mirror of https://github.com/waku-org/nwaku.git
1.5 KiB
1.5 KiB
Quickstart: running a nwaku node
This guide helps you run a nwaku node with typical configuration.
It connects your node to the wakuv2.prod
fleet for bootstrapping
and enables discovery v5 for continuous peer discovery.
Only relay
protocol is enabled.
For a more comprehensive overview,
see our step-by-step guide.
Option 1: run nwaku binary
Prerequisites are the usual developer tools, such as a C compiler, Make, Bash and Git.
git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/status-im/nwaku
cd nwaku
make wakunode2
./build/wakunode2 \
--dns-discovery:true \
--dns-discovery-url:enrtree://AOGECG2SPND25EEFMAJ5WF3KSGJNSGV356DSTL2YVLLZWIV6SAYBM@prod.waku.nodes.status.im \
--discv5-discovery \
--nat=extip:[yourpublicip] # or, if you are behind a nat: --nat=any
Option 2: run nwaku in a Docker container
Prerequisite is a Docker installation.
docker run -i -t -p 60000:60000 -p 9000:9000/udp \
statusteam/nim-waku:v0.12.0 \ # or, the image:tag of your choice
--dns-discovery:true \
--dns-discovery-url:enrtree://AOGECG2SPND25EEFMAJ5WF3KSGJNSGV356DSTL2YVLLZWIV6SAYBM@prod.waku.nodes.status.im \
--discv5-discovery \
--nat:extip:[yourpublicip] # or, if you are behind a nat: --nat=any
Tips and tricks
To find the public IP of your host, you can use
dig TXT +short o-o.myaddr.l.google.com @ns1.google.com | awk -F'"' '{ print $2}'