# Build status-go ## Introduction status-go is an underlying part of Status. It heavily depends on [go-ethereum](https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/) which is [forked](https://github.com/status-im/go-ethereum) and slightly modified by us. ## Build status-go ### 1. Requirements * Nix (Installed automatically) * Docker (only if cross-compiling). > go is provided by Nix ### 2. Clone the repository ```shell git clone https://github.com/status-im/status-go cd status-go ``` ### 3. Set up build environment status-go uses nix in the Makefile to provide every tools required. ### 4. Build the statusd CLI To get started, let’s build the Ethereum node Command Line Interface tool, called `statusd`. ```shell make statusgo ``` Once that is completed, you can run it straight away with a default configuration by running ```shell build/bin/statusd ``` ### 5. Build a library for Android and iOS ```shell make install-gomobile make statusgo-cross # statusgo-android or statusgo-ios to build for specific platform ``` ## Debugging ### IDE Debugging If you’re using Visual Studio Code, you can rename the [.vscode/launch.example.json](https://github.com/status-im/status-go/blob/develop/.vscode/launch.example.json) file to .vscode/launch.json so that you can run the statusd server with the debugger attached. ### Android debugging In order to see the log files while debugging on an Android device, do the following: * Ensure that the app can write to disk by granting it file permissions. For that, you can for instance set your avatar from a file on disk. * Connect a USB cable to your phone and make sure you can use adb. Run ```shell adb shell tail -f sdcard/Android/data/im.status.ethereum.debug/files/Download/geth.log ``` ## Testing First, make sure the code is linted properly: ```shell make lint ``` Next, run unit tests: ```shell make test ``` Unit tests can also be run using `go test` command. If you want to launch specific test, for instance `RPCSendTransactions`, use the following command: ```shell go test -tags gowaku_skip_migrations -v ./api/ -testify.m ^RPCSendTransaction$ ``` Note -testify.m as [testify/suite](https://godoc.org/github.com/stretchr/testify/suite) is used to group individual tests. Finally, run e2e tests: ```shell make test-e2e ``` There is also a command to run all tests in one go: ```shell make ci ``` ### Running Passing the `-h` flag will output all the possible flags used to configure the tool. Although the tool can be used with default configuration, you’ll probably want to delve into the configuration and modify it to your needs. Node configuration - be it through the CLI or as a static library - is done through JSON files following a precise structure. At any point, you can add the `-version` argument to `statusd` to get an output of the JSON configuration in use. You can pass multiple configuration files which will be applied in the order in which they were specified. There are a few standard configuration files located in the config/cli folder to get you started. For instance you can pass `-c les-enabled.json` to enable LES mode. For more details on running a Status Node see [the dedicated page](https://github.com/status-im/status-go/blob/develop/_examples/README.md#run-waku-node). ### Testing with an Ethereum network To setup accounts passphrase you need to setup an environment variable: `export ACCOUNT_PASSWORD="secret_pass_phrase"`. To test statusgo using a given network by name, use: ```shell make ci networkid=rinkeby ``` To test statusgo using a given network by number ID, use: ```shell make ci networkid=3 ``` If you have problems running tests on public network we suggest reading e2e guide.