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Part 2: Non-profit (NGO) Chaincode

The instructions in this README will help you to install the NGO chaincode on the Fabric network you created in Part 1

All steps are carried out on the Fabric client node you created in Part 1

Pre-requisites

From Cloud9, SSH into the Fabric client node. The key (i.e. the .PEM file) should be in your home directory. The DNS of the Fabric client node EC2 instance can be found in the output of the CloudFormation stack you created in Part 1

ssh ec2-user@<dns of EC2 instance> -i ~/<Fabric network name>-keypair.pem

You should have already cloned this repo in Part 1

cd ~
git clone https://github.com/aws-samples/non-profit-blockchain.git

You will need to set the context before carrying out any Fabric CLI commands. We do this using the export files that were generated for us in Part 1

Source the file, so the exports are applied to your current session. If you exit the SSH session and re-connect, you'll need to source the file again. The source command below will print out the values of the key ENV variables. Make sure they are all populated. If they are not, follow Step 4 in Part 1 to repopulate them.

cd ~/non-profit-blockchain/ngo-fabric
source fabric-exports.sh
source ~/peer-exports.sh 

Step 1 - Copy the chaincode into the CLI container

The Fabric CLI container that is running on your Fabric client node (do docker ps to see it) mounts a folder from the Fabric client node EC2 instance: /home/ec2-user/fabric-samples/chaincode. You can see this by looking at the docker config. Look at the Mounts section in the output where you'll see /home/ec2-user/fabric-samples/chaincode mounted into the Docker container:

docker inspect cli

You should already have this folder on your Fabric client node as it was created earlier. Copying the chaincode into this folder will make it accessible inside the Fabric CLI container.

cd ~
mkdir -p ./fabric-samples/chaincode/ngo
cp ./non-profit-blockchain/ngo-chaincode/src/* ./fabric-samples/chaincode/ngo

Step 2 - Install the chaincode on your peer

Before executing any chaincode functions, the chaincode must be installed on the peer node. Chaincode must be installed on every peer that wants to invoke transactions or run the query functions in the chaincode.

Notice we are using the -l node flag, as our chaincode is written in Node.js.

docker exec -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ENABLED=true" -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ROOTCERT_FILE=/opt/home/managedblockchain-tls-chain.pem" \
    -e "CORE_PEER_LOCALMSPID=$MSP" -e "CORE_PEER_MSPCONFIGPATH=$MSP_PATH" -e "CORE_PEER_ADDRESS=$PEER"  \
    cli peer chaincode install -n ngo -l node -v v0 -p /opt/gopath/src/github.com/ngo

Expected response:

2018-11-15 06:39:47.625 UTC [chaincodeCmd] checkChaincodeCmdParams -> INFO 001 Using default escc
2018-11-15 06:39:47.625 UTC [chaincodeCmd] checkChaincodeCmdParams -> INFO 002 Using default vscc
2018-11-15 06:39:47.625 UTC [container] WriteFolderToTarPackage -> INFO 003 rootDirectory = /opt/gopath/src/github.com/ngo
2018-11-15 06:39:47.636 UTC [chaincodeCmd] install -> INFO 004 Installed remotely response:<status:200 payload:"OK" >

Step 3 - Instantiate the chaincode on the channel

Instantiation initializes the chaincode on the channel, i.e. it binds the chaincode to a specific channel. Instantiation is treated as a Fabric transaction. In fact, when chaincode is instantiated, the Init function on the chaincode is called. Instantiation also sets the endorsement policy for this version of the chaincode on this channel. In the example below we are not explictly passing an endorsement policy, so the default policy of 'any member of the organizations in the channel' is applied.

