Created project directory, app.go and connect.go files. Reused the logic for
connect.go from the events application and added second organization setup.
Implemented private data transaction example in go as described in the main
documentation in "Tutorials/Using Private Data in Fabric".
Updated README.md with the command to run the go application and the script
which runs the application in the Github Actions workflow.
Fixed typos and punctuation in the private data typescript application.
Signed-off-by: Stanislav Jakuschevskij <stas@two-giants.com>
The removed samples make use of deprecated legacy client SDKs. They all
have equivalent samples implemented using the currently supported Fabric
Gateway client API, and are therefore redundant.
Signed-off-by: Mark S. Lewis <Mark.S.Lewis@outlook.com>
For the asset transfer example (https://hyperledger-fabric.readthedocs.io/en/release-2.5/private_data_tutorial.html#pd-use-case)
the are three private data collections, one per org and one shared between the orgs.
The shared collection didn't have an endorsement policy so inheritted the chaincodes; this was specifically set away from the default
to be OR(Org1MSP,Org2MSP). The documentation says this is to ensure that either organization can create and asset.
However this isn't really necassary, the endorsement policy should be lowest level; so this PR moves the endorsement policy to
the collection. The documentation does I believe lead to a false understanding
Signed-off-by: Matthew B White <whitemat@uk.ibm.com>
The `-i` flag was originally added to support an
upgrade sample. Since that sample is no longer available
remove the `-i` flag to clean up the network.sh options
and avoid confusion as it's possible now to specify
an image version that is no longer backwards compatible
with the new test-network with osnadmin.
Signed-off-by: Brett Logan <lindluni@github.com>
Re-enable CI tests for asset-transfer-private-data JavaScript application.
Also re-add the error when private asset details are not found in the collection,
so that the CLI instructions work as desired, and to demonstrate error
handing in the client application.
Signed-off-by: David Enyeart <enyeart@us.ibm.com>
Adds the apps and chaincodes to linting and testing
CI that weren't added before.
Linting issues were corrected where necessary to make CI pass.
The Basic-Go application and Private-Javascript application
are currently disabled pending fixes currently being worked on.
Signed-off-by: Brett Logan <brett.t.logan@ibm.com>
Pushes the scripting logic into a standalone script
and adds tests for the applications which by side-effect
also test the invoke and query functions on the chaincode.
Signed-off-by: Brett Logan <brett.t.logan@ibm.com>