Running nodes locally

This page contains information on three methods for locally running nodes:

  • Nodes can be run manually from a local machine.
  • The Dockerform or Cordform gradle plugins can also be used to run nodes locally.
  • Running nodes remotely is also possible - find instructions on how to do this here.

There are several ways to run a Corda node locally for testing purposes:

You can run a node by opening a terminal/command prompt window in the node’s directory and running the following command:

java -jar corda.jar

By default, the node will look for a configuration file called node.conf and a CorDapps folder called cordapps in the current working directory. You can override the configuration file and workspace paths on the command line:

java -jar ./corda.jar --config-file=test.conf --base-directory=/opt/corda/nodes/test`).

If you need to initialise or migrate the node’s database schema objects, you need to run the run-migration-scripts sub-command. You may get an error message stating:

Incompatible database schema version detected, please run schema migration scripts

If this is the case, you will need to run the migration scripts. One way of doing so is with

java -jar corda.jar run-migration-scripts --core-schemas --app-schemas`.

See Node command-line options for more options and further details.

There are several ways to set JVM arguments for the node process (particularly the garbage collector and the memory settings). They are listed here in order of increasing priority - if the same flag is set in a way mentioned later in the list below, it will override anything set earlier.

  • Default arguments in capsule: The capsuled Corda node has default flags set to -Xmx512m -XX:+UseG1GC - this gives the node a relatively low 512 MB of heap space, and turns on the G1 garbage collector, ensuring low pause times for garbage collection.

When devMode is explicitly set to false, the default node memory size will be enlarged to 4G: -Xmx4G -XX:+UseG1GC.

  • Node configuration: The node configuration file can specify custom default JVM arguments by adding a section like the one below:
custom = {
   jvmArgs: [ "-Xmx1G", "-XX:+UseG1GC" ]
}
  • Capsule specific system property: You can use a special system property that Capsule understands, to set JVM arguments only for the Corda process, not the launcher that actually starts it:
java -Dcapsule.jvm.args="-Xmx1G" -jar corda.jar

Setting a property like this will override any value for this property, but not interfere with any other JVM arguments that are configured in any way mentioned above. In this example, it resets the maximum heap memory to -Xmx1G but it does not touch the garbage collector settings. This is particularly useful for either setting large memory allowances that you don’t want to give to the launcher, or for setting values that can only be set on one process at a time - for example, a debug port.

  • Command line flag: You can set JVM arguments in the command prompt that apply to the launcher process and the node process as in the example above. This overrides any value for the same flag set any other way, but leaves any other JVM arguments alone.

  • OutOfMemoryError handling: In addition to the JVM arguments listed above, the capsuled Corda node has two flags that cause the node to stop on out-of-memory error and generate the corresponding diagnostic files:

-XX:+HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError -XX:+CrashOnOutOfMemoryError

With CrashOnOutOfMemoryError the node which is running out of memory is expected to stop immediately (fail-fast) to preserve ledger consistency and avoid flaws in operations.

Unlike for arguments related to memory and GC, to completely replace the default out-of-memory error arguments, you must explicitly add at least one out-of-memory error related argument into the custom.jvmArgs section. For example, the following configuration turns off HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError and does not invoke the CrashOnOutOfMemoryError option:

custom = {
   jvmArgs: [ "-Xmx1G", "-XX:+UseG1GC", "-XX:-HeapDumpOnOutOfMemoryError" ]
}

You can optionally start a node using the following command-line options:

  • --base-directory, -b: The node working directory where all the files are kept (default: .).
  • --config-file, -f: The path to the configuration file. Defaults to node.conf.
  • --dev-mode, -d: Runs the node in development mode. Unsafe in production. Defaults to true on MacOS and desktop versions of Windows, otherwise defaults to false.
  • --no-local-shell, -n: Do not start the embedded shell locally.
  • --on-unknown-config-keys <[FAIL,INFO]>: How to behave on unknown node configuration. Defaults to FAIL.
  • --sshd: Enables SSH server for node administration.
  • --sshd-port: Sets the port for the SSH server. If not supplied and SSH server is enabled, the port defaults to 2222.
  • --verbose, --log-to-console, -v: If set, prints logging to the console as well as to a file.
  • --logging-level=<loggingLevel>: Enable logging at this level and higher. Possible values: ERROR, WARN, INFO (default), DEBUG, TRACE.
  • --help, -h: Show this help message and exit.
  • --version, -V: Print version information and exit.

clear-network-cache: Clears the local copy of the network map - it will be restored from the server or the file system on node start-up.

initial-registration: Starts an initial node registration with the compatibility zone to obtain a certificate from the Identity Manager Service (formerly Doorman).

Parameters:

  • --network-root-truststore, -t required: Network root trust store obtained from the network operator.
  • --network-root-truststore-password, -p: Network root trust store password obtained from the network operator.

generate-node-info: Performs the node start-up tasks necessary to generate the node.info file, saves it to disk, then exits.

generate-rpc-ssl-settings: Generates the SSL keystore and truststore for a secure RPC connection.

install-shell-extensions: Installs a corda alias and auto-completion for bash and zsh. For more information, see Shell extensions for CLI Applications.

validate-configuration: Validates the actual configuration without starting the node.

To enable remote debugging of the node, run the node with the following JVM arguments:

java -Dcapsule.jvm.args="-agentlib:jdwp=transport=dt_socket,server=y,suspend=y,address=5005" -jar corda.jar

This will allow you to attach a debugger to your node on port 5005.

To enable export of JMX metrics over HTTP via Jolokia, run the following command in the command prompt:

java -Dcapsule.jvm.args="-javaagent:drivers/jolokia-jvm-1.3.7-agent.jar=port=7005" -jar corda.jar

This command will start the node with JMX metrics accessible via HTTP on port 7005.

See Monitoring via Jolokia for further details.

The Cordform gradle plugin (as used by the deployNodes gradle task) generates a runnodes script. Executing this allows you to quickly start up all nodes. Only userunnodes for testing purposes.

Start the nodes with runnodes by running the following command from the root of the project:

  • Linux/macOS: build/nodes/runnodes
  • Windows: call build\nodes\runnodes.bat

If you receive an OutOfMemoryError exception when interacting with the nodes, you need to increase the amount of Java heap memory available to them, which you can do when running them individually. See Starting a Corda node from the command line.

If you created your nodes using Dockerform, a docker-compose.yml file has been created. You can use docker-compose to bring up a cluster of Corda nodes. See prepareDockerNodes in the generating nodes locally for more information on this. In order to start up the nodes in a new, internal network, go to the build/nodes directory and run the docker-compose up command. After the nodes are started, you can use the docker ps command to see how the ports are mapped.

Depending on the versions of Corda and of the CorDapps used, database migration scripts might need to run before a node is able to start. For more information, see Database management.

From Corda 4.6, if you need to initialise or migrate the node’s database schema objects, you need to run the run-migration-scripts sub-command. See Node command-line options for details.

There are a number of critical resources that a Corda node needs to operate in order to ensure the transactional consistency of the ledger. These critical resources include:

  • Connection to a database.
  • Connection to Artemis Broker for P2P communication.
  • Connection to Artemis Broker for RPC communication.

Should any of those critical resources becomes unavailable, the Corda node will get into an unstable state and, as a safety precaution, it will shut itself down, reporting the cause as an error message to its log file.

Once all the critical resources the node relies on are available again, it is safe for the node operator to restart the node for normal operation.

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