This repository contains a sample implementation of Mesh API for the Ethereum blockchain.
Build once. Integrate your blockchain everywhere.
MESH-ETHEREUM IS CONSIDERED ALPHA SOFTWARE. USE AT YOUR OWN RISK.
This project is available open source under the terms of the [Apache 2.0 License](https://opensource.org/licenses/Apache-2.0).
The mesh-ethereum
repository provides an implementation sample of the Mesh API for Ethereum in Golang. We created this repository for developers of Ethereum-like (a.k.a., account-based) blockchains, who may find it easier to fork this implementation sample than write one from scratch.
Mesh is an open-source specification and set of tools that makes integrating with blockchains simpler, faster, and more reliable. The Mesh API is specified in the OpenAPI 3.0 format.
You can craft requests and responses with auto-generated code using Swagger Codegen or OpenAPI Generator. These requests and responses must be human-readable (easy to debug and understand), and able to be used in servers and browsers.
Jump to:
- Fork the repo.
- Start playing with the code.
- Deploy a node in Docker to begin testing.
RAM: 16 MB minimum
We tested mesh-ethereum
on an AWS c5.2xlarge instance.
This instance type has 8 vCPU and 16 GB of RAM. If you use a computer with less than 16 GB of RAM, it is possible that mesh-ethereum
will exit with an OOM error.
To increase the load mesh-ethereum
can handle, we recommend these actions:
- Tune your OS settings to allow for more connections. On a linux-based OS, run the following commands to do so (source):
sysctl -w net.ipv4.tcp_tw_reuse=1
sysctl -w net.core.rmem_max=16777216
sysctl -w net.core.wmem_max=16777216
sysctl -w net.ipv4.tcp_max_syn_backlog=10000
sysctl -w net.core.somaxconn=10000
sysctl -p (when done)
We have not tested mesh-ethereum
with net.ipv4.tcp_tw_recycle
and do not recommend enabling it.
- Modify your open file settings to
100000
. You can do this on a linux-based OS with the command:ulimit -n 100000
.
mesh-ethereum
uses memory-mapped files to persist data in the indexer
. As a result, you must run mesh-ethereum
on a 64-bit architecture (the virtual address space easily exceeds 100s of GBs).
If you receive a kernel OOM, you may need to increase the allocated size of swap space on your OS. There is a great tutorial for how to do this on Linux here.
- Comprehensive tracking of all ETH balance changes
- Stateless, offline, curve-based transaction construction (with address checksum validation)
- Atomic balance lookups using go-ethereum's GraphQL Endpoint
- Idempotent access to all transaction traces and receipts
Helpful commands for development:
make deps
make test
make lint
make salus
make build-local
make coverage-local
Running the following commands will create a Docker image called mesh-ethereum:latest
.
To download the pre-built Docker image from the latest release, run:
curl -sSfL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/coinbase/mesh-ethereum/master/install.sh | sh -s
Do not try to install mesh-ethereum using GitHub Packages!
After cloning this repository, run:
make build-local
MODE
Type: String
Options: ONLINE
, OFFLINE
Default: None
MODE
determines if Mesh can make outbound connections.
NETWORK
Type: String
Options: MAINNET
, ROPSTEN
, RINKEBY
, GOERLI
or TESTNET
Default: ROPSTEN
, but only for backwards compatibility if you use TESTNET
NETWORK
is the Ethereum network to launch or communicate with.
PORT
Type: Integer
Options: 8080
, any compatible port number
Default: None
PORT
is the port to use for Mesh.
GETH
Type: String
Options: A node URL
Default: None
GETH
points to a remote geth
node instead of initializing one
SKIP_GETH_ADMIN
Type: Boolean
Options: TRUE
, FALSE
Default: FALSE
SKIP_GETH_ADMIN
instructs Mesh to not use the geth
admin
RPC calls. This is typically disabled by hosted blockchain node services.
Running the commands below will start a Docker container in
detached mode, with
a data directory at <working directory>/ethereum-data
and the Mesh API accessible at port 8080
.
