This is a Go tool that mocks the basics of Ethereum 1.0 RPC server for usage as an endpoint for Ethereum 2.0. Created by the Prysmatic Labs team, building a production client for Ethereum 2.0 called Prysm. WARNING: This is NOT a generic Ethereum mock RPC server, as it's only purpose is to serve Ethereum 2.0 clients.
Ethereum 2.0 is an entirely new blockchain protocol which will bring much needed scalability and security upgrades to the current Ethereum ecosystem. Contrary to being a hard fork, Ethereum 2.0 will be a separate system built from scratch running Proof of Stake consensus. Participants in consensus are known as validators, and they join the network by depositing 32 ETH into a validator deposit contract deployed on the current Ethereum Proof of Work chain. Nodes running Ethereum 2.0 need to listen to these deposit contract events in order to kick-off the chain and onboard new validators.
This project serves as a mock server that simulates that deposit functionality without the need to run a real Ethereum network, making it easier to run local testnets for Ethereum 2.0. It is meant to be used alongside an Ethereum 2.0 client such as Prysm.
To run the tool, you'll need to install:
- The latest release of Bazel
- A modern GNU/Linux operating system
- Open a terminal window. Ensure you are running the most recent version of Bazel by issuing the command:
bazel version
- Clone this repository and enter the directory:
git clone https://github.com/prysmaticlabs/eth1-mock-rpc
cd eth1-mock-rpc
- Build the project:
bazel build //...
Bazel will automatically pull and install any dependencies as well, including Go and necessary compilers.
You'll need a file of unencrypted validator private keys to use for triggering mock deposits. You can use unencrypted_keys.json
at the root of this directory for this purpose. You can then run the mock using:
bazel run //:eth1-mock-rpc -- --genesis-deposits 64 --unencrypted-keys /path/to/unencrypted_keys.json
Once your server is running, it will launch an HTTP and websocket listener at http://localhost:7777 and http://localhost:7778 respectively. You can now launch the Prysm project and point it to these endpoints to receive mock data:
bazel run //beacon-chain -- \
--no-discovery \
--http-web3provider http://localhost:7777 \
--web3provider ws://localhost:7778 \
--clear-db \
--verbosity debug