Run a bunch of Quorum nodes, each in a separate Docker container.
This is simply a learning exercise for configuring Quorum networks. Probably best not used in a production environment.
quorum-docker-Nnodes is not actively supported.
If interested in tooling to deploy Quorum networks using Docker, we encourage you to use quorum-dev-quickstart which is actively maintained and that provides extended capabilities for Quorum network deployments.
If you have any questions or concerns, please reach out to the ConsenSys protocol engineering team on #Discord or by email.
In the top level directory:
docker build -t quorum .
The first time will take a while, but after some caching it gets much quicker for any minor updates.
I've got the size of the final image down to 391MB 308MB from over 890MB. It's likely possible to improve much further on that. Alpine Linux is a candidate minimal base image, but there are challenges with the Haskell dependencies; there's an example here.
Change to the Nnodes/ directory. Edit the ips
variable in setup.sh to list two or more IP addresses on the Docker network that will host nodes:
ips=("172.13.0.2" "172.13.0.3" "172.13.0.4")
The IP addresses are needed for Constellation to work. Now run,
./setup.sh
docker-compose up -d
This will set up as many Quorum nodes as IP addresses you supplied, each in a separate container, on a Docker network, all hopefully talking to each other.
Nnodes> docker ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
83ad1de7eea6 quorum "/qdata/start-node.sh" 55 seconds ago Up 53 seconds 0.0.0.0:22002->8545/tcp nnodes_node_2_1
14b903ca465c quorum "/qdata/start-node.sh" 55 seconds ago Up 54 seconds 0.0.0.0:22003->8545/tcp nnodes_node_3_1
d60bcf0b8a4f quorum "/qdata/start-node.sh" 55 seconds ago Up 54 seconds 0.0.0.0:22001->8545/tcp nnodes_node_1_1
docker-compose down
If you have Geth installed on the host machine you can do the following from the Nnodes directory to attach to Node 1's console.
geth attach qdata_1/dd/geth.ipc
Otherwise, the following will achieve the same thing, attaching via the Geth instance in the container. If you do this, you'll have to copy transaction scripts used below into the qdata_N directories manually.
docker exec -it Nnodes_node_1_1 geth attach /qdata/dd/geth.ipc
We will demo the following, from Node 1's console.
-
Create a public contract (visible to all nodes)
-
Create a private contract with Node 2
-
Send a private transaction to update the contract state with node 2.
This is based on using the provided example setup.sh file as-is (three nodes).
> var abi = [{"constant":true,"inputs":[],"name":"storedData","outputs":[{"name":"","type":"uint256"}],"payable":false,"type":"function"},{"constant":false,"inputs":[{"name":"x","type":"uint256"}],"name":"set","outputs":[],"payable":false,"type":"function"},{"constant":true,"inputs":[],"name":"get","outputs":[{"name":"retVal","type":"uint256"}],"payable":false,"type":"function"},{"inputs":[{"name":"initVal","type":"uint256"}],"type":"constructor"}];
undefined
> loadScript("contract_pub.js")
Contract transaction send: TransactionHash: 0x0e7ff9b609c0ba3a11de9cd4f51389c29dceacbac2f91e294346df86792d8d8f waiting to be mined...
true
Contract mined! Address: 0x1932c48b2bf8102ba33b4a6b545c32236e342f34
[object Object]
> var public = eth.contract(abi).at("0x1932c48b2bf8102ba33b4a6b545c32236e342f34")
undefined
> public.get()
42
> loadScript("contract_pri.js")
Contract transaction send: TransactionHash: 0xa9b969f90c1144a49b4ab4abb5e2bfebae02ab122cdc22ca9bc564a740e40bcd waiting to be mined...
true
Contract mined! Address: 0x1349f3e1b8d71effb47b840594ff27da7e603d17
[object Object]
> var private = eth.contract(abi).at("0x1349f3e1b8d71effb47b840594ff27da7e603d17")
undefined
> private.get()
42
> private.set(65535, {privateFor: ["QfeDAys9MPDs2XHExtc84jKGHxZg/aj52DTh0vtA3Xc="]})
"0x0dc9c0b85b4c4e5f1e3ba2014b5f628f5153bc2588741a69626eb5a40d2b30d6"
> private.get()
65535
> var abi = [{"constant":true,"inputs":[],"name":"storedData","outputs":[{"name":"","type":"uint256"}],"payable":false,"type":"function"},{"constant":false,"inputs":[{"name":"x","type":"uint256"}],"name":"set","outputs":[],"payable":false,"type":"function"},{"constant":true,"inputs":[],"name":"get","outputs":[{"name":"retVal","type":"uint256"}],"payable":false,"type":"function"},{"inputs":[{"name":"initVal","type":"uint256"}],"type":"constructor"}];
undefined
> var public = eth.contract(abi).at("0x1932c48b2bf8102ba33b4a6b545c32236e342f34")
undefined
> var private = eth.contract(abi).at("0x1349f3e1b8d71effb47b840594ff27da7e603d17")
undefined
> public.get()
42
> private.get()
65535
> var abi = [{"constant":true,"inputs":[],"name":"storedData","outputs":[{"name":"","type":"uint256"}],"payable":false,"type":"function"},{"constant":false,"inputs":[{"name":"x","type":"uint256"}],"name":"set","outputs":[],"payable":false,"type":"function"},{"constant":true,"inputs":[],"name":"get","outputs":[{"name":"retVal","type":"uint256"}],"payable":false,"type":"function"},{"inputs":[{"name":"initVal","type":"uint256"}],"type":"constructor"}];
undefined
> var public = eth.contract(abi).at("0x1932c48b2bf8102ba33b4a6b545c32236e342f34")
undefined
> var private = eth.contract(abi).at("0x1349f3e1b8d71effb47b840594ff27da7e603d17")
undefined
> public.get()
42
> private.get()
0
So, Node 2 is able to see both contracts and the private transaction. Node 3 can see only the public contract and its state.
The RPC port for each container is mapped to localhost starting from port 22001. So, to see the peers connected to Node 2, you can do either of the following and get the same result. Change it in setup.sh if you don't like it.
curl -X POST --data '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"admin_peers","id":1}' 172.13.0.3:8545
curl -X POST --data '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"admin_peers","id":1}' localhost:22002
You can see the log files for the nodes in qdata_N/logs/geth.log and qdata_N/logs/constellation.log. This is useful when things go wrong!
This example uses only the Raft consensus mechanism.