nwaku/waku/README.md

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# Waku
This folder contains code related to Waku, both as a node and as a protocol.
## Introduction
This is an implementation in Nim of the Waku suite of protocols.
2024-06-07 07:37:15 +00:00
See [specifications](https://rfc.vac.dev/waku/standards/core/10/waku2).
## How to Build & Run
### Prerequisites
* GNU Make, Bash and the usual POSIX utilities. Git 2.9.4 or newer.
### Wakunode binary
```bash
# The first `make` invocation will update all Git submodules.
# You'll run `make update` after each `git pull`, in the future, to keep those submodules up to date.
make wakunode2
# See available command line options
./build/wakunode2 --help
# Connect the client directly with the Status test fleet
# TODO NYI
#./build/wakunode2 --log-level:debug --discovery:off --fleet:test --log-metrics
```
2022-03-16 16:13:23 +00:00
Note: building `wakunode2` requires 2GB of RAM. The build will fail on systems not fulfilling this requirement.
Setting up a `wakunode2` on the smallest [digital ocean](https://docs.digitalocean.com/products/droplets/how-to/) droplet, you can either
* compile on a stronger droplet featuring the same CPU architecture and downgrade after compiling, or
* activate swap on the smallest droplet, or
* use Docker.
### Waku Protocol Test Suite
```bash
# Run all the Waku tests
make test
```
To run a specific test.
```bash
# Get a shell with the right environment variables set
./env.sh bash
# Run a specific test
nim c -r ./tests/test_waku_filter_legacy.nim
```
You can also alter compile options. For example, if you want a less verbose output you can do the following. For more, refer to the [compiler flags](https://nim-lang.org/docs/nimc.html#compiler-usage) and [chronicles documentation](https://github.com/status-im/nim-chronicles#compile-time-configuration).
```bash
nim c -r -d:chronicles_log_level=WARN --verbosity=0 --hints=off ./tests/waku_filter_v2/test_waku_filter.nim
```
You may also want to change the `outdir` to a folder ignored by git.
```bash
nim c -r -d:chronicles_log_level=WARN --verbosity=0 --hints=off --outdir=build ./tests/waku_filter_v2/test_waku_filter.nim
```
### Waku Protocol Example
There are basic examples of both publishing and subscribing,
more limited in features and configuration than the `wakunode2` binary,
located in `examples/`.
There is also a more full featured example in `apps/chat2/`.
## Using Metrics
Metrics are available for Waku nodes.
```bash
make wakunode2
./build/wakunode2 --metrics-server
```
Ensure your Prometheus config `prometheus.yml` contains the targets you care about, e.g.:
```
scrape_configs:
- job_name: "waku"
static_configs:
- targets: ['localhost:8008', 'localhost:8009', 'localhost:8010']
```
For visualisation, similar steps can be used as is written down for Nimbus
[here](https://github.com/status-im/nimbus#metric-visualisation).
There is a similar example dashboard that includes visualisation of the
envelopes available at `metrics/waku-grafana-dashboard.json`.
## Spec support
All Waku RFCs reside at rfc.vac.dev.
Note that Waku specs are titled `WAKU2-XXX`
to differentiate them from a previous legacy version of Waku with RFC titles in the format `WAKU-XXX`.
The legacy Waku protocols are stable, but not under active development.
## Generating and configuring a private key
By default a node will generate a new, random key pair each time it boots,
resulting in a different public libp2p `multiaddrs` after each restart.
To maintain consistent addressing across restarts,
it is possible to configure the node with a previously generated private key using the `--nodekey` option.
```shell
wakunode2 --nodekey=<64_char_hex>
```
This option takes a [Secp256k1](https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Secp256k1) private key in 64 char hexstring format.
To generate such a key on Linux systems,
use the openssl `rand` command to generate a pseudo-random 32 byte hexstring.
```sh
openssl rand -hex 32
```
Example output:
```sh
$ openssl rand -hex 32
6a29e767c96a2a380bb66b9a6ffcd6eb54049e14d796a1d866307b8beb7aee58
```
where the key `6a29e767c96a2a380bb66b9a6ffcd6eb54049e14d796a1d866307b8beb7aee58` can be used as `nodekey`.
To create a reusable keyfile on Linux using `openssl`,
use the `ecparam` command coupled with some standard utilities
whenever you want to extract the 32 byte private key in hex format.
