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e70670368c
* Document the ways and behaviours of setting JVM args on a corda node process. * Small review fixes * Clarification, removing outdated jvmArgs documentation
189 lines
9.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
189 lines
9.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
Running nodes locally
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=====================
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.. contents::
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.. note:: You should already have generated your node(s) with their CorDapps installed by following the instructions in
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:doc:`generating-a-node`.
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There are several ways to run a Corda node locally for testing purposes.
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Starting a Corda node using DemoBench
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-------------------------------------
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See the instructions in :doc:`demobench`.
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.. _starting-an-individual-corda-node:
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Starting a Corda node from the command line
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-------------------------------------------
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Run a node by opening a terminal window in the node's folder and running:
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.. code-block:: shell
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java -jar corda.jar
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By default, the node will look for a configuration file called ``node.conf`` and a CorDapps folder called ``cordapps``
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in the current working directory. You can override the configuration file and workspace paths on the command line (e.g.
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``./corda.jar --config-file=test.conf --base-directory=/opt/corda/nodes/test``).
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You can increase the amount of Java heap memory available to the node using the ``-Xmx`` command line argument. For
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example, the following would run the node with a heap size of 2048MB:
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.. code-block:: shell
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java -Xmx2048m -jar corda.jar
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You should do this if you receive an ``OutOfMemoryError`` exception when interacting with the node.
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Optionally run the node's webserver as well by opening a terminal window in the node's folder and running:
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.. code-block:: shell
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java -jar corda-webserver.jar
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.. warning:: The node webserver is for testing purposes only and will be removed soon.
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.. _setting_jvm_args:
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Setting JVM arguments
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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There are several ways of setting JVM arguments for the node process (particularly the garbage collector and the memory settings).
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They are listed here in order of increasing priority, i.e. if the same flag is set in a way later in this list, it will override
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anything set earlier.
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:Default arguments in capsule: The capsuled corda node has default flags set to ``-Xmx512m -XX:+UseG1GC`` - this gives the node (a relatively
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low) 512 MB of heap space and turns on the G1 garbage collector, ensuring low pause times for garbage collection.
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:Node configuration: The node configuration file can specify custom default JVM arguments by adding a section like::
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custom = {
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jvmArgs: [ '-Xmx1G', '-XX:+UseG1GC' ]
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}
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Note that this will completely replace any defaults set by capsule above, not just the flags that are set here, so if you use this
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to set e.g. the memory, you also need to set the garbage collector, or it will revert to whatever default your JVM is using.
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:Capsule specific system property: You can use a special system property that Capsule understands to set JVM arguments only for the Corda
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process, not the launcher that actually starts it::
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java -Dcapsule.jvm.args="-Xmx:1G" corda.jar
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Setting a property like this will override any value for this property, but not interfere with any other JVM arguments that are configured
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in any way mentioned above. In this example, it would reset the maximum heap memory to ``-Xmx1G`` but not touch the garbage collector settings.
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This is particarly useful for either setting large memory allowances that you don't want to give to the launcher or for setting values that
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can only be set on one process at a time, e.g. a debug port.
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:Command line flag: You can set JVM args on the command line that apply to the launcher process and the node process as in the example
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above. This will override any value for the same flag set any other way, but will leave any other JVM arguments alone.
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Command-line options
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The node can optionally be started with the following command-line options:
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* ``--base-directory``, ``-b``: The node working directory where all the files are kept (default: ``.``).
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* ``--config-file``, ``-f``: The path to the config file. Defaults to ``node.conf``.
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* ``--dev-mode``, ``-d``: Runs the node in development mode. Unsafe in production. Defaults to true on MacOS and desktop versions of Windows. False otherwise.
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* ``--no-local-shell``, ``-n``: Do not start the embedded shell locally.
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* ``--on-unknown-config-keys <[FAIL,INFO]>``: How to behave on unknown node configuration. Defaults to FAIL.
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* ``--sshd``: Enables SSH server for node administration.
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* ``--sshd-port``: Sets the port for the SSH server. If not supplied and SSH server is enabled, the port defaults to 2222.
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* ``--verbose``, ``--log-to-console``, ``-v``: If set, prints logging to the console as well as to a file.
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* ``--logging-level=<loggingLevel>``: Enable logging at this level and higher. Possible values: ERROR, WARN, INFO, DEBUG, TRACE. Default: INFO.
