-`nwaku` node running [Relay](/learn/concepts/protocols#relay) and [Store](/learn/concepts/protocols#store) protocols with [RLN](/learn/concepts/protocols#rln-relay) enabled.
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:::tip
Check out the [Waku Node Operator Cheatsheet](/Waku-NodeOperator.pdf) to learn how to easily run, monitor, and interact with a node.
We recommend running a `nwaku` node with at least 2GB of RAM, especially if `WSS` is enabled. If running just a `Relay` node, 0.5GB of RAM is sufficient.
Docker Compose [reads the .env file](https://docs.docker.com/compose/environment-variables/set-environment-variables/#additional-information-3) from the filesystem. You can use `.env.example` as a template to provide the configuration values. The recommended process for working with `.env` files is to duplicate `.env.example`, rename it as `.env`, and then make the necessary value edits.
The RLN membership is your access key to The Waku Network. Its registration is done on-chain, allowing your `nwaku` node to send messages decentralised and privately, respecting some rate limits. Other peers won't relay messages that exceed the rate limit.
Launch all the processes: `nwaku` node, database for storing messages, and Grafana for metrics with the following command. Your RLN membership is loaded into `nwaku` under the hood:
If you encounter issues running your node or require assistance with anything, please visit the [#node-help channel](https://discord.com/channels/1110799176264056863/1216748184592711691) on our Discord.
You have successfully started a `nwaku` node with `RLN` enabled using Docker Compose. Have a look at the [Node Configuration Examples](/guides/nwaku/configure-nwaku) and [Advanced Configuration](https://github.com/waku-org/nwaku-compose/blob/master/ADVANCED.md) guides to learn how to configure `nwaku` for different use cases.