The nwaku repository implements Waku, and provides tools related to it.
- A Nim implementation of the Waku (v2) protocol.
- CLI application
wakunode2
that allows you to run a Waku node. - Examples of Waku usage.
- Various tests of above.
For more details see the source code
These instructions are generic. For more detailed instructions, see the Waku source code above.
The standard developer tools, including a C compiler, GNU Make, Bash, and Git. More information on these installations can be found here.
# The first `make` invocation will update all Git submodules.
# You'll run `make update` after each `git pull` in the future to keep those submodules updated.
make wakunode2
# Build with custom compilation flags. Do not use NIM_PARAMS unless you know what you are doing.
# Replace with your own flags
make wakunode2 NIMFLAGS="-d:chronicles_colors:none -d:disableMarchNative"
# Run with DNS bootstrapping
./build/wakunode2 --dns-discovery --dns-discovery-url=DNS_BOOTSTRAP_NODE_URL
# See available command line options
./build/wakunode2 --help
To join the network, you need to know the address of at least one bootstrap node. Please refer to the Waku README for more information.
For more on how to run wakunode2
, refer to:
If you encounter difficulties building the project on WSL, consider placing the project within WSL's filesystem, avoiding the /mnt/
directory.
Note: This is a work in progress. The current setup procedure is as follows: Goal: Get rid of windows specific procedures and make the build process the same as linux/macos.
The current setup procedure is as follows:
- Clone the repository and checkout master branch
- Ensure prerequisites are installed (Make, GCC, MSYS2/MinGW)
- Run scripts/windows_setup.sh
This repository is bundled with a Nim runtime that includes the necessary dependencies for the project.
Before you can utilize the runtime you'll need to build the project, as detailed in a previous section.
This will generate a vendor
directory containing various dependencies, including the nimbus-build-system
which has the bundled nim runtime.
After successfully building the project, you may bring the bundled runtime into scope by running:
source env.sh
If everything went well, you should see your prompt suffixed with [Nimbus env]$
. Now you can run nim
commands as usual.
# Run all the Waku tests
make test
During development it is helpful to build and run a single test file. To support this make has a specific target:
targets:
build/<relative path to your test file.nim>
test/<relative path to your test file.nim>
Binary will be created as <path to your test file.nim>.bin
under the build
directory .
# Build and run your test file separately
make test/tests/common/test_enr_builder.nim
Nim files are expected to be formatted using the nph
version present in vendor/nph
.
You can easily format file with the make nph/<relative path to nim> file
command.
For example:
make nph/waku/waku_core.nim
A convenient git hook is provided to automatically format file at commit time. Run the following command to install it:
make install-nph
Examples can be found in the examples folder. This includes a fully featured chat example.
Different tools and their corresponding how-to guides can be found in the tools
folder.
For an inquiry, or if you would like to propose new features, feel free to open a general issue.
For bug reports, please tag your issue with the bug
label.
If you believe the reported issue requires critical attention, please use the critical
label to assist with triaging.
To get help, or participate in the conversation, join the Waku Discord server.