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* Docs: some work on the network map docs. * Address review comments * Address review comments * Docs: discuss zone constraints, flow drains and more upgrade related topics (#2585) Docs: discuss zone constraints, flow drains and more upgrade related topics.
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229 lines
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API: Contract Constraints
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=========================
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.. note:: Before reading this page, you should be familiar with the key concepts of :doc:`key-concepts-contracts`.
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.. contents::
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Contract constraints
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--------------------
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Corda separates verification of states from their definition. Whilst you might have expected the ``ContractState``
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interface to define a verify method, or perhaps to do verification logic in the constructor, instead it is primarily
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done by a method on a ``Contract`` class. This is because what we're actually checking is the
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validity of a *transaction*, which is more than just whether the individual states are internally consistent.
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The transition between two valid states may be invalid, if the rules of the application are not being respected.
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For instance, two cash states of $100 and $200 may both be internally valid, but replacing the first with the second
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isn't allowed unless you're a cash issuer - otherwise you could print money for free.
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For a transaction to be valid, the ``verify`` function associated with each state must run successfully. However,
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for this to be secure, it is not sufficient to specify the ``verify`` function by name as there may exist multiple
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different implementations with the same method signature and enclosing class. This normally will happen as applications
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evolve, but could also happen maliciously.
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Contract constraints solve this problem by allowing a contract developer to constrain which ``verify`` functions out of
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the universe of implementations can be used (i.e. the universe is everything that matches the signature and contract
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constraints restrict this universe to a subset). Constraints are satisfied by attachments (JARs). You are not allowed to
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attach two JARs that both define the same application due to the *no overlap rule*. This rule specifies that two
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attachment JARs may not provide the same file path. If they do, the transaction is considered invalid. Because each
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state specifies both a constraint over attachments *and* a Contract class name to use, the specified class must appear
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in only one attachment.
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So who picks the attachment to use? It is chosen by the creator of the transaction that has to satisfy input constraints.
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The transaction creator also gets to pick the constraints used by any output states, but the contract logic itself may
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have opinions about what those constraints are - a typical contract would require that the constraints are propagated,
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that is, the contract will not just enforce the validity of the next transaction that uses a state, but *all successive
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transactions as well*. The constraints mechanism creates a balance of power between the creator of data on
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the ledger and the user who is trying to edit it, which can be very useful when managing upgrades to Corda applications.
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There are two ways of handling upgrades to a smart contract in Corda:
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1. *Implicit:* By allowing multiple implementations of the contract ahead of time, using constraints.
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2. *Explicit:* By creating a special *contract upgrade transaction* and getting all participants of a state to sign it using the
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contract upgrade flows.
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This article focuses on the first approach. To learn about the second please see :doc:`upgrading-cordapps`.
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The advantage of pre-authorising upgrades using constraints is that you don't need the heavyweight process of creating
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upgrade transactions for every state on the ledger. The disadvantage is that you place more faith in third parties,
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who could potentially change the app in ways you did not expect or agree with. The advantage of using the explicit
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upgrade approach is that you can upgrade states regardless of their constraint, including in cases where you didn't
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anticipate a need to do so. But it requires everyone to sign, requires everyone to manually authorise the upgrade,
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consumes notary and ledger resources, and is just in general more complex.
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How constraints work
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--------------------
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Starting from Corda 3 there are two types of constraint that can be used: hash and zone whitelist. In future
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releases a third type will be added, the signature constraint.
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**Hash constraints.** The behaviour provided by public blockchain systems like Bitcoin and Ethereum is that once data is placed on the ledger,
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the program that controls it is fixed and cannot be changed. There is no support for upgrades at all. This implements a
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form of "code is law", assuming you trust the community of that blockchain to not release a new version of the platform
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that invalidates or changes the meaning of your program.
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This is supported by Corda using a hash constraint. This specifies exactly one hash of a CorDapp JAR that contains the
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contract and states any consuming transaction is allowed to use. Once such a state is created, other nodes will only
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accept a transaction if it uses that exact JAR file as an attachment. By implication, any bugs in the contract code
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or state definitions cannot be fixed except by using an explicit upgrade process via ``ContractUpgradeFlow``.