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* ``--help``, ``-h``: Show this help message and exit.
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* ``--version``, ``-V``: Print version information and exit.
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Sub-commands
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^^^^^^^^^^^^
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``clear-network-cache``: Clears local copy of network map, on node startup it will be restored from server or file system.
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``initial-registration``: Starts initial node registration with the compatibility zone to obtain a certificate from the Doorman.
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Parameters:
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* ``--network-root-truststore``, ``-t`` **required**: Network root trust store obtained from network operator.
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* ``--network-root-truststore-password``, ``-p``: Network root trust store password obtained from network operator.
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``generate-node-info``: Performs the node start-up tasks necessary to generate the nodeInfo file, saves it to disk, then exits.
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``generate-rpc-ssl-settings``: Generates the SSL keystore and truststore for a secure RPC connection.
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``install-shell-extensions``: Install ``corda`` alias and auto completion for bash and zsh. See :doc:`cli-application-shell-extensions` for more info.
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``validate-configuration``: Validates the actual configuration without starting the node.
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.. _enabling-remote-debugging:
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Enabling remote debugging
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To enable remote debugging of the node, run the node with the following JVM arguments:
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``java -Dcapsule.jvm.args="-agentlib:jdwp=transport=dt_socket,server=y,suspend=y,address=5005" -jar corda.jar``
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This will allow you to attach a debugger to your node on port 5005.
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Starting all nodes at once on a local machine from the command line
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-------------------------------------------------------------------
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.. _starting-all-nodes-at-once:
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Native
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~~~~~~
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If you created your nodes using ``deployNodes``, a ``runnodes`` shell script (or batch file on Windows) will have been
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generated to allow you to quickly start up all nodes and their webservers. ``runnodes`` should only be used for testing
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purposes.
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Start the nodes with ``runnodes`` by running the following command from the root of the project:
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* Linux/macOS: ``build/nodes/runnodes``
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* Windows: ``call build\nodes\runnodes.bat``
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.. warning:: On macOS, do not click/change focus until all the node terminal windows have opened, or some processes may
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fail to start.
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If you receive an ``OutOfMemoryError`` exception when interacting with the nodes, you need to increase the amount of
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Java heap memory available to them, which you can do when running them individually. See
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:ref:`starting-an-individual-corda-node`.
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docker-compose
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If you created your nodes using ``Dockerform``, the ``docker-compose.yml`` file and corresponding ``Dockerfile`` for
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nodes has been created and configured appropriately. Navigate to ``build/nodes`` directory and run ``docker-compose up``
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command. This will startup nodes inside new, internal network.
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After the nodes are started up, you can use ``docker ps`` command to see how the ports are mapped.
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.. warning:: You need both ``Docker`` and ``docker-compose`` installed and enabled to use this method. Docker CE
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(Community Edition) is enough. Please refer to `Docker CE documentation <https://www.docker.com/community-edition>`_
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and `Docker Compose documentation <https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/>`_ for installation instructions for all
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major operating systems.
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Starting all nodes at once on a remote machine from the command line
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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By default, ``Cordform`` expects the nodes it generates to be run on the same machine where they were generated.
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In order to run the nodes remotely, the nodes can be deployed locally and then copied to a remote server.
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If after copying the nodes to the remote machine you encounter errors related to ``localhost`` resolution, you will additionally need to follow the steps below.
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To create nodes locally and run on a remote machine perform the following steps:
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1. Configure Cordform task and deploy the nodes locally as described in :doc:`generating-a-node`.
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2. Copy the generated directory structure to a remote machine using e.g. Secure Copy.
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3. Optionally, bootstrap the network on the remote machine.
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This is optional step when a remote machine doesn't accept ``localhost`` addresses, or the generated nodes are configured to run on another host's IP address.
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If required change host addresses in top level configuration files ``[NODE NAME]_node.conf`` for entries ``p2pAddress`` , ``rpcSettings.address`` and ``rpcSettings.adminAddress``.
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Run the network bootstrapper tool to regenerate the nodes network map (see for more explanation :doc:`network-bootstrapper`):
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``java -jar corda-tools-network-bootstrapper-Master.jar --dir <nodes-root-dir>``
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4. Run nodes on the remote machine using :ref:`runnodes command <starting-all-nodes-at-once>`.
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The above steps create a test deployment as ``deployNodes`` Gradle task would do on a local machine.
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