yasiryagi 1b6a250bb1 Storage documentation (#850) 2 年 前
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README.md 1b6a250bb1 Storage documentation (#850) 2 年 前

README.md

Overview

The following assumptions apply:

  1. You are root, and cloning to ~/joystream
  2. in most cases, you will want to run your own joystream-node on the same device, and this guide assumes you are.

For instructions on how to set this up, go here. Note that you can disregard all the parts about keys before applying, and just install the software so it is ready to go. You do need to run with --pruning=archive though, and be synced past the blockheight you are exporting the db from.

Get Started

You don't need to host your query-node, but if you're connecting to your own node, docker will not "find" it on localhost. So first, go to Setup Hosting.

Install Docker

sudo curl -fsSL https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu/gpg | sudo gpg --dearmor -o /usr/share/keyrings/docker-archive-keyring.gpg
sudo echo \
  "deb [arch=$(dpkg --print-architecture) signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/docker-archive-keyring.gpg] https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu \
  $(lsb_release -cs) stable" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/docker.list > /dev/null
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install docker-ce docker-ce-cli containerd.io docker-compose-plugin

Install a Newer Version of docker-compose

The package manager apt-get installs an old version of docker-compose, that doesn't take the .env file format we have used. We recommend removing the old one, and install the new one, with:

$docker-compose version
# if you see `1.29.2` skip to Deploy
$ cd ~/
$ apt-get remove docker-compose
$ curl -L "https://github.com/docker/compose/releases/download/1.29.2/docker-compose-$(uname -s)-$(uname -m)" -o /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
$ chmod +x /usr/local/bin/docker-compose
$ ln -s /usr/local/bin/docker-compose /usr/bin/docker-compose

Clone the Repo

If you haven't already, clone the Joystream/joystream (mono)repo:

$ git clone https://github.com/Joystream/joystream.git
$ cd joystream
$ ./setup.sh
# this requires you to start a new session. if you are using a vps:
$ exit
#
# Login back again
$ cd joystream
$ ./build-packages.sh

The last command will take a while...

Deploy

Set the Environment

First, get your

$ cd ~/joystream
$ nano .env
# Change to make, where "old" line is commented out:
---
#JOYSTREAM_NODE_WS=ws://joystream-node:9944/
JOYSTREAM_NODE_WS=wss://<your.cool.url>/rpc

Deploy - Easy

Assuming you installed the newer version of docker-compose:

$ cd ~/joystream
$ query-node/start.sh

And you should be done!

Go and confirm everything is working

Deploy - Elaborate

If you want to use a version of docker-compose older than 1.29.0:

First, you need to edit the .env file some more:

$ cd ~/joystream
$ nano .env
# Change to make, where "old" line is commented out:
---
#COLOSSUS_QUERY_NODE_URL=http://graphql-server:${GRAPHQL_SERVER_PORT}/graphql
COLOSSUS_QUERY_NODE_URL=http://graphql-server:4000/graphql

#DISTRIBUTOR_QUERY_NODE_URL=http://graphql-server:${GRAPHQL_SERVER_PORT}/graphql
DISTRIBUTOR_QUERY_NODE_URL=http://graphql-server:4000/graphql

#PROCESSOR_INDEXER_GATEWAY=http://hydra-indexer-gateway:${HYDRA_INDEXER_GATEWAY_PORT}/graphql
PROCESSOR_INDEXER_GATEWAY=http://hydra-indexer-gateway:4000/graphql

You are now ready to run a script that deploys the query node with docker.

$ cd ~/joystream
$ nano deploy-qn.sh
# paste in below:
---
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -e

SCRIPT_PATH="$(dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")"
cd $SCRIPT_PATH

# Bring up db
docker-compose up -d db

# Make sure we use dev config for db migrations (prevents "Cannot create database..." and some other errors)
docker-compose run --rm --entrypoint sh graphql-server -c "yarn workspace query-node config:dev"
# Migrate the databases
docker-compose run --rm --entrypoint sh graphql-server -c "yarn workspace query-node-root db:prepare"
docker-compose run --rm --entrypoint sh graphql-server -c "yarn workspace query-node-root db:migrate"

# Start indexer and gateway
docker-compose up -d indexer
docker-compose up -d hydra-indexer-gateway

# Start processor and graphql server
docker-compose up -d processor
docker-compose up -d graphql-server

Then, deploy!


$ chmod +x deploy-qn.sh
./deploy-qn.sh

Confirm Everything is Working

# Are all the 6 processes running?
$ docker ps
# Should return: graphql-server, processor, hydra-indexer-gateway, indexer, redis, db

# Is it syncing?
$ docker logs -f -n 100 processor
# this should get all the blocks between 4191207 and the current height. It's fast :)

$ docker logs -f -n 100 indexer
# this should parse all the "interesting" events that the processor processes.

You can do a spotcheck to see if you have the correct storageBuckets:

curl 'localhost:8081/graphql' -H 'Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br' -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -H 'Accept: application/json' -H 'Connection: keep-alive' -H 'DNT: 1' -H 'Origin: localhost:8081/graphql' --data-binary '{"query":"query {\n  storageBuckets {\n    id\n  }\n}"}' --compressed

Finally, if you included hosting of the Query-node, you can access the graphql server at https://<your.cool.url>/server/graphql. Note that you'd need to change https://<your.cool.url>/graphql address to https://<your.cool.url>/server/graphql as well for the server to be reached.

Troubleshooting

Make sure your joystream node accept connections from your domain, use the flag --rpc-cors flag i.e. --rpc-cors all.