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Asset-Transfer-Basic as an external service
This sample provides an introduction to how to use external builder and launcher scripts to run chaincode as an external service to your peer. For more information, see the Chaincode as an external service topic in the Fabric documentation.
Note: each organization in a real network would need to setup and host their own instance of the external service. In this tutorial, we use the same instance for both organizations for simplicity.
Setting up the external builder and launcher
External Builders and Launchers is an advanced feature that typically requires custom packaging of the peer image so that it contains all the tools your builder and launcher require. This sample uses very simple (and crude) shell scripts that can be run directly within the default Fabric peer images.
Open the config/core.yaml file at the top of the fabric-samples directory. If you do not have this file, follow the instructions to Install the Samples, Binaries and Docker Images to download the Fabric binaries and configuration files alongside the Fabric samples.
Modify the externalBuilders field in the core.yaml file to resemble the configuration below:
externalBuilders:
- path: /opt/gopath/src/github.com/hyperledger/fabric-samples/asset-transfer-basic/chaincode-external/sampleBuilder
name: external-sample-builder
This update sets the name of the external builder as external-sample-builder, and the path of the builder to the scripts provided in this sample. Note that this is the path within the peer container, not your local machine.
To set the path within the peer container, you will need to modify the docker compose file to mount a couple of additional volumes. Open the file test-network/docker/docker-compose-test-net.yaml, and add to the volumes section of both peer0.org1.example.com and peer0.org2.example.com the following two lines:
- ../..:/opt/gopath/src/github.com/hyperledger/fabric-samples
- ../../config/core.yaml:/etc/hyperledger/fabric/core.yaml
This update will mount the core.yaml that you modified into the peer container and override the configuration file within the peer image. The update also mounts the fabric-sample builder so that it can be found at the location that you specified in core.yaml. You also have the option of commenting out the line - /var/run/docker.sock:/host/var/run/docker.sock, since we no longer need to access the docker daemon from inside the peer container to launch the chaincode.
Packaging and installing Chaincode
The Asset-Transfer-Basic external chaincode requires two environment variables to run, CHAINCODE_SERVER_ADDRESS and CHAINCODE_ID, which are described and set in the chaincode.env file.
You need to provide a connection.json configuration file to your peer in order to connect to the external Asset-Transfer-Basic service. The address specified in the connection.json must correspond to the CHAINCODE_SERVER_ADDRESS value in chaincode.env, which is asset-transfer-basic.org1.example.com:9999 in our example.
Because we will run our chaincode as an external service, the chaincode itself does not need to be included in the chaincode package that gets installed to each peer. Only the configuration and metadata information needs to be included in the package. Since the packaging is trivial, we can manually create the chaincode package.
Open a new terminal and navigate to the fabric-samples/asset-transfer-basic/chaincode-external directory.
cd fabric-samples/asset-transfer-basic/chaincode-external
First, create a code.tar.gz archive containing the connection.json file:
tar cfz code.tar.gz connection.json
Then, create the chaincode package, including the code.tar.gz file and the supplied metadata.json file:
tar cfz asset-transfer-basic-external.tgz metadata.json code.tar.gz
You are now ready to deploy the external chaincode sample.
Starting the test network
We will use the Fabric test network to run the external chaincode. Open a new terminal and navigate to the fabric-samples/test-network directory.
cd fabric-samples/test-network
Run the following command to deploy the test network and create a new channel:
./network.sh up createChannel -c mychannel -ca
We are now ready to deploy the external chaincode.
Installing the external chaincode
We can't use the test network script to install an external chaincode so we will have to do a bit more work. However, we can still leverage part of the test-network scripts to make this easier.
From the test-network directory, set the following environment variables to use the Fabric binaries:
export PATH=${PWD}/../bin:$PATH
export FABRIC_CFG_PATH=$PWD/../config/
Run the following command to import functions from the envVar.sh script into your terminal. These functions allow you to act as either test network organization.
