Backports changes to docs on generating and running nodes.

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@ -126,10 +126,10 @@ path to the node's base directory.
:username: Username consisting only of word characters (a-z, A-Z, 0-9 and _)
:password: The password
:permissions: A list of permission strings which RPC methods can use to control access
If this field is absent or an empty list then RPC is effectively locked down. Alternatively, if it contains the string
``ALL`` then the user is permitted to use *any* RPC method. This value is intended for administrator users and for developers.
:permissions: A list of permissions for starting flows via RPC. To give the user the permission to start the flow
``foo.bar.FlowClass``, add the string ``StartFlow.foo.bar.FlowClass`` to the list. If the list
contains the string ``ALL``, the user can start any flow via RPC. This value is intended for administrator
users and for development.
:devMode: This flag sets the node to run in development mode. On startup, if the keystore ``<workspace>/certificates/sslkeystore.jks``
does not exist, a developer keystore will be used if ``devMode`` is true. The node will exit if ``devMode`` is false
@ -141,4 +141,4 @@ path to the node's base directory.
interfaces, and then by sending an IP discovery request to the network map service. Set to ``false`` to disable.
:certificateSigningService: Certificate Signing Server address. It is used by the certificate signing request utility to
obtain SSL certificate. (See :doc:`permissioning` for more information.)
obtain SSL certificate (see :doc:`permissioning` for more information)

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@ -4,8 +4,9 @@ Corda nodes
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 1
deploying-a-node
generating-a-node
running-a-node
deploying-a-node
corda-configuration-file
clientrpc
shell

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@ -118,9 +118,9 @@ Creating the CorDapp JAR
The gradle ``jar`` task included in the CorDapp template build file will automatically build your CorDapp JAR correctly
as long as your dependencies are set correctly.
Note that the hash of the resulting CorDapp JAR is not deterministic, as it depends on variables such as the timestamp
at creation. Nodes running the same CorDapp must therefore ensure they are using the exact same CorDapp jar, and not
different versions of the JAR created from identical sources.
.. warning:: The hash of the generated CorDapp JAR is not deterministic, as it depends on variables such as the
timestamp at creation. Nodes running the same CorDapp must therefore ensure they are using the exact same CorDapp
jar, and not different versions of the JAR created from identical sources.
The filename of the JAR must include a unique identifier to deduplicate it from other releases of the same CorDapp.
This is typically done by appending the version string to the CorDapp's name. This unique identifier should not change
@ -131,7 +131,7 @@ Installing the CorDapp jar
--------------------------
.. note:: Before installing a CorDapp, you must create one or more nodes to install it on. For instructions, please see
:doc:`deploying-a-node`.
:doc:`generating-a-node`.
At runtime, nodes will load any plugins present in their ``plugins`` folder. Therefore in order to install a CorDapp on
a node, the CorDapp JAR must be added to the ``<node_dir>/plugins/`` folder, where ``node_dir`` is the folder in which

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@ -1,140 +1,295 @@
Deploying a node
================
Node structure
--------------
Each Corda node has the following structure:
.. contents::
.. sourcecode:: none
.. note:: These instructions are intended for people who want to deploy a Corda node to a server,
whether they have developed and tested a CorDapp following the instructions in :doc:`generating-a-node`
or are deploying a third-party CorDapp.
.
├── certificates // The node's doorman certificates
├── corda-webserver.jar // The built-in node webserver
├── corda.jar // The core Corda libraries
├── logs // The node logs
├── node.conf // The node's configuration files
├── persistence.mv.db // The node's database
└── plugins // The CorDapps jars installed on the node
Linux: Installing and running Corda as a system service
-------------------------------------------------------
We recommend creating system services to run a node and the optional webserver. This provides logging and service
handling, and ensures the Corda service is run at boot.
The node is configured by editing its ``node.conf`` file. You install CorDapps on the node by dropping the CorDapp JARs
into the ``plugins`` folder.
