The devp2p command
The devp2p command line tool is a utility for low-level peer-to-peer debugging and
protocol development purposes. It can do many things.
ENR Decoding
Use devp2p enrdump <base64>
to verify and display a 420coin Node Record.
Node Key Management
The devp2p key ...
command family deals with node key files.
Run devp2p key generate mynode.key
to create a new node key in the mynode.key
file.
Run devp2p key to-enode mynode.key -ip 127.0.0.1 -tcp 13013
to create an enode:// URL
corresponding to the given node key and address information.
Maintaining DNS Discovery Node Lists
The devp2p command can create and publish DNS discovery node lists.
Run devp2p dns sign <directory>
to update the signature of a DNS discovery tree.
Run devp2p dns sync <enrtree-URL>
to download a complete DNS discovery tree.
Run devp2p dns to-cloudflare <directory>
to publish a tree to CloudFlare DNS.
Run devp2p dns to-route53 <directory>
to publish a tree to Amazon Route53.
You can find more information about these commands in the [DNS Discovery Setup Guide][dns-tutorial].
Discovery v4 Utilities
The devp2p discv4 ...
command family deals with the [Node Discovery v4][discv4]
protocol.
Run devp2p discv4 ping <enode/ENR>
to ping a node.
Run devp2p discv4 resolve <enode/ENR>
to find the most recent node record of a node in
the DHT.
Run devp2p discv4 crawl <nodes.json path>
to create or update a JSON node set.
Discovery v5 Utilities
The devp2p discv5 ...
command family deals with the [Node Discovery v5][discv5]
protocol. This protocol is currently under active development.
Run devp2p discv5 ping <ENR>
to ping a node.
Run devp2p discv5 resolve <ENR>
to find the most recent node record of a node in
the discv5 DHT.
Run devp2p discv5 listen
to run a Discovery v5 node.
Run devp2p discv5 crawl <nodes.json path>
to create or update a JSON node set containing
discv5 nodes.
Discovery Test Suites
The devp2p command also contains interactive test suites for Discovery v4 and Discovery
v5.
To run these tests against your implementation, you need to set up a networking
environment where two separate UDP listening addresses are available on the same machine.
The two listening addresses must also be routed such that they are able to reach the node
you want to test.
For example, if you want to run the test on your local host, and the node under test is
also on the local host, you need to assign two IP addresses (or a larger range) to your
loopback interface. On macOS, this can be done by executing the following command:
sudo ifconfig lo0 add 127.0.0.2
You can now run either test suite as follows: Start the node under test first, ensuring
that it won't talk to the Internet (i.e. disable bootstrapping). An easy way to prevent
unintended connections to the global DHT is listening on 127.0.0.1
.
Now get the ENR of your node and store it in the NODE
environment variable.
Start the test by running devp2p discv5 test -listen1 127.0.0.1 -listen2 127.0.0.2 $NODE
.
Fourtwenty Protocol Test Suite
The Fourtwenty Protocol test suite is a conformance test suite for the fourtwenty protocol.
To run the fourtwenty protocol test suite against your implementation, the node needs to be initialized as such:
- initialize the g420 node with the
genesis.json
file contained in the testdata
directory
- import the
halfchain.rlp
file in the testdata
directory
- run g420 with the following flags:
g420 --datadir <datadir> --nodiscover --nat=none --networkid 19763 --verbosity 5
Then, run the following command, replacing <enode ID>
with the enode of the g420 node:
devp2p rlpx fourtwenty-test <enode ID> cmd/devp2p/internal/420test/testdata/fullchain.rlp cmd/devp2p/internal/420test/testdata/genesis.json