```sh
# Generate keyfile
openssl ecparam -genkey -name secp256k1 -out my_private_key.pem
# Extract 32 byte private key
openssl ec -in my_private_key.pem -outform DER | tail -c +8 | head -c 32| xxd -p -c 32
```
Example output:
```sh
read EC key
writing EC key
0c687bb8a7984c770b566eae08520c67f53d302f24b8d4e5e47cc479a1e1ce23
```
where the key `0c687bb8a7984c770b566eae08520c67f53d302f24b8d4e5e47cc479a1e1ce23` can be used as `nodekey`.
```sh
wakunode2 --nodekey=0c687bb8a7984c770b566eae08520c67f53d302f24b8d4e5e47cc479a1e1ce23
```
## Configuring a domain name
It is possible to configure an IPv4 DNS domain name that resolves to the node's public IPv4 address.
```shell
wakunode2 --dns4-domain-name=mynode.example.com
```
This allows for the node's publicly announced `multiaddrs` to use the `/dns4` scheme.
In addition, nodes with domain name and [secure websocket configured](#enabling-websocket),
will generate a discoverable ENR containing the `/wss` multiaddr with `/dns4` domain name.
This is necessary to verify domain certificates when connecting to this node over secure websocket.
## Using DNS discovery to connect to existing nodes
A node can discover other nodes to connect to using [DNS-based discovery](../docs/tutorial/dns-disc.md).
The following command line options are available:
```
--dns-discovery Enable DNS Discovery
--dns-discovery-url URL for DNS node list in format 'enrtree://<key>@<fqdn>'
--dns-discovery-name-server DNS name server IPs to query. Argument may be repeated.
```
- `--dns-discovery` is used to enable DNS discovery on the node.
Waku DNS discovery is disabled by default.
- `--dns-discovery-url` is mandatory if DNS discovery is enabled.
It contains the URL for the node list.
The URL must be in the format `enrtree://<key>@<fqdn>` where `<fqdn>` is the fully qualified domain name and `<key>` is the base32 encoding of the compressed 32-byte public key that signed the list at that location.
- `--dns-discovery-name-server` is optional and contains the IP(s) of the DNS name servers to query.
If left unspecified, the Cloudflare servers `1.1.1.1` and `1.0.0.1` will be used by default.
A node will attempt connection to all discovered nodes.
This can be used, for example, to connect to one of the existing fleets.
Current URLs for the published fleet lists:
- production fleet: `enrtree://AIRVQ5DDA4FFWLRBCHJWUWOO6X6S4ZTZ5B667LQ6AJU6PEYDLRD5O@sandbox.waku.nodes.status.im`
- test fleet: `enrtree://AOGYWMBYOUIMOENHXCHILPKY3ZRFEULMFI4DOM442QSZ73TT2A7VI@test.waku.nodes.status.im`
See the [separate tutorial](../docs/tutorial/dns-disc.md) for a complete guide to DNS discovery.
## Enabling Websocket
Websocket is currently the only Waku transport supported by browser nodes that uses [js-waku](https://github.com/status-im/js-waku).
Setting up websocket enables your node to directly serve browser peers.
A valid certificate is necessary to serve browser nodes,
you can use [`letsencrypt`](https://letsencrypt.org/):
```shell
sudo letsencrypt -d <your.domain.name>
```
You will need the `privkey.pem` and `fullchain.pem` files.
To enable secure websocket, pass the generated files to `wakunode2`:
Note, the default port for websocket is 8000.
```shell
wakunode2 --websocket-secure-support=true --websocket-secure-key-path="<letsencrypt cert dir>/privkey.pem" --websocket-secure-cert-path="<letsencrypt cert dir>/fullchain.pem"
```
### Self-signed certificates
Self-signed certificates are not recommended for production setups because:
- Browsers do not accept self-signed certificates
- Browsers do not display an error when rejecting a certificate for websocket.
However, they can be used for local testing purposes:
```shell
mkdir -p ./ssl_dir/
openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout ./ssl_dir/key.pem -out ./ssl_dir/cert.pem -sha256 -nodes
wakunode2 --websocket-secure-support=true --websocket-secure-key-path="./ssl_dir/key.pem" --websocket-secure-cert-path="./ssl_dir/cert.pem"
```