doc.go 5.8 KB

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  1. // Copyright 2016 The go-ethereum Authors
  2. // This file is part of the go-ethereum library.
  3. //
  4. // The go-ethereum library is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
  5. // it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
  6. // the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
  7. // (at your option) any later version.
  8. //
  9. // The go-ethereum library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
  10. // but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  11. // MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
  12. // GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
  13. //
  14. // You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
  15. // along with the go-ethereum library. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
  16. /*
  17. Package node sets up multi-protocol Ethereum nodes.
  18. In the model exposed by this package, a node is a collection of services which use shared
  19. resources to provide RPC APIs. Services can also offer devp2p protocols, which are wired
  20. up to the devp2p network when the node instance is started.
  21. Node Lifecycle
  22. The Node object has a lifecycle consisting of three basic states, INITIALIZING, RUNNING
  23. and CLOSED.
  24. ●───────┐
  25. New()
  26. INITIALIZING ────Start()─┐
  27. │ │
  28. │ ▼
  29. Close() RUNNING
  30. │ │
  31. ▼ │
  32. CLOSED ◀──────Close()─┘
  33. Creating a Node allocates basic resources such as the data directory and returns the node
  34. in its INITIALIZING state. Lifecycle objects, RPC APIs and peer-to-peer networking
  35. protocols can be registered in this state. Basic operations such as opening a key-value
  36. database are permitted while initializing.
  37. Once everything is registered, the node can be started, which moves it into the RUNNING
  38. state. Starting the node starts all registered Lifecycle objects and enables RPC and
  39. peer-to-peer networking. Note that no additional Lifecycles, APIs or p2p protocols can be
  40. registered while the node is running.
  41. Closing the node releases all held resources. The actions performed by Close depend on the
  42. state it was in. When closing a node in INITIALIZING state, resources related to the data
  43. directory are released. If the node was RUNNING, closing it also stops all Lifecycle
  44. objects and shuts down RPC and peer-to-peer networking.
  45. You must always call Close on Node, even if the node was not started.
  46. Resources Managed By Node
  47. All file-system resources used by a node instance are located in a directory called the
  48. data directory. The location of each resource can be overridden through additional node
  49. configuration. The data directory is optional. If it is not set and the location of a
  50. resource is otherwise unspecified, package node will create the resource in memory.
  51. To access to the devp2p network, Node configures and starts p2p.Server. Each host on the
  52. devp2p network has a unique identifier, the node key. The Node instance persists this key
  53. across restarts. Node also loads static and trusted node lists and ensures that knowledge
  54. about other hosts is persisted.
  55. JSON-RPC servers which run HTTP, WebSocket or IPC can be started on a Node. RPC modules
  56. offered by registered services will be offered on those endpoints. Users can restrict any
  57. endpoint to a subset of RPC modules. Node itself offers the "debug", "admin" and "web3"
  58. modules.
  59. Service implementations can open LevelDB databases through the service context. Package
  60. node chooses the file system location of each database. If the node is configured to run
  61. without a data directory, databases are opened in memory instead.
  62. Node also creates the shared store of encrypted Ethereum account keys. Services can access
  63. the account manager through the service context.
  64. Sharing Data Directory Among Instances
  65. Multiple node instances can share a single data directory if they have distinct instance
  66. names (set through the Name config option). Sharing behaviour depends on the type of
  67. resource.
  68. devp2p-related resources (node key, static/trusted node lists, known hosts database) are
  69. stored in a directory with the same name as the instance. Thus, multiple node instances
  70. using the same data directory will store this information in different subdirectories of
  71. the data directory.
  72. LevelDB databases are also stored within the instance subdirectory. If multiple node
  73. instances use the same data directory, opening the databases with identical names will
  74. create one database for each instance.
  75. The account key store is shared among all node instances using the same data directory
  76. unless its location is changed through the KeyStoreDir configuration option.
  77. Data Directory Sharing Example
  78. In this example, two node instances named A and B are started with the same data
  79. directory. Node instance A opens the database "db", node instance B opens the databases
  80. "db" and "db-2". The following files will be created in the data directory:
  81. data-directory/
  82. A/
  83. nodekey -- devp2p node key of instance A
  84. nodes/ -- devp2p discovery knowledge database of instance A
  85. db/ -- LevelDB content for "db"
  86. A.ipc -- JSON-RPC UNIX domain socket endpoint of instance A
  87. B/
  88. nodekey -- devp2p node key of node B
  89. nodes/ -- devp2p discovery knowledge database of instance B
  90. static-nodes.json -- devp2p static node list of instance B
  91. db/ -- LevelDB content for "db"
  92. db-2/ -- LevelDB content for "db-2"
  93. B.ipc -- JSON-RPC UNIX domain socket endpoint of instance B
  94. keystore/ -- account key store, used by both instances
  95. */
  96. package node