. ./scripts/envVar.sh
Run the following commands to install the asset-transfer-basic-external.tar.gz chaincode on org1. The setGlobals function simply sets the environment variables that allow you to act as org1 or org2.
setGlobals 1
peer lifecycle chaincode install ../asset-transfer-basic/chaincode-external/asset-transfer-basic-external.tgz
Install the chaincode package on the org2 peer:
setGlobals 2
peer lifecycle chaincode install ../asset-transfer-basic/chaincode-external/asset-transfer-basic-external.tgz
Run the following command to query the package ID of the chaincode that you just installed:
setGlobals 1
peer lifecycle chaincode queryinstalled --peerAddresses localhost:7051 --tlsRootCertFiles organizations/peerOrganizations/org1.example.com/peers/peer0.org1.example.com/tls/ca.crt
The command will return output similar to the following:
Installed chaincodes on peer:
Package ID: basic_1.0:ecfc83f251b7c2d9ef376bc3fc20fc6b9744c0fc0a8923092af6542af94790c3, Label: basic_1.0
Save the package ID that was returned by the command as an environment variable. The ID will not be the same for all users, so you need to set the variable using the ID from your command window:
export CHAINCODE_ID=basic_1.0:ecfc83f251b7c2d9ef376bc3fc20fc6b9744c0fc0a8923092af6542af94790c3
Running the Asset-Transfer-Basic external service
We are going to run the smart contract as an external service by first building and then starting a docker container. Open a new terminal and navigate back to the chaincode-external directory:
cd fabric-samples/asset-transfer-basic/chaincode-external
In this directory, open the chaincode.env file to set the CHAINCODE_ID variable to the same package ID that was returned by the peer lifecycle chaincode queryinstalled command. The value should be the same as the environment variable that you set in the previous terminal.
After you edit the chaincode.env file, you can use the Dockerfile to build an image of the external Asset-Transfer-Basic chaincode:
docker build -t hyperledger/asset-transfer-basic .
You can then run the image to start the Asset-Transfer-Basic service:
docker run -it --rm --name asset-transfer-basic.org1.example.com --hostname asset-transfer-basic.org1.example.com --env-file chaincode.env --network=fabric_test hyperledger/asset-transfer-basic
This will start and run the external chaincode service within the container.
Deploy the Asset-Transfer-Basic external chaincode definition to the channel
Navigate back to the test-network directory to finish deploying the chaincode definition of the external smart contract to the channel. Make sure that your environment variables are still set.
setGlobals 2
peer lifecycle chaincode approveformyorg -o localhost:7050 --ordererTLSHostnameOverride orderer.example.com --tls --cafile "$PWD/organizations/ordererOrganizations/example.com/orderers/orderer.example.com/msp/tlscacerts/tlsca.example.com-cert.pem" --channelID mychannel --name basic --version 1.0 --package-id $CHAINCODE_ID --sequence 1
setGlobals 1
peer lifecycle chaincode approveformyorg -o localhost:7050 --ordererTLSHostnameOverride orderer.example.com --tls --cafile "$PWD/organizations/ordererOrganizations/example.com/orderers/orderer.example.com/msp/tlscacerts/tlsca.example.com-cert.pem" --channelID mychannel --name basic --version 1.0 --package-id $CHAINCODE_ID --sequence 1
peer lifecycle chaincode commit -o localhost:7050 --ordererTLSHostnameOverride orderer.example.com --tls --cafile "$PWD/organizations/ordererOrganizations/example.com/orderers/orderer.example.com/msp/tlscacerts/tlsca.example.com-cert.pem" --channelID mychannel --name basic --peerAddresses localhost:7051 --tlsRootCertFiles "$PWD/organizations/peerOrganizations/org1.example.com/peers/peer0.org1.example.com/tls/ca.crt" --peerAddresses localhost:9051 --tlsRootCertFiles organizations/peerOrganizations/org2.example.com/peers/peer0.org2.example.com/tls/ca.crt --version 1.0 --sequence 1
The commands above approve the chaincode definition for the external chaincode and commits the definition to the channel. The resulting output should be similar to the following:
2020-08-05 15:41:44.982 PDT [chaincodeCmd] ClientWait -> INFO 001 txid [6bdbe040b99a45cc90a23ec21f02ea5da7be8b70590eb04ff3323ef77fdedfc7] committed with status (VALID) at localhost:7051
2020-08-05 15:41:44.983 PDT [chaincodeCmd] ClientWait -> INFO 002 txid [6bdbe040b99a45cc90a23ec21f02ea5da7be8b70590eb04ff3323ef77fdedfc7] committed with status (VALID) at localhost:9051
Now that we have started the chaincode service and deployed it to the channel, we can submit transactions as we would with a normal chaincode.
Using the Asset-Transfer-Basic external chaincode
Open yet another terminal and navigate to the fabric-samples/asset-transfer-basic/application-javascript directory:
cd fabric-samples/asset-transfer-basic/application-javascript
Run the following commands to use the node application in this directory to test the external smart contract:
rm -rf wallet # in case you ran this before
npm install
node app.js
If all goes well, the program should run exactly the same as described in the "Writing Your First Application" tutorial.