what you are currently working on. Github markdown checklists work great for this.

License

The go-ethereum library (i.e. all code outside of the cmd directory) is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0, also included in our repository in the COPYING.LESSER file.

The go-ethereum binaries (i.e. all code inside of the cmd directory) is licensed under the GNU General Public License v3.0, also included in our repository in the COPYING file.