go-waku/examples/chat2
Richard Ramos 38b9ec5448
basic2 example
2021-04-04 15:33:21 -04:00
..
build add chat2 example 2021-04-04 13:08:48 -04:00
pb add chat2 example 2021-04-04 13:08:48 -04:00
Makefile add chat2 example 2021-04-04 13:08:48 -04:00
README.md add chat2 example 2021-04-04 13:08:48 -04:00
chat.go basic2 example 2021-04-04 15:33:21 -04:00
go.mod basic2 example 2021-04-04 15:33:21 -04:00
go.sum add chat2 example 2021-04-04 13:08:48 -04:00
main.go add chat2 example 2021-04-04 13:08:48 -04:00
ui.go add chat2 example 2021-04-04 13:08:48 -04:00

README.md

Using the chat2 application

Background

The chat2 application is a basic command-line chat app using the Waku v2 suite of protocols. It connects to a fleet of test nodes to provide end-to-end p2p chat capabilities. The Waku team is currently using this application for internal testing. If you want try our protocols, or join the dogfooding fun, follow the instructions below.

Preparation

make

Basic application usage

To start the chat2 application in its most basic form, run the following from the project directory

./build/chat2

The app will randomly select and connect to a peer from the test fleet.

No static peers configured. Choosing one at random from test fleet...

Wait for the chat prompt (>) and chat away!

Retrieving historical messages

TODO

Specifying a static peer

In order to connect to a specific node as relay peer, define that node's multiaddr as a staticnode when starting the app:

./build/chat2 -staticnode=/ip4/134.209.139.210/tcp/30303/p2p/16Uiu2HAmPLe7Mzm8TsYUubgCAW1aJoeFScxrLj8ppHFivPo97bUZ

This will bypass the random peer selection process and connect to the specified node.

In-chat options

Command Effect
/help displays available in-chat commands
/connect interactively connect to a new peer
/nick change nickname for current chat session
/peers Display the list of connected peers

chat2 message protobuf format

Each chat2 message is encoded as follows

message Chat2Message {
  uint64 timestamp = 1;
  string nick = 2;
  bytes payload = 3;
}

where timestamp is the Unix timestamp of the message, nick is the relevant chat2 user's selected nickname and payload is the actual chat message being sent. The payload is the byte array representation of a UTF8 encoded string.