Akachain Golang Software Development Kit
golang SDK that supports writing chaincodes on Akachain platform. In release v1.0, we introduce 3 different Software Development Kits (SDKs)
1. Unit testing framework
Hyperledger Fabric supports writing unit test for chaincode using GoMock. However, the default Mock file provided by Fabric does not support testing with CouchDB. Instead, key-value data is stored in an in-memory map. This does not allows developers to perform unit test on any function that relies on couchdb.
aakc-go-sdk-hfv2x provides utilities that override the default mock stub class to allow writing chaincode unit test that uses a local (or remote) couchdb instance.
We first need to install Apache couchdb at http://couchdb.apache.org/
There is also a list of imports that are neccessary as follows.
import (
...
"testing"
"github.com/Akachain/akc-go-sdk-hfv2x/util"
"github.com/hyperledger/fabric-chaincode-go/shim"
"github.com/stretchr/testify/assert"
)
We then create a MockStubExtend object that literally extend Fabric MockStub and
type Chaincode struct {
}
func setupMock() *util.MockStubExtend {
// Initialize mockstubextend
cc := new(Chaincode)
stub := util.NewMockStubExtend(shim.NewMockStub("mockstubextend", cc), cc)
// Create a new database, Drop old database
db, _ := util.NewCouchDBHandler("dbtest", true)
stub.SetCouchDBConfiguration(db)
return stub
}
Then we can perform Unit test for each chaincode invoke function normally. Here is an example of testing an invoke function:
func TestSample(t *testing.T) {
stub := setupMock()
usr := models.UserWallet{
UserId: "id1",
PublicKey: "pubkey",
}
param, _ := json.Marshal(usr)
// Create a new user
rs := util.MockInvokeTransaction(t, stub, [][]byte{[]byte("createUser"), []byte(param), []byte("2")})
// Make a composite key that is similar with the one in couchdb
compositeKey, _ := stub.CreateCompositeKey(models.USERWALLET_TABLE, []string{rs})
// Check if the created user exist
state, _ := stub.GetState(compositeKey)
var ad models.UserWallet
json.Unmarshal([]byte(state), &ad)
// Check if the created user information is correct
assert.Equal(t, usr.UserId, ad.UserId)
assert.Equal(t, usr.PublicKey, ad.PublicKey)
}
2. High Throughput Chaincode (HTC)
Please follow the instruction here
3. High Secure Transaction Chaincode (HSTX)
A high level description of HSTX is described here. It is still in R&D phase.
We have a live demo here