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.. note:: Corda does not support any way to create states that can never be upgraded at all, but the same effect can be
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obtained by using a hash constraint and then simply refusing to agree to any explicit upgrades. Hash
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constraints put you in control by requiring an explicit agreement to any upgrade.
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**Zone constraints.** Often a hash constraint will be too restrictive. You do want the ability to upgrade an app,
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and you don't mind the upgrade taking effect "just in time" when a transaction happens to be required for other business
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reasons. In this case you can use a zone constraint. This specifies that the network parameters of a compatibility zone
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(see :doc:`network-map`) is expected to contain a map of class name to hashes of JARs that are allowed to provide that
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class. The process for upgrading an app then involves asking the zone operator to add the hash of your new JAR to the
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parameters file, and trigger the network parameters upgrade process. This involves each node operator running a shell
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command to accept the new parameters file and then restarting the node. Node owners who do not restart their node in
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time effectively stop being a part of the network.
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**Signature constraints.** These are not yet supported, but once implemented they will allow a state to require a JAR
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signed by a specified identity, via the regular Java jarsigner tool. This will be the most flexible type
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and the smoothest to deploy: no restarts or contract upgrade transactions are needed.
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**Defaults.** The default constraint type is either a zone constraint, if the network parameters in effect when the
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transaction is built contain an entry for that contract class, or a hash constraint if not.
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A ``TransactionState`` has a ``constraint`` field that represents that state's attachment constraint. When a party
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constructs a ``TransactionState``, or adds a state using ``TransactionBuilder.addOutput(ContractState)`` without
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specifying the constraint parameter, a default value (``AutomaticHashConstraint``) is used. This default will be
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automatically resolved to a specific ``HashAttachmentConstraint`` or a ``WhitelistedByZoneAttachmentConstraint``.
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This automatic resolution occurs when a ``TransactionBuilder`` is converted to a ``WireTransaction``. This reduces
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the boilerplate that would otherwise be involved.
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Finally, an ``AlwaysAcceptAttachmentConstraint`` can be used which accepts anything, though this is intended for
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testing only.
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Please note that the ``AttachmentConstraint`` interface is marked as ``@DoNotImplement``. You are not allowed to write
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new constraint types. Only the platform may implement this interface. If you tried, other nodes would not understand
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your constraint type and your transaction would not verify.
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.. warning:: An AlwaysAccept constraint is effectively the same as disabling security for those states entirely.
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Nothing stops you using this constraint in production, but that degrades Corda to being effectively a form
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of distributed messaging with optional contract logic being useful only to catch mistakes, rather than potentially
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malicious action. If you are deploying an app for which malicious actors aren't in your threat model, using an
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AlwaysAccept constraint might simplify things operationally.
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An example below shows how to construct a ``TransactionState`` with an explicitly specified hash constraint from within
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a flow:
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.. sourcecode:: java
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// Constructing a transaction with a custom hash constraint on a state
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TransactionBuilder tx = new TransactionBuilder();
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Party notaryParty = ... // a notary party
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DummyState contractState = new DummyState();
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SecureHash myAttachmentHash = SecureHash.parse("2b4042aed7e0e39d312c4c477dca1d96ec5a878ddcfd5583251a8367edbd4a5f");
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TransactionState transactionState = new TransactionState(contractState, DummyContract.Companion.getPROGRAMID(), notaryParty, new AttachmentHashConstraint(myAttachmentHash));
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tx.addOutputState(transactionState);
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WireTransaction wtx = tx.toWireTransaction(serviceHub); // This is where an automatic constraint would be resolved.
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LedgerTransaction ltx = wtx.toLedgerTransaction(serviceHub);
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ltx.verify(); // Verifies both the attachment constraints and contracts
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Hard-coding the hash of your app in the code itself can be pretty awkward, so the API also offers the ``AutomaticHashConstraint``.
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This isn't a real constraint that will appear in a transaction: it acts as a marker to the ``TransactionBuilder`` that
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you require the hash of the node's installed app which supplies the specified contract to be used. In practice, when using
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hash constraints, you almost always want "whatever the current code is" and not a hard-coded hash. So this automatic
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constraint placeholder is useful.
