According to this tutorial http://hyperledger-fabric.readthedocs.io/en/latest/write_first_app.html
the function name is spelled changeCarOwner.
Renamed changeCarowner to changeCarOwner.
Change-Id: Ic32c76137e3686cbf951f846da0ef8c4c5d8986d
Signed-off-by: Nikita Klein <objcoding@gmail.com>
Crypto materal is cleared after every re-start of a new network
Change-Id: I01c919109401428de1252695930f42e73eb3f795
Signed-off-by: ratnakar <asara.ratnakar@gmail.com>
This CR replaces the expired certificates with the msp library
in fabric/sampleconfig.
Regenerate the orderer.block and myc.tx artifact using the
configtx.yaml in fabric/sampleconfig. Profiles used are
SampleSingleMSPSolo & SampleSingleMSPChannel. Modify the
orderer profile in configtxyaml and change address from
127.0.0.1:7050 -> orderer:7050 before reading in the file
to configtxgen. This allows the peer to
resolve with the ordering service when the docker compose
is spun up.
Change CORE_PEER_ADDRESS from 7051 to 7052 when starting
the chaincode in dev mode.
Change-Id: I0dbd3f81553c85943a4219123f086e69081c4f5a
Signed-off-by: Nick Gaski <ngaski@us.ibm.com>
This is a sample application that demonstrates usage of Fabric SDK typings.
Change-Id: I5b9b42c666de51a490043cafe0faac29e4f4a0a4
Signed-off-by: Kapil Sachdeva <ksachdeva17@gmail.com>
The CLI timeout for byfn is currently set to
10000 seconds. This is not a huge issue, but
does mean that the CLI will hang around for
10000 seconds after the e2e is complete.
This simply changes the default timeout to
10 seconds.
Change-Id: I4e163ed248d9e937354e83c0d0143dc6748b6a08
Signed-off-by: Gari Singh <gari.r.singh@gmail.com>
The balance transfer sample commands do not work.
Fixed the readme sample commands along with a few
supporting application code.
Change-Id: I74c5ff150f26e4c1868201499eb616daca316ee8
Signed-off-by: Bret Harrison <beharrison@nc.rr.com>
Steps include: revoking a user, generating a CRL,
updating the CRL in the configuration block of the
channel, and finally querying the chaincode using
the revoked user credentials. The query will fail as
it is invoked by a revoked user.
Change-Id: I3b0f26d9b5a78475b6f42543b0e17458e9ce2a73
Signed-off-by: Anil Ambati <aambati@us.ibm.com>
This CR adds two new yaml files that are specific to a new
organization - Org3 - that will join the existing application
channel. Also adds a separate docker-compose that is specific
to the new org - Org3.
Update byfn.sh to remove the Org3 artifacts
Reliant on CR - 15323
Change-Id: I22a08be6f8472f981c4231491b7cae56906b71dd
Signed-off-by: Nick Gaski <ngaski@us.ibm.com>
Maybe this sub-task is too stricky and tiny.
To make the source easier to be read together as explained in the WYFA doc.
Change-Id: Icc0dc56c3e25ca7b8d4828935addd5ec7229e51c
Signed-off-by: Min Luo <luomin_tokyotech@hotmail.com>
When a CA starts, it creates its signing cert and then
starts listening on its listening port. The fix is to
wait for the server to start listening on the port rather
than waiting for the signing cert file to be created.
See the waitPort function in env.sh, and places where this
is called. I also had to increase the max time we wait before
failing.
WARNING: This change set is dependent upon the following
fabric-ca change set and should not be merged until it
has been merged:
https://gerrit.hyperledger.org/r/#/c/15089/
Change-Id: I781e3653bf6846e22f401fe64855fa155ffeb7cb
Signed-off-by: Keith Smith <bksmith@us.ibm.com>
Chaincode mount path has been corrected with this fix so
that artifacts (ex. mychannel.block etc.,) won't be visible on
the host machine and the cli container upon restart.
Change-Id: I9b59c80d1cac3034d9cd7d9e19b2931df8b3988e
Signed-off-by: ratnakar <asara.ratnakar@gmail.com>
It's possible to run byfn -m generate multiple
times depending on how you go through the
tutorials, start/stop the network, etc.
The crypto-config folder is deleted when
running byfn -m down and that will stay,
but now each time generateCerts is run the
cyrpto-config folder will be deleted as well.