**Prerequisites**:
Node naming
-----------
A node's name must be a valid X500 name that obeys the following additional constraints:
* Oracle Java 8. The supported versions are listed in :doc:`getting-set-up`
* The fields of the name have the following maximum character lengths:
1. Add a system user which will be used to run Corda:
* Common name: 64
* Organisation: 128
* Organisation unit: 64
* Locality: 64
* State: 64
``sudo adduser --system --no-create-home --group corda``
* The country code is a valid ISO 3166-1 two letter code in upper-case
2. Create a directory called ``/opt/corda`` and change its ownership to the user you want to use to run Corda:
* The organisation, locality and country attributes are present
``mkdir /opt/corda; chown corda:corda /opt/corda``
* The organisation field of the name obeys the following constraints:
3. Download the `Corda jar <https://r3.bintray.com/corda/net/corda/corda/>`_
(under ``/VERSION_NUMBER/corda-VERSION_NUMBER.jar``) and place it in ``/opt/corda``
* Has at least two letters
* No leading or trailing whitespace
* No double-spacing
* Upper-case first letter
* Does not contain the words "node" or "server"
* Does not include the characters ',' or '=' or '$' or '"' or '\'' or '\\'
* Is in NFKC normalization form
* Only the latin, common and inherited unicode scripts are supported
4. (Optional) Download the `Corda webserver jar <http://r3.bintray.com/corda/net/corda/corda-webserver/>`_
(under ``/VERSION_NUMBER/corda-VERSION_NUMBER.jar``) and place it in ``/opt/corda``
The deployNodes task
--------------------
The CorDapp template defines a ``deployNodes`` task that allows you to automatically generate and configure a set of
nodes:
5. Create a directory called ``plugins`` in ``/opt/corda`` and save your CorDapp jar file to it. Alternatively, download one of
our `sample CorDapps <https://www.corda.net/samples/>`_ to the ``plugins`` directory
.. sourcecode:: groovy
6. Save the below as ``/opt/corda/node.conf``. See :doc:`corda-configuration-file` for a description of these options
task deployNodes(type: net.corda.plugins.Cordform, dependsOn: ['jar']) {
directory "./build/nodes"
networkMap "O=Controller,L=London,C=GB"
node {
name "O=Controller,L=London,C=GB"
// The notary will offer a validating notary service.
// Set to `corda.notary.simple` for a non-validating notary.
advertisedServices = ["corda.notary.validating"]
p2pPort 10002
rpcPort 10003
// No webport property, so no webserver will be created.
h2Port 10004
sshdPort 22
// Includes the corda-finance CorDapp on our node.
cordapps = ["net.corda:corda-finance:$corda_release_version"]
.. code-block:: json
basedir : "/opt/corda"
p2pAddress : "example.com:10002"
rpcAddress : "example.com:10003"
webAddress : "0.0.0.0:10004"
h2port : 11000
emailAddress : "you@example.com"
myLegalName : "O=Bank of Breakfast Tea, L=London, C=GB"
keyStorePassword : "cordacadevpass"
trustStorePassword : "trustpass"
useHTTPS : false
devMode : false
networkMapService {
address="networkmap.foo.bar.com:10002"
legalName="O=FooBar NetworkMap, L=Dublin, C=IE"
}
node {
name "O=PartyA,L=London,C=GB"
advertisedServices = []
p2pPort 10005
rpcPort 10006
webPort 10007
h2Port 10008
sshdPort 22
cordapps = ["net.corda:corda-finance:$corda_release_version"]
// Grants user1 all RPC permissions.
rpcUsers = [[ user: "user1", "password": "test", "permissions": ["ALL"]]]
rpcUsers=[
{
user=corda
password=portal_password
permissions=[
ALL
]
}
node {
name "O=PartyB,L=New York,C=US"
advertisedServices = []
p2pPort 10009
rpcPort 10010
webPort 10011
h2Port 10012
sshdPort 22
cordapps = ["net.corda:corda-finance:$corda_release_version"]
// Grants user1 the ability to start the MyFlow flow.
rpcUsers = [[ user: "user1", "password": "test", "permissions": ["StartFlow.net.corda.flows.MyFlow"]]]
]
7. Make the following changes to ``/opt/corda/node.conf``:
* Change the ``p2pAddress`` and ``rpcAddress`` values to start with your server's hostname or external IP address.