It can take up to 30 seconds to instantiate chaincode on the channel.

docker exec -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ENABLED=true" -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ROOTCERT_FILE=/opt/home/managedblockchain-tls-chain.pem" \
    -e "CORE_PEER_LOCALMSPID=$MSP" -e "CORE_PEER_MSPCONFIGPATH=$MSP_PATH" -e "CORE_PEER_ADDRESS=$PEER"  \
    cli peer chaincode instantiate -o $ORDERER -C mychannel -n ngo -v v0 -c '{"Args":["init"]}' --cafile /opt/home/managedblockchain-tls-chain.pem --tls

Expected response: (Note this might fail if the chaincode has been previously instantiated. Chaincode only needs to be instantiated once on a channel)

2018-11-15 06:41:02.847 UTC [chaincodeCmd] checkChaincodeCmdParams -> INFO 001 Using default escc
2018-11-15 06:41:02.847 UTC [chaincodeCmd] checkChaincodeCmdParams -> INFO 002 Using default vscc

Step 4 - Query the chaincode

Query all donors

docker exec -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ENABLED=true" -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ROOTCERT_FILE=/opt/home/managedblockchain-tls-chain.pem" \
    -e "CORE_PEER_ADDRESS=$PEER" -e "CORE_PEER_LOCALMSPID=$MSP" -e "CORE_PEER_MSPCONFIGPATH=$MSP_PATH" \
    cli peer chaincode query -C mychannel -n ngo -c '{"Args":["queryAllDonors"]}'

Expected response: This is correct as we do not have any donors in our network yet. We'll add one in the next step.

[]

Step 5 - Invoke a transaction

Let's add a couple of donors to Fabric. Execute both of these transactions below:

docker exec -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ENABLED=true" -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ROOTCERT_FILE=/opt/home/managedblockchain-tls-chain.pem" \
    -e "CORE_PEER_ADDRESS=$PEER" -e "CORE_PEER_LOCALMSPID=$MSP" -e "CORE_PEER_MSPCONFIGPATH=$MSP_PATH" \
    cli peer chaincode invoke -C mychannel -n ngo \
    -c  '{"Args":["createDonor","{\"donorUserName\": \"edge\", \"email\": \"edge@def.com\", \"registeredDate\": \"2018-10-22T11:52:20.182Z\"}"]}' -o $ORDERER --cafile /opt/home/managedblockchain-tls-chain.pem --tls

docker exec -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ENABLED=true" -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ROOTCERT_FILE=/opt/home/managedblockchain-tls-chain.pem" \
    -e "CORE_PEER_ADDRESS=$PEER" -e "CORE_PEER_LOCALMSPID=$MSP" -e "CORE_PEER_MSPCONFIGPATH=$MSP_PATH" \
    cli peer chaincode invoke -C mychannel -n ngo \
    -c  '{"Args":["createDonor","{\"donorUserName\": \"braendle\", \"email\": \"braendle@def.com\", \"registeredDate\": \"2018-11-05T14:31:20.182Z\"}"]}' -o $ORDERER --cafile /opt/home/managedblockchain-tls-chain.pem --tls

Step 6 - Query the chaincode

Query all donors

docker exec -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ENABLED=true" -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ROOTCERT_FILE=/opt/home/managedblockchain-tls-chain.pem" \
    -e "CORE_PEER_ADDRESS=$PEER" -e "CORE_PEER_LOCALMSPID=$MSP" -e "CORE_PEER_MSPCONFIGPATH=$MSP_PATH" \
    cli peer chaincode query -C mychannel -n ngo -c '{"Args":["queryAllDonors"]}'

Query a specific donor

docker exec -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ENABLED=true" -e "CORE_PEER_TLS_ROOTCERT_FILE=/opt/home/managedblockchain-tls-chain.pem" \
    -e "CORE_PEER_ADDRESS=$PEER" -e "CORE_PEER_LOCALMSPID=$MSP" -e "CORE_PEER_MSPCONFIGPATH=$MSP_PATH" \
    cli peer chaincode query -C mychannel -n ngo -c '{"Args":["queryDonor","{\"donorUserName\": \"edge\"}"]}'

Move on to Part 3

The workshop instructions can be found in the README files in parts 1-4:

  • Part 1: Start the workshop by building the Hyperledger Fabric blockchain network using Amazon Managed Blockchain.
  • Part 2: Deploy the non-profit chaincode.
  • Part 3: Run the RESTful API server.
  • Part 4: Run the application.
  • Part 5: Add a new member to the network.
  • Part 6: Read and write to the blockchain with Amazon API Gateway and AWS Lambda.
  • Part 7: Use blockchain events to notify users of NGO donations.
  • Part 8: Deploy Hyperledger Explorer.
  • Part 9: Integrating blockchain users with Amazon Cognito.