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63 lines
2.8 KiB
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63 lines
2.8 KiB
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Introduction
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============
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By this point, :doc:`your dev environment should be set up <getting-set-up>`, you've run
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:doc:`your first CorDapp <tutorial-cordapp>`, and you're familiar with Corda's :doc:`key concepts <key-concepts>`. What
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comes next?
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If you're a developer, the next step is to write your own CorDapp. Each CorDapp takes the form of a plugin that is
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installed on one or more Corda nodes, and gives them the ability to conduct some new process - anything from
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issuing a debt instrument to making a restaurant booking.
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Our use-case
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------------
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Our CorDapp will seek to model IOUs on ledger. An IOU – short for “I Owe yoU” – records the fact that one person owes
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another a given amount of money. We can imagine that this is potentially sensitive information that we'd only want to
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communicate on a need-to-know basis. This is one of the areas where Corda excels - allowing a small set of parties to
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agree on a fact without needing to share this fact with everyone else on the network, as you do with most other
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blockchain platforms.
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To serve any useful function, a CorDapp needs three core elements:
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* **One or more states** – the shared facts that will be agreed upon and stored on the ledger
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* **One or more contracts** – the rules governing how these states can evolve over time
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* **One or more flows** – the step-by-step process for carrying out a ledger update
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Our IOU CorDapp is no exception. It will have the following elements:
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State
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^^^^^
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The states will be IOUStates, with each instance representing a single IOU. We can visualize an IOUState as follows:
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.. image:: resources/tutorial-state.png
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:scale: 25%
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:align: center
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Contract
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^^^^^^^^
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Our contract will be the IOUContract, imposing rules on the evolution of IOUs over time:
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* Only the creation of new IOUs will be allowed
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* Transferring existing IOUs or paying off an IOU with cash will not be allowed
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However, we can easily extend our CorDapp to handle additional use-cases later on.
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Flow
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^^^^
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Our flow will be the IOUFlow. It will allow two nodes to orchestrate the creation of a new IOU on the ledger, via the
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following steps:
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.. image:: resources/tutorial-flow.png
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:scale: 25%
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:align: center
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In traditional distributed ledger systems, where all data is broadcast to every network participant, you don’t even
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think about this step – you simply package up your ledger update and send it out into the world. But in Corda, where
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privacy is a core focus, flows are used to carefully control who sees what during the process of agreeing a
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ledger update.
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Progress so far
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---------------
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We've sketched out a simple CorDapp that will allow nodes to confidentially agree the creation of new IOUs.
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Next, we'll be taking a look at the template project we'll be using as a base for our work.
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