This is the address other nodes or RPC interfaces will use to communicate with your node
* Change the ports if necessary, for example if you are running multiple nodes on one server (see below)
* Enter an email address which will be used as an administrative contact during the registration process. This is
only visible to the permissioning service
* Enter your node's desired legal name. This will be used during the issuance of your certificate and should rarely
change as it should represent the legal identity of your node
* Organization (``O=``) should be a unique and meaningful identifier (e.g. Bank of Breakfast Tea)
* Location (``L=``) is your nearest city
* Country (``C=``) is the `ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2>`_
* Change the RPC username and password
.. note:: Ubuntu 16.04 and most current Linux distributions use SystemD, so if you are running one of these
distributions follow the steps marked **SystemD**. If you are running Ubuntu 14.04, follow the instructions
for **Upstart**.
8. **SystemD**: Create a ``corda.service`` file based on the example below and save it in the ``/etc/systemd/system/``
directory
.. code-block:: shell
[Unit]
Description=Corda Node - Bank of Breakfast Tea
Requires=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
User=corda
WorkingDirectory=/opt/corda
ExecStart=/usr/bin/java -Xmx2048m -jar /opt/corda/corda.jar
Restart=on-failure
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
8. **Upstart**: Create a ``corda.conf`` file based on the example below and save it in the ``/etc/init/`` directory
.. code-block:: shell
description "Corda Node - Bank of Breakfast Tea"
start on runlevel [2345]
stop on runlevel [!2345]
respawn
setuid corda
chdir /opt/corda
exec java -Xmx2048m -jar /opt/corda/corda.jar
9. Make the following changes to ``corda.service`` or ``corda.conf``:
* Make sure the service description is informative - particularly if you plan to run multiple nodes.
* Change the username to the user account you want to use to run Corda. **We recommend that this user account is
not root**
* Set the maximum amount of memory available to the Corda process by changing the ``-Xmx2048m`` parameter
* **SystemD**: Make sure the ``corda.service`` file is owned by root with the correct permissions:
* ``sudo chown root:root /etc/systemd/system/corda.service``
* ``sudo chmod 644 /etc/systemd/system/corda.service``
* **Upstart**: Make sure the ``corda.conf`` file is owned by root with the correct permissions:
* ``sudo chown root:root /etc/init/corda.conf``
* ``sudo chmod 644 /etc/init/corda.conf``
.. note:: The Corda webserver provides a simple interface for interacting with your installed CorDapps in a browser.
Running the webserver is optional.
10. **SystemD**: Create a ``corda-webserver.service`` file based on the example below and save it in the ``/etc/systemd/system/``
directory
.. code-block:: shell
[Unit]
Description=Webserver for Corda Node - Bank of Breakfast Tea
Requires=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
User=corda
WorkingDirectory=/opt/corda
ExecStart=/usr/bin/java -jar /opt/corda/corda-webserver.jar
Restart=on-failure
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
10. **Upstart**: Create a ``corda-webserver.conf`` file based on the example below and save it in the ``/etc/init/``
directory
.. code-block:: shell
description "Webserver for Corda Node - Bank of Breakfast Tea"
start on runlevel [2345]
stop on runlevel [!2345]
respawn
setuid corda
chdir /opt/corda
exec java -jar /opt/corda/corda-webserver.jar
11. Provision the required certificates to your node. Contact the network permissioning service or see
:doc:`permissioning`
12. **SystemD**: You can now start a node and its webserver and set the services to start on boot by running the
following ``systemctl`` commands:
* ``sudo systemctl daemon-reload``
* ``sudo systemctl enable --now corda``
* ``sudo systemctl enable --now corda-webserver``
12. **Upstart**: You can now start a node and its webserver by running the following commands:
* ``sudo start corda``
* ``sudo start corda-webserver``
The Upstart configuration files created above tell Upstart to start the Corda services on boot so there is no need to explicitly enable them.
