In IBC, blockchains do not directly pass messages to each other over the network. This is where relayer
comes in.
A relayer process monitors for updates on opens paths between sets of IBC enabled chains.
The relayer submits these updates in the form of specific message types to the counterparty chain. Clients are then used to
track and verify the consensus state.
In addition to relaying packets, this relayer can open paths across chains, thus creating clients, connections and channels.
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Clone, checkout and install the latest release (releases page).
Go needs to be installed and a proper Go environment needs to be configured
$ git clone https://github.com/cosmos/relayer.git
$ cd relayer && git checkout v2.4.0
$ make install
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Initialize the relayer's configuration directory/file.
$ rly config init
Default config file location: ~/.relayer/config/config.yaml
By default, transactions will be relayed with a memo of rly(VERSION)
e.g. rly(v2.4.0)
.
To customize the memo for all relaying, use the --memo
flag when initializing the configuration.
$ rly config init --memo "My custom memo"
Custom memos will have rly(VERSION)
appended. For example, a memo of My custom memo
running on relayer version v2.4.0
would result in a transaction memo of My custom memo | rly(v2.4.0)
.
The --memo
flag is also available for other rly
commands also that involve sending transactions such as rly tx link
and rly start
. It can be passed there to override the config.yaml
value if desired.
To omit the memo entirely, including the default value of rly(VERSION)
, use -
for the memo.
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Configure the chains you want to relay between.
In our example, we will configure the relayer to operate on the canonical path between the Cosmos Hub and Osmosis.
The rly chains add
command fetches chain meta-data from the chain-registry and adds it to your config file.
$ rly chains add cosmoshub osmosis
Adding chains from the chain-registry randomly selects an RPC address from the registry entry.
If you are running your own node, manually go into the config and adjust the rpc-addr
setting.
NOTE: rly chains add
will check the liveliness of the available RPC endpoints for that chain in the chain-registry.
It is possible that the command will fail if none of these RPC endpoints are available. In this case, you will want to manually add the chain config.
To add the chain config files manually, example config files have been included here
$ rly chains add --url https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cosmos/relayer/main/docs/example-configs/cosmoshub-4.json cosmoshub
$ rly chains add --url https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cosmos/relayer/main/docs/example-configs/osmosis-1.json osmosis
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Import OR create new keys for the relayer to use when signing and relaying transactions.
key-name
is an identifier of your choosing.
If you need to generate a new private key you can use the add
subcommand.
$ rly keys add cosmoshub [key-name]
$ rly keys add osmosis [key-name]
If you already have a private key and want to restore it from your mnemonic you can use the restore
subcommand.
$ rly keys restore cosmoshub [key-name] "mnemonic words here"
$ rly keys restore osmosis [key-name] "mnemonic words here"
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Use the key-name
created above.
This step is necessary if you chose a key-name
other than "default"
$ rly keys use cosmoshub [key-name]
$ rly keys use osmosis [key-name]
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Ensure the keys associated with the configured chains are funded.
Your configured addresses will need to contain some of the respective native tokens for paying relayer fees.
You can query the balance of each configured key by running:
$ rly q balance cosmoshub
$ rly q balance osmosis
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Configure path meta-data in config file.
We have the chain meta-data configured, now we need path meta-data. For more info on path
terminology visit here.
NOTE: Thinking of chains in the config as "source" and "destination" can be confusing. Be aware that most path are bi-directional.
rly paths fetch
will check for IBC path meta data from the chain-registry and add these paths to your config file.
$ rly paths fetch
NOTE: Don't see the path metadata for paths you want to relay on?
Please open a PR to add this metadata to the GitHub repo!
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By default, the relayer will relay packets over all channels on a given connection.
Each path has a src-channel-filter
which you can utilize to specify which channels you would like to relay on.
The rule
can be one of three values:
allowlist
which tells the relayer to relay on ONLY the channels in channel-list
denylist
which tells the relayer to relay on all channels BESIDES the channels in channel-list
- empty value, which is the default setting, and tells the relayer to relay on all channels
Since we are only worried about the canonical channel between the Cosmos Hub and Osmosis our filter settings would look like the following.
Example:
hubosmo:
src:
chain-id: cosmoshub-4
client-id: 07-tendermint-259
connection-id: connection-257
dst:
chain-id: osmosis-1
client-id: 07-tendermint-1
connection-id: connection-1
src-channel-filter:
rule: allowlist
channel-list: [channel-141]
Because two channels between chains are tightly coupled, there is no need to specify the dst channels.
If you only know the "dst" channel-ID you can query the "src" channel-ID by running: rly q channel <dst_chain_name> <dst_channel_id> <port> | jq '.channel.counterparty.channel_id'
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Finally, we start the relayer on the desired path.
The relayer will periodically update the clients and listen for IBC messages to relay.
$ rly paths list
$ rly start [path]
# Optionally you can omit the `path` argument to start all configured paths
$ rly start
When running multiple instances of rly start
, you will need to use the --debug-addr
flag and provide an address:port. You can also pass an empty string ''
to turn off this feature or pass localhost:0
to randomly select a port.
[TROUBLESHOOTING]
If you would like to report a security bug related to the relayer repo,
please follow the instructions in SECURITY.md.
The Cosmos community is dedicated to providing an inclusive and harassment free
experience for contributors. Please visit Code of Conduct for more information.