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go-algorand

Algorand's official implementation in Go.

Algorand is a permissionless, pure proof-of-stake blockchain that delivers decentralization, scalability, security, and transaction finality.

Getting Started

Our developer website has the most up to date information about using and installing the Algorand platform.

Building from source

Development is done using the Go Programming Language. The version of go is specified in the project's go.mod file. This document assumes that you have a functioning environment setup. If you need assistance setting up an environment please visit the official Go documentation website.

Linux / OSX

We currently strive to support Debian-based distributions with Ubuntu 18.04 being our official release target. Building on Arch Linux works as well. Our core engineering team uses Linux and OSX, so both environments are well supported for development.

OSX only: Homebrew (brew) must be installed before continuing. Here are the installation requirements.

Initial environment setup:

git clone https://github.com/algorand/go-algorand
cd go-algorand
./scripts/configure_dev.sh
./scripts/buildtools/install_buildtools.sh

At this point, you are ready to build go-algorand. We use make and have a number of targets to automate common tasks.

build

make install

test

# unit tests
make test

# integration tests
make integration

style and checks

make fmt
make lint
make fix
make vet

or alternatively

make sanity

Running a node

Once the software is built you'll find binaries in ${GOPATH}/bin, and a data directory will be initialized at ~/.algorand. Start your node with ${GOPATH}/bin/goal node start -d ~/.algorand, use ${GOPATH}/bin/carpenter -d ~/.algorand to see activity. Refer to the developer website for how to use the different tools.

Providing your own data directory

You can run a node out of other directories than ~/.algorand and join networks other than mainnet. Just make a new directory and copy into it the genesis.json file for the network. For example:

mkdir ~/testnet_data
cp installer/genesis/testnet/genesis.json ~/testnet_data/genesis.json
${GOPATH}/bin/goal node start -d ~/testnet_data

Genesis files for mainnet, testnet, and betanet can be found in installer/genesis/.

Contributing (Code, Documentation, Bugs, Etc)

Please refer to our CONTRIBUTING document.

Project Layout

go-algorand is split into various subpackages.

The following packages provide core functionality to the algod and kmd daemons, as well as other tools and commands:

  • crypto contains the cryptographic constructions we're using for hashing, signatures, and VRFs. There are also some Algorand-specific details here about spending keys, protocols keys, one-time-use signing keys, and how they relate to each other.
  • config holds configuration parameters. These include parameters used locally by the node as well as parameters which must be agreed upon by the protocol.
  • data defines various types used throughout the codebase.
    • basics hold basic types such as MicroAlgos, account data, and addresses.
    • account defines accounts, including "root" accounts (which can spend money) and "participation" accounts (which can participate in the agreement protocol).
    • transactions define transactions that accounts can issue against the Algorand state. These include standard payments and also participation key registration transactions.
    • bookkeeping defines blocks, which are batches of transactions atomically committed to Algorand.
    • pools implement the transaction pool. The transaction pool holds transactions seen by a node in memory before they are proposed in a block.
    • committee implements the credentials that authenticate a participating account's membership in the agreement protocol.
  • ledger (README) contains the Algorand Ledger state machine, which holds the sequence of blocks. The Ledger executes the state transitions that result from applying these blocks. It answers queries on blocks (e.g., what transactions were in the last committed block?) and on accounts (e.g., what is my balance?).
  • protocol declares constants used to identify protocol versions, tags for routing network messages, and prefixes for domain separation of cryptographic inputs. It also implements the canonical encoder.
  • network contains the code for participating in a mesh network based on WebSockets. Maintains connection to some number of peers, (optionally) accepts connections from peers, sends point to point and broadcast messages, and receives messages routing them to various handler code (e.g. agreement/gossip/network.go registers three handlers).
    • rpcs contains the HTTP RPCs used by algod processes to query one another.
  • agreement (README) contains the agreement service, which implements Algorand's Byzantine Agreement protocol. This protocol allows participating accounts to quickly confirm blocks in a fork-safe manner, provided that sufficient account stake is correctly executing the protocol.
  • node integrates the components above and handles initialization and shutdown. It provides queries into these components.

daemon defines the two daemons which provide Algorand clients with services:

  • daemon/algod holds the algod daemon, which implements a participating node. algod allows a node to participate in the agreement protocol, submit and confirm transactions, and view the state of the Algorand Ledger.
    • daemon/algod/api (README) is the REST interface used for interactions with algod.
  • daemon/kmd (README) holds the kmd daemon. This daemon allows a node to sign transactions. Because kmd is separate from algod, kmd allows a user to sign transactions on an air-gapped computer.

The following packages allow developers to interface with the Algorand system:

  • cmd holds the primary commands defining entry points into the system.
    • cmd/catchupsrv (README) is a tool to assist with processing historic blocks on a new node.
  • libgoal exports a Go interface useful for developers of Algorand clients.
  • debug holds secondary commands which assist developers during debugging.

The following packages contain tools to help Algorand developers deploy networks of their own:

  • nodecontrol
  • tools
  • docker
  • commandandcontrol (README) is a tool to automate a network of algod instances.
  • components
  • netdeploy

A number of packages provide utilities for the various components:

  • logging is a wrapper around logrus.
  • util contains a variety of utilities, including a codec, a SQLite wrapper, a goroutine pool, a timer interface, node metrics, and more.

test (README) contains end-to-end tests and utilities for the above components.

License

License: AGPL v3

Please see the COPYING_FAQ for details about how to apply our license.

Copyright (C) 2019-2021, Algorand Inc.

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