You can run multiple nodes by creating multiple directories and Corda services, modifying the ``node.conf`` and
SystemD or Upstart configuration files so they are unique.
Windows: Installing and running Corda as a Windows service
----------------------------------------------------------
We recommend running Corda as a Windows service. This provides service handling, ensures the Corda service is run
at boot, and means the Corda service stays running with no users connected to the server.
**Prerequisites**:
* Oracle Java 8. The supported versions are listed in :doc:`getting-set-up`
1. Create a Corda directory and download the Corda jar. Replace ``VERSION_NUMBER`` with the desired version. Here's an
example using PowerShell:
.. code-block:: PowerShell
mkdir C:\Corda
wget http://jcenter.bintray.com/net/corda/corda/VERSION_NUMBER/corda-VERSION_NUMBER.jar -OutFile C:\Corda\corda.jar
2. Create a directory called ``plugins`` in ``/opt/corda`` and save your CorDapp jar file to it. Alternatively,
download one of our `sample CorDapps <https://www.corda.net/samples/>`_ to the ``plugins`` directory
3. Save the below as ``C:\Corda\node.conf``. See :doc:`corda-configuration-file` for a description of these options
.. code-block:: json
basedir : "C:\\Corda"
p2pAddress : "example.com:10002"
rpcAddress : "example.com:10003"
webAddress : "0.0.0.0:10004"
h2port : 11000
emailAddress: "you@example.com"
myLegalName : "O=Bank of Breakfast Tea, L=London, C=GB"
keyStorePassword : "cordacadevpass"
trustStorePassword : "trustpass"
extraAdvertisedServiceIds: [ "" ]
useHTTPS : false
devMode : false
networkMapService {
address="networkmap.foo.bar.com:10002"
legalName="O=FooBar NetworkMap, L=Dublin, C=IE"
}
rpcUsers=[
{
user=corda
password=portal_password
permissions=[
ALL
]
}
]
Running this task will create three nodes in the ``build/nodes`` folder:
4. Make the following changes to ``C:\Corda\node.conf``:
* A ``Controller`` node that:
* Change the ``p2pAddress`` and ``rpcAddress`` values to start with your server's hostname or external IP address.
This is the address other nodes or RPC interfaces will use to communicate with your node
* Change the ports if necessary, for example if you are running multiple nodes on one server (see below)
* Enter an email address which will be used as an administrative contact during the registration process. This is
only visible to the permissioning service
* Enter your node's desired legal name. This will be used during the issuance of your certificate and should rarely
change as it should represent the legal identity of your node
* Serves as the network map
* Offers a validating notary service
* Will not have a webserver (since ``webPort`` is not defined)
* Is running the ``corda-finance`` CorDapp
* Organization (``O=``) should be a unique and meaningful identifier (e.g. Bank of Breakfast Tea)
* Location (``L=``) is your nearest city
* Country (``C=``) is the `ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2>`_
* Change the RPC username and password
* ``PartyA`` and ``PartyB`` nodes that:
5. Copy the required Java keystores to the node. See :doc:`permissioning`
* Are pointing at the ``Controller`` as the network map service
* Are not offering any services
* Will have a webserver (since ``webPort`` is defined)
* Are running the ``corda-finance`` CorDapp
* Have an RPC user, ``user1``, that can be used to log into the node via RPC
6. Download the `NSSM service manager <nssm.cc>`_
Additionally, all three nodes will include any CorDapps defined in the project's source folders, even though these
CorDapps are not listed in each node's ``cordapps`` entry. This means that running the ``deployNodes`` task from the
template CorDapp, for example, would automatically build and add the template CorDapp to each node.