Change-Id: Ie3851debd76ff0c50c84e14fbca56de2a28bd825
Signed-off-by: Gari Singh <gari.r.singh@gmail.com>
fabcar uses 1.0.2 node modules changing it to unstable so that
latest node modules can be used on master branch
Change-Id: Ia9dc866931763760dd3cd7dbc5c7fd9a5de099be
Signed-off-by: ratnakar <asara.ratnakar@gmail.com>
Update balance transfer sample to use the
connection profile and node 8.
Change-Id: I17c74c6cb23ebe55a8f2bba735d41525ae9e5ab1
Signed-off-by: Bret Harrison <beharrison@nc.rr.com>
Signed-off-by: ratnakar <asara.ratnakar@gmail.com>
Update the fabcar sample with an easier flow
Remove hardcoded fields in the invoke program
Change-Id: I9a06cdd317c2afec80720ac7d728d38fc62c6f63
Signed-off-by: Bret Harrison <beharrison@nc.rr.com>
Signed-off-by: Nick Gaski <ngaski@us.ibm.com>
Fix the error in fabric-ca/README.md file,the setup-fabric.sh was
written to run-fabric.sh,it should be setup-fabric.sh.
Change-Id: I5d15a0fb5941c587213c2db8831e53079c0f463a
Signed-off-by: Zhangjiong Xuan <xuanzhangjiong@hyperchain.cn>
This sample uses fabric-ca to run an end-to-end test similar
to the BYFN sample. However, instead of using cryptogen, it
uses fabric-ca. All private keys are generated dynamically in
the container in which they are used.
This sample also demonstrates how to use abac
(Attribute-Based Access Control) to make access decisions.
See chaincode/abac/abac.go.
Change-Id: I5eddc9e35908e409ac07266c3183ce89a5a6cd82
Signed-off-by: Keith Smith <bksmith@us.ibm.com>
Fabric 1.1 supports javascript chaincode. This changeset
addresses porting of the golang chaincode to node.js
chiancode and the corresponding README files
Change-Id: Iae24e713f16ab3508fe0cc18ee062ffa412b8ba6
Signed-off-by: ratnakar <asara.ratnakar@gmail.com>
The license text at the bottom of the
README is a bit confusing as it might imply
that the entire project is licensed under
Creative Commons
See [FAB-6326] for details
Change-Id: Ic9178ac0d55763b5c911ec7c188312e5a6b98c88
Signed-off-by: Gari Singh <gari.r.singh@gmail.com>
A new data storage model was implemented in the fabric-samples which allows
for high-throughput of transactions. The storage model is based on storing
deltas of a value, creating a new row for each transaction, and then merging
these deltas when the final value of the variable is required.
This concept is similar to simple integer-based CRDTs, where add or subtract
updates are constantly sent to the ledger and the merge function combines all
of these deltas into one value.
Change-Id: I60b5cdc295d4503d7d496d016bf215c78eff5710
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Pauwels <alexj.pauwels@gmail.com>
Added quotes to $CURRENT_DIR in byfn.sh so that the current directory
can contain spaces and the script will still run properly.
Change-Id: I3853e3398c29c55c46603477fada5db023808431
Issue-id: FAB-5618
Signed-off-by: Ethan Coeytaux <eacoeytaux@gmail.com>
[FAB-5992] Fix error at line 42 of the script.sh in scripts dir,
and add tips in byfn.sh.
Change-Id: Id05277074dc240c06e1b47ac4eedf349e9555cfa
Signed-off-by: Zhangjiong Xuan <xuanzhangjiong@hyperchain.cn>
Remove docker-compose script to fix the byfn e2e test failures
Change-Id: Iee560b73f5fe535120ee888a816646d3aba224ed
Signed-off-by: rameshthoomu <rameshbabu.thoomu@gmail.com>
Currently peer and couchdb containers started simulateously, while
clearly peer depends on availability of the state db, therfore this
commit add dependency declaration into docker-compose.yaml file to make
sure to start couchdb before peer container.
Change-Id: Id2302a32fba9234d04ef3f4e6bd24ac92a766995
Signed-off-by: Artem Barger <bartem@il.ibm.com>
fixed the unrecognized option on byfn.sh script when
providing the docker-compose file to start the network
Fix Issue # FAB-5603
Change-Id: I74234c53d8f82cbf2678f80aa3a898c3ec51c422
Signed-off-by: dsanchezseco <d.seco@protonmail.com>
Using the -f flag is possible to specify the docker-compose file to use on the
byfn.sh script to have a standar way to test the different configurations for
the samples project. The defautl is 'docker-compose-cli.yaml'
-h output updated as well.
Fix Issue # FAB-5576.
Change-Id: I8766ab930f05d9c4934b149872b9de3a299ff345
Signed-off-by: dsanchezseco <d.seco@protonmail.com>