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CorDapps as attachments
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-----------------------
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CorDapp JARs (see :doc:`cordapp-overview`) that are installed to the node and contain classes implementing the ``Contract``
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interface are automatically loaded into the ``AttachmentStorage`` of a node at startup.
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After CorDapps are loaded into the attachment store the node creates a link between contract classes and the attachment
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that they were loaded from. This makes it possible to find the attachment for any given contract. This is how the
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automatic resolution of attachments is done by the ``TransactionBuilder`` and how, when verifying the constraints and
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contracts, attachments are associated with their respective contracts.
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.. note:: The obvious way to write a CorDapp is to put all you states, contracts, flows and support code into a single
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Java module. This will work but it will effectively publish your entire app onto the ledger. That has two problems:
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(1) it is inefficient, and (2) it means changes to your flows or other parts of the app will be seen by the ledger
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as a "new app", which may end up requiring essentially unnecessary upgrade procedures. It's better to split your
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app into multiple modules: one which contains just states, contracts and core data types. And another which contains
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the rest of the app. See :ref:`cordapp-structure`.
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Testing
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-------
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Since all tests involving transactions now require attachments it is also required to load the correct attachments
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for tests. Unit test environments in JVM ecosystems tend to use class directories rather than JARs, and so CorDapp JARs
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typically aren't built for testing. Requiring this would add significant complexity to the build systems of Corda
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and CorDapps, so the test suite has a set of convenient functions to generate CorDapps from package names or
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to specify JAR URLs in the case that the CorDapp(s) involved in testing already exist. You can also just use
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``AlwaysAcceptAttachmentConstraint`` in your tests to disable the constraints mechanism.
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MockNetwork/MockNode
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********************
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The simplest way to ensure that a vanilla instance of a MockNode generates the correct CorDapps is to use the
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``cordappPackages`` constructor parameter (Kotlin) or the ``setCordappPackages`` method on ``MockNetworkParameters`` (Java)
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when creating the MockNetwork. This will cause the ``AbstractNode`` to use the named packages as sources for CorDapps. All files
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within those packages will be zipped into a JAR and added to the attachment store and loaded as CorDapps by the
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``CordappLoader``.
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An example of this usage would be:
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.. sourcecode:: java
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class SomeTestClass {
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MockNetwork network = null;
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@Before
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void setup() {
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network = new MockNetwork(new MockNetworkParameters().setCordappPackages(Arrays.asList("com.domain.cordapp")))
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}
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... // Your tests go here
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}
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MockServices
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************
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If your test uses a ``MockServices`` directly you can instantiate it using a constructor that takes a list of packages
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to use as CorDapps using the ``cordappPackages`` parameter.
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.. sourcecode:: java
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MockServices mockServices = new MockServices(Arrays.asList("com.domain.cordapp"))
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However - there is an easier way! If your unit tests are in the same package as the contract code itself, then you
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can use the no-args constructor of ``MockServices``. The package to be scanned for CorDapps will be the same as the
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the package of the class that constructed the object. This is a convenient default.
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Driver
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******
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The driver takes a parameter called ``extraCordappPackagesToScan`` which is a list of packages to use as CorDapps.
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.. sourcecode:: java
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driver(new DriverParameters().setExtraCordappPackagesToScan(Arrays.asList("com.domain.cordapp"))) ...
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Full Nodes
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**********
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When testing against full nodes simply place your CorDapp into the cordapps directory of the node.
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Debugging
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---------
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If an attachment constraint cannot be resolved, a ``MissingContractAttachments`` exception is thrown. There are two
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common sources of ``MissingContractAttachments`` exceptions:
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Not setting CorDapp packages in tests
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*************************************
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You are running a test and have not specified the CorDapp packages to scan. See the instructions above.
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Wrong fully-qualified contract name
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***********************************
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You are specifying the fully-qualified name of the contract incorrectly. For example, you've defined ``MyContract`` in
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the package ``com.mycompany.myapp.contracts``, but the fully-qualified contract name you pass to the
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``TransactionBuilder`` is ``com.mycompany.myapp.MyContract`` (instead of ``com.mycompany.myapp.contracts.MyContract``). |