7. Unzip ``nssm-2.24\win64\nssm.exe`` to ``C:\Corda``
You can extend ``deployNodes`` to generate additional nodes. The only requirement is that you must specify
a single node to run the network map service, by putting their name in the ``networkMap`` field.
8. Save the following as ``C:\Corda\nssm.bat``:
.. warning:: When adding nodes, make sure that there are no port clashes!
.. code-block:: batch
Running deployNodes
-------------------
To create the nodes defined in our ``deployNodes`` task, we'd run the following command in a terminal window from the
root of the project:
nssm install cordanode1 C:\ProgramData\Oracle\Java\javapath\java.exe
nssm set cordanode1 AppDirectory C:\Corda
nssm set cordanode1 AppParameters "-Xmx2048m -jar corda.jar --config-file=C:\corda\node.conf"
nssm set cordanode1 AppStdout C:\Corda\service.log
nssm set cordanode1 AppStderr C:\Corda\service.log
nssm set cordanode1 Description Corda Node - Bank of Breakfast Tea
nssm set cordanode1 Start SERVICE_AUTO_START
sc start cordanode1
* Unix/Mac OSX: ``./gradlew deployNodes``
* Windows: ``gradlew.bat deployNodes``
9. Modify the batch file:
This will create the nodes in the ``build/nodes`` folder.
* If you are installing multiple nodes, use a different service name (``cordanode1``) for each node
* Set the amount of Java heap memory available to this node by modifying the -Xmx argument
* Set an informative description
.. warning:: Outside of development environments, do not store your node directories in the build folder.
10. Run the batch file by clicking on it or from a command prompt
There will be a node folder generated for each node you defined, plus a ``runnodes`` shell script (or batch file on
Windows) to run all the nodes at once. If you make any changes to your ``deployNodes`` task, you will need to re-run
the task to see the changes take effect.
11. Run ``services.msc`` and verify that a service called ``cordanode1`` is present and running
You can now run the nodes by following the instructions in :doc:`Running a node <running-a-node>`.
12. Run ``netstat -ano`` and check for the ports you configured in ``node.conf``
13. You may need to open the ports on the Windows firewall
Testing your installation
-------------------------
You can verify Corda is running by connecting to your RPC port from another host, e.g.:
``telnet your-hostname.example.com 10002``
If you receive the message "Escape character is ^]", Corda is running and accessible. Press Ctrl-] and Ctrl-D to exit
telnet.

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@ -0,0 +1,136 @@
Creating nodes locally
======================
.. contents::
Node structure
--------------
Each Corda node has the following structure:
.. sourcecode:: none
.
├── certificates // The node's certificates
├── corda-webserver.jar // The built-in node webserver
├── corda.jar // The core Corda libraries
├── logs // The node logs
├── node.conf // The node's configuration files
├── persistence.mv.db // The node's database
└── plugins // The CorDapps jars installed on the node
The node is configured by editing its ``node.conf`` file. You install CorDapps on the node by dropping the CorDapp JARs
into the ``plugins`` folder.
