nwaku/waku
Ivan Folgueira Bande a49031ba3f
postgres_driver: add more error handling when creating partitions
Given that multiple nodes can be connected to the same database,
it can happen that other node did something that my node was willing
to do. In this commit, we overcome the possible "interleaved"
partition creation.
2024-07-08 14:57:52 +02:00
..
common fix: multi nat initialization causing dead lock in waku tests + serialize test runs to avoid timing and port occupied issues (#2799) 2024-06-12 07:49:55 +02:00
discovery chore: Discovery in libwaku (#2711) 2024-05-21 18:37:50 +02:00
factory chore(rln): rln message limit to 100 (#2883) 2024-07-08 11:52:04 +02:00
incentivization feat(incentivization): add codec for eligibility proof and status (#2419) 2024-03-26 18:25:42 +01:00
node fix: revert "chore: adding observers for message logging (#2800)" (#2815) 2024-06-17 14:30:30 +02:00
utils chore: generic change to reduce the number of compilation warnings (#2696) 2024-05-16 22:29:11 +02:00
waku_api fix: invalid cursor returning messages (#2724) 2024-05-27 10:54:10 -04:00
waku_archive postgres_driver: add more error handling when creating partitions 2024-07-08 14:57:52 +02:00
waku_core unifying clusterId to be uint16 (#2777) 2024-06-05 15:32:35 +02:00
waku_enr unifying clusterId to be uint16 (#2777) 2024-06-05 15:32:35 +02:00
waku_filter_v2 chore: set msg_hash logs to notice level (#2737) 2024-06-10 15:56:55 +02:00
waku_keystore feat(rlnv2): clean fork of rlnv2 (#2828) 2024-06-20 14:55:50 +02:00
waku_lightpush feat: RLN proofs as a lightpush service (#2768) 2024-06-13 21:10:00 +04:00
waku_metadata Generic re-style with nph 0.5.1 (#2396) 2024-03-16 00:08:47 +01:00
waku_noise Generic re-style with nph 0.5.1 (#2396) 2024-03-16 00:08:47 +01:00
waku_peer_exchange refactor: big refactor to add waku component in libwaku instead of onlu waku node (#2658) 2024-05-03 14:07:15 +02:00
waku_relay fix: revert "chore: adding observers for message logging (#2800)" (#2815) 2024-06-17 14:30:30 +02:00
waku_rln_relay chore(rln-relay): add chain-id flag to wakunode and restrict usage if mismatches rpc provider (#2858) 2024-06-28 11:19:16 +02:00
waku_store chore: generic change to reduce the number of compilation warnings (#2696) 2024-05-16 22:29:11 +02:00
waku_store_legacy chore: generic change to reduce the number of compilation warnings (#2696) 2024-05-16 22:29:11 +02:00
README.md chore: simple link refactor (#2781) 2024-06-07 13:07:15 +05:30
waku_api.nim Generic re-style with nph 0.5.1 (#2396) 2024-03-16 00:08:47 +01:00
waku_archive.nim Generic re-style with nph 0.5.1 (#2396) 2024-03-16 00:08:47 +01:00
waku_core.nim Generic re-style with nph 0.5.1 (#2396) 2024-03-16 00:08:47 +01:00
waku_enr.nim Generic re-style with nph 0.5.1 (#2396) 2024-03-16 00:08:47 +01:00
waku_filter_v2.nim Generic re-style with nph 0.5.1 (#2396) 2024-03-16 00:08:47 +01:00
waku_keystore.nim Generic re-style with nph 0.5.1 (#2396) 2024-03-16 00:08:47 +01:00
waku_lightpush.nim Generic re-style with nph 0.5.1 (#2396) 2024-03-16 00:08:47 +01:00
waku_metadata.nim Generic re-style with nph 0.5.1 (#2396) 2024-03-16 00:08:47 +01:00
waku_node.nim chore: Separation of node health and initialization state from rln_relay (#2612) 2024-04-23 18:53:18 +02:00
waku_peer_exchange.nim Generic re-style with nph 0.5.1 (#2396) 2024-03-16 00:08:47 +01:00
waku_relay.nim chore: remove references to v2 (#1898) 2023-08-09 18:11:50 +01:00
waku_rln_relay.nim Generic re-style with nph 0.5.1 (#2396) 2024-03-16 00:08:47 +01:00
waku_store.nim Generic re-style with nph 0.5.1 (#2396) 2024-03-16 00:08:47 +01:00
waku_store_legacy.nim feat: store v3 (#2431) 2024-04-25 09:09:52 -04:00

README.md

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.

See specifications.

How to Build & Run

Prerequisites

  • GNU Make, Bash and the usual POSIX utilities. Git 2.9.4 or newer.

Wakunode binary

# 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

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 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

# Run all the Waku tests
make test

To run a specific test.

# 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 and chronicles documentation.

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.

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.

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.

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.

wakunode2 --nodekey=<64_char_hex>

This option takes a 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.

openssl rand -hex 32

Example output:

$ 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.

# 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:

read EC key
writing EC key
0c687bb8a7984c770b566eae08520c67f53d302f24b8d4e5e47cc479a1e1ce23

where the key 0c687bb8a7984c770b566eae08520c67f53d302f24b8d4e5e47cc479a1e1ce23 can be used as nodekey.

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.

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, 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. 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 for a complete guide to DNS discovery.

Enabling Websocket

Websocket is currently the only Waku transport supported by browser nodes that uses 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:

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.

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:

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"