nwaku/docs/operators/how-to/configure-store.md

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Configure store protocol

This instructions apply to nwaku version v0.13.0+. For versions prior to v0.13.0, check this page.

The waku store protocol is disabled by default the nwaku node. This is controlled by the --store option. To enable waku store protocol on startup, specify explicitly the --store option set to true:

wakunode2 --store=true

This option controls the mounting of the Waku Store protocol, meaning that your node will indicate to other peers that it supports the Waku store protocol.

Configuring the node as a waku store client

Provide at least one store service node address with the --storenode option. This option is independent of the --store option i.e., one node can act as a waku store client without mounting the Waku Store protocol.

For example, to use the peer at /dns4/node-01.ac-cn-hongkong-c.wakuv2.test.statusim.net/tcp/30303/p2p/16Uiu2HAkvWiyFsgRhuJEb9JfjYxEkoHLgnUQmr1N5mKWnYjxYRVm as the waku store service node:

wakunode2 \
  --storenode=/dns4/node-01.ac-cn-hongkong-c.wakuv2.test.statusim.net/tcp/30303/p2p/16Uiu2HAkvWiyFsgRhuJEb9JfjYxEkoHLgnUQmr1N5mKWnYjxYRVm

Your node can now send queries to retrieve historical messages from the configured store service node. One way to trigger such queries is asking your node for historical messages using the Waku v2 JSON RPC API.

Configuring the node as a store service node

If the waku store node is enabled (the --store option is set to true) the node will store historical messages and will be able to serve those messages to the waku store clients.

There is a set of configuration options to customize the waku store protocol's message store. These are the most relevant:

  • --store-message-retention-policy: This option controls the retention policy i.e., how long certain messages will be persisted. Three different retention policies are supported:

    • The time retention policy,time:<duration-in-seconds> (e.g., time:14400)
    • The capacity retention policy,capacity:<messages-count> (e.g, capacity:25000)
    • The size retention policy,size:<size-in-gb-mb> (e.g, size:25Gb)
    • To disable the retention policy, explicitly, set this option to "", an empty string.
  • --store-message-db-url: The message store database url option controls the message storage engine. This option follows the SQLAlchemy database URL format.

    • SQLite engine: The only database engine supported by the nwaku node. The database URL has this shape: sqlite://<database-file-path>. If the <database-file-path> is not an absolute path (preceded by a / character), the file will be created in the current working directory. The SQLite engine also supports to select a non-persistent in-memory database by setting the <database-file-path> to :memory:.
    • In the case you don't want to use a persistent message store; set the --store-message-db-url to an empty string, "". This will instruct the node to use the fallback in-memory message store.

By default the node message store will be configured with a time retention policy set to 14400 seconds (4 hours). Additionally, by default, the node message store will use the SQLite database engine to store historical messages in order to persist these between restarts.

⚠️ Note the 3 slashes, ///, after the SQLite database URL schema. The third slash indicates that it is an absolute path: /mnt/nwaku/data/db1/store.sqlite3

wakunode2 \
  --store=true \
  --store-message-db-url=sqlite:///mnt/nwaku/data/db1/store.sqlite3 \
  --store-message-retention-policy=capacity:150000

How much resources should I allocate?

Currently store service nodes use, by default, a message store backed by an in-disk SQLite database. Most Waku messages average a size of 1KB - 2KB, implying a minimum memory requirement of at least ~250MB for a typical store capacity of 100k messages. Note, however, that the allowable maximum size for Waku messages is up to 1MB.