Node naming
-----------
A node's name must be a valid X.500 name that obeys the following additional constraints:
* The fields of the name have the following maximum character lengths:
* Common name: 64
* Organisation: 128
* Organisation unit: 64
* Locality: 64
* State: 64
* The country code is a valid ISO 3166-1 two letter code in upper-case
* The organisation, locality and country attributes are present
* The organisation field of the name obeys the following constraints:
* Has at least two letters
* No leading or trailing whitespace
* No double-spacing
* Upper-case first letter
* Does not contain the words "node" or "server"
* Does not include the characters ',' or '=' or '$' or '"' or '\'' or '\\'
* Is in NFKC normalization form
* Only the latin, common and inherited unicode scripts are supported
The Cordform task
-----------------
Corda provides a gradle plugin called ``Cordform`` that allows you to automatically generate and configure a set of
nodes. Here is an example ``Cordform`` task called ``deployNodes`` that creates three nodes, defined in the
`Kotlin CorDapp Template <https://github.com/corda/cordapp-template-kotlin/blob/release-V2/build.gradle#L97>`_:
.. sourcecode:: groovy
task deployNodes(type: net.corda.plugins.Cordform, dependsOn: ['jar']) {
directory "./build/nodes"
networkMap "O=Controller,L=London,C=GB"
node {
name "O=Controller,L=London,C=GB"
// The notary will offer a validating notary service.
notary = [validating : true]
p2pPort 10002
rpcPort 10003
// No webport property, so no webserver will be created.
h2Port 10004
// Includes the corda-finance CorDapp on our node.
cordapps = ["net.corda:corda-finance:$corda_release_version"]
}
node {
name "O=PartyA,L=London,C=GB"
advertisedServices = []
p2pPort 10005
rpcPort 10006
webPort 10007
h2Port 10008
cordapps = ["net.corda:corda-finance:$corda_release_version"]
// Grants user1 all RPC permissions.
rpcUsers = [[ user: "user1", "password": "test", "permissions": ["ALL"]]]
}
node {
name "O=PartyB,L=New York,C=US"
advertisedServices = []
p2pPort 10009
rpcPort 10010
webPort 10011
h2Port 10012
cordapps = ["net.corda:corda-finance:$corda_release_version"]
// Grants user1 the ability to start the MyFlow flow.
rpcUsers = [[ user: "user1", "password": "test", "permissions": ["StartFlow.net.corda.flows.MyFlow"]]]
}
}
Running this task will create three nodes in the ``build/nodes`` folder:
* A ``Controller`` node that:
* Serves as the network map
* Offers a validating notary service
* Will not have a webserver (since ``webPort`` is not defined)
* Is running the ``corda-finance`` CorDapp
* ``PartyA`` and ``PartyB`` nodes that:
* Are pointing at the ``Controller`` as the network map service
* Are not offering any services
* Will have a webserver (since ``webPort`` is defined)
* Are running the ``corda-finance`` CorDapp
* Have an RPC user, ``user1``, that can be used to log into the node via RPC
Additionally, all three nodes will include any CorDapps defined in the project's source folders, even though these
CorDapps are not listed in each node's ``cordapps`` entry. This means that running the ``deployNodes`` task from the
template CorDapp, for example, would automatically build and add the template CorDapp to each node.
You can extend ``deployNodes`` to generate additional nodes. The only requirement is that you must specify
a single node to run the network map service, by putting its name in the ``networkMap`` field.
.. warning:: When adding nodes, make sure that there are no port clashes!
Running deployNodes
-------------------
To create the nodes defined in our ``deployNodes`` task, run the following command in a terminal window from the root
of the project where the ``deployNodes`` task is defined:
* Linux/macOS: ``./gradlew deployNodes``
* Windows: ``gradlew.bat deployNodes``
This will create the nodes in the ``build/nodes`` folder. There will be a node folder generated for each node defined
in the ``deployNodes`` task, plus a ``runnodes`` shell script (or batch file on Windows) to run all the nodes at once
for testing and development purposes. If you make any changes to your CorDapp source or ``deployNodes`` task, you will
need to re-run the task to see the changes take effect.
You can now run the nodes by following the instructions in :doc:`Running a node <running-a-node>`.

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@ -1,25 +1,64 @@
Running a node
==============
Running nodes locally
=====================
Starting your node
------------------
After following the steps in :doc:`deploying-a-node`, you should have deployed your node(s) with any chosen CorDapps
already installed. You run each node by navigating to ``<node_dir>`` in a terminal window and running:
.. contents::
.. note:: You should already have generated your node(s) with their CorDapps installed by following the instructions in
:doc:`generating-a-node`.