You can run these commands from the command line. If you cloned the repository, you can use the make
commands shown after the examples.
Mainnet:Online
Uncloned repo:
docker run -d --rm --ulimit "nofile=100000:100000" -v "$(pwd)/ethereum-data:/data" -e "MODE=ONLINE" -e "NETWORK=MAINNET" -e "PORT=8080" -p 8080:8080 -p 30303:30303 mesh-ethereum:latest
Cloned repo:
make run-mainnet-online
Mainnet:Online
(Remote)
Uncloned repo:
docker run -d --rm --ulimit "nofile=100000:100000" -e "MODE=ONLINE" -e "NETWORK=MAINNET" -e "PORT=8080" -e "GETH=<NODE URL>" -p 8080:8080 -p 30303:30303 mesh-ethereum:latest
Cloned repo:
make run-mainnet-remote geth=<NODE URL>
Mainnet:Offline
Uncloned repo:
docker run -d --rm -e "MODE=OFFLINE" -e "NETWORK=MAINNET" -e "PORT=8081" -p 8081:8081 mesh-ethereum:latest
Cloned repo:
make run-mainnet-offline
Testnet:Online
Uncloned repo:
docker run -d --rm --ulimit "nofile=100000:100000" -v "$(pwd)/ethereum-data:/data" -e "MODE=ONLINE" -e "NETWORK=TESTNET" -e "PORT=8080" -p 8080:8080 -p 30303:30303 mesh-ethereum:latest
Cloned repo:
make run-testnet-online
// to send some funds into your testnet account you can use the following commands
geth attach http://127.0.0.1:8545
> eth.sendTransaction({from: eth.coinbase, to: "0x9C639954BC9956598Df734994378A36f73cfba0C", value: web3.toWei(50, "ether")})
Testnet:Online
(Remote)
Uncloned repo:
docker run -d --rm --ulimit "nofile=100000:100000" -e "MODE=ONLINE" -e "NETWORK=TESTNET" -e "PORT=8080" -e "GETH=<NODE URL>" -p 8080:8080 -p 30303:30303 mesh-ethereum:latest
Cloned repo:
make run-testnet-remote geth=<NODE URL>
Testnet:Offline
Uncloned repo:
docker run -d --rm -e "MODE=OFFLINE" -e "NETWORK=TESTNET" -e "PORT=8081" -p 8081:8081 mesh-ethereum:latest
Cloned repo:
make run-testnet-offline
To validate mesh-ethereum
, install mesh-cli
and run one of the following commands:
mesh-cli check:data --configuration-file mesh-cli-conf/testnet/config.json
- This command validates that the Data API implementation is correct using the ethereumtestnet
node. It also ensures that the implementation does not miss any balance-changing operations.mesh-cli check:construction --configuration-file mesh-cli-conf/testnet/config.json
- This command validates the Construction API implementation. It also verifies transaction construction, signing, and submissions to thetestnet
network.mesh-cli check:data --configuration-file mesh-cli-conf/mainnet/config.json
- This command validates that the Data API implementation is correct using the ethereummainnet
node. It also ensures that the implementation does not miss any balance-changing operations.
Read the How to Test your Mesh Implementation documentation for additional details.
You may contribute to the mesh-ethereum
project in various ways:
Read our Contributing documentation for more information.
You can also find community implementations for a variety of blockchains in the mesh-ecosystem repository.
You can find the Mesh API documentation here.
Check out the Getting Started section to start diving into Mesh.
- mesh-geth-sdk — This SDK helps accelerate Mesh API implementation on go-ethereum based chains.
- mesh-sdk-go — The
mesh-sdk-go
SDK provides a collection of packages used for interaction with the Mesh API specification. - mesh-specifications — Much of the SDKs’ code is generated from this repository.
- mesh-cli — Use the
mesh-cli
tool to test your Mesh API implementation. The tool also provides the ability to look up block contents and account balances.
You can find community implementations for a variety of blockchains in the mesh-ecosystem repository.
This project is available open source under the terms of the Apache 2.0 License.
© 2022 Coinbase