There are several ways to run a Corda node locally for testing purposes.
Starting all nodes at once
--------------------------
.. note:: ``runnodes`` is a shell script (or batch file on Windows) that is generated by ``deployNodes`` to allow you
to quickly start up all nodes and their webservers. ``runnodes`` should only be used for testing purposes.
Start the nodes with ``runnodes`` by running the following command from the root of the project:
* Linux/macOS: ``build/nodes/runnodes``
* Windows: ``call build\nodes\runnodes.bat``
.. warn:: On macOS, do not click/change focus until all the node terminal windows have opened, or some processes may
fail to start.
If you receive an ``OutOfMemoryError`` exception when interacting with the nodes, you need to increase the amount of
Java heap memory available to them, which you can do when running them individually. See
:ref:`starting-an-individual-corda-node`.
.. _starting-an-individual-corda-node:
Starting an individual Corda node
---------------------------------
Run the node by opening a terminal window in the node's folder and running:
.. code-block:: shell
java -jar corda.jar
.. warning:: If your working directory is not ``<node_dir>`` your plugins and configuration will not be used.
By default, the node will look for a configuration file called ``node.conf`` and a CorDapps folder called ``plugins``
in the current working directory. You can override the configuration file and workspace paths on the command line (e.g.
``./corda.jar --config-file=test.conf --base-directory=/opt/corda/nodes/test``).
The configuration file and workspace paths can be overridden on the command line. For example:
You can increase the amount of Java heap memory available to the node using the ``-Xmx`` command line argument. For
example, the following would run the node with a heap size of 2048MB:
``./corda.jar --config-file=test.conf --base-directory=/opt/r3corda/nodes/test``.
.. code-block:: shell
Otherwise the workspace folder for the node is the current working path.
java -Xmx2048m -jar corda.jar
Debugging your node
-------------------
You should do this if you receive an ``OutOfMemoryError`` exception when interacting with the node.
Optionally run the node's webserver as well by opening a terminal window in the node's folder and running:
.. code-block:: shell
java -jar corda-webserver.jar
.. warning:: The node webserver is for testing purposes only and will be removed soon.
Starting a node with remote debugging enabled
---------------------------------------------
To enable remote debugging of the node, run the following from the terminal window:
``java -Dcapsule.jvm.args="-agentlib:jdwp=transport=dt_socket,server=y,suspend=y,address=5005" -jar corda.jar``

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@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ which could be represented as ``{ first: foo, second: 123 }``.
.. note:: If your CorDapp is written in Java,
named arguments won't work unless you compiled using the ``-parameters`` argument to javac.
See :doc:`deploying-a-node` for how to specify it via Gradle.
See :doc:`generating-a-node` for how to specify it via Gradle.
The same syntax is also used to specify the parameters for RPCs, accessed via the ``run`` command, like this:

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@ -26,7 +26,8 @@ for gradle and IntelliJ, but it's possible this option is not present in your en
"No matching constructor found: - [arg0: int, arg1: Party]: missing parameter arg0"
***********************************************************************************
Your CorDapp is written in Java and you haven't specified the ``-parameters`` compiler argument. See :doc:`deploying-a-node` for how it can be done using Gradle.
Your CorDapp is written in Java and you haven't specified the ``-parameters`` compiler argument. See
:doc:`generating-a-node` for how it can be done using Gradle.
IDEA issues
-----------

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@ -176,7 +176,7 @@ There are two ways to run the example CorDapp:
* Via IntelliJ
In both cases, we will deploy a set of test nodes with our CorDapp installed, then run the nodes. You can read more
about how we define the nodes to be deployed :doc:`here <deploying-a-node>`.
about how we define the nodes to be deployed :doc:`here <generating-a-node>`.
Terminal
~~~~~~~~