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This is a detailed documentation for setting up a full node on Cronos mainnet cronosmainnet_25-1
.
We officially support macOS, Windows, and Linux only. Other platforms may work but there is no guarantee. We will extend our support to other operating systems after we have stabilised our current architecture.
To run Cronos Mainnet nodes, you will need a machine with the following minimum requirements to run different types of nodes:
- Pruned node (setting pruning=everything)
- Storage: ~25G*
- RAM: 4 GB (LevelDB) or 64G RAM (RocksDB)***
- CPU: 4-core
- Default full node (setting pruning=default)
- Storage: ~1.5T**
- RAM: 4 GB (LevelDB) or 64G RAM (RocksDB)***
- CPU: 4-core
- Archive node (setting pruning=nothing)
- Storage: ~2.8T**
- RAM: 4 GB (LevelDB) or 64G RAM (RocksDB)***
- CPU: 4-core
*Only in case state-sync enabled.
** e.g. Note that size of snapshots from Quicksync will keep growing.
*** Note that during a state-sync the node might require higher RAM than 3GB but, returns to normal after state-sync has finished.
{% hint style="info" %} Note that all depends on the type of node you are running and settings will vary depending on your usage. {% endhint %}
{% tabs %} {% tab title="Mainnet" %}
- Seeds for Fullnode
- Genesis files
- Binaries for Linux, Mac (Intel x86 / M1) and Windows {% endtab %} {% endtabs %}
Before we start, please note that there was "Huygen" network upgrade at the block height 2,693,800
, which requires the node operator to update their Cronos Mainnet binary cronosd
from v0.6.*
to v0.7.0
.
For the host who would like to build a Full Node with complete blockchain data from scratch, one would need to:
Block Height | Binary Version | Instruction |
---|---|---|
1 ~ 2693800 | cronos_v0.6.* | Start the node with the older binary version cronos_v0.6.* Sync-up with the blockchain until it reaches the target upgrade block height 2,693,800 |
2693800 ~ 3982500 | cronos_v0.7.0 | After it reaches the block height 2,693,800 , update app.toml with new config itemsUpdate the binary to cronos_v0.7.0 Restart the node |
3982500 | cronos_v0.8.3 | After reaching block height, update iavl-disable-fastnode in app.toml Update the binary to cronos_v0.8.3 Restart the node |
6542800 | cronos_v1.0.2 | After reaching block height, update app-db-backend in app.toml. Update the binary to cronos_v1.0.2 Restart the node |
11608760 | cronos v1.0.15 | After reaching block height, update the binary to v1.0.15 Restart the node |
13184000 | cronos v1.1.0 | After reaching block height, update the binary to v1.1.0 Restart the node |
13520000 | cronos v1.2.0 | After reaching block height, update the binary to v1.2.0 Restart the node |
14920000 | cronos v1.3.0 | After reaching block height, update the binary to v1.3.0 Restart the node |
Users can refer to the upgrade guide of "Huygen" for the detailed upgrade steps.
{% hint style="info" %} To patch "unlucky" transactions, follow this guide on patching unlucky tx {% endhint %}
{% hint style="info" %} Remarks:
The following is the minimal setup for a validator node / full node. {% endhint %}
To simplify the following step, we will be using Linux (Intel x86) for illustration.
Binaries for Mac (Intel x86 / M1) and Windows are also available.
-
To install released Cronos Mainnet binaries from github:
$ curl -LOJ https://github.com/crypto-org-chain/cronos/releases/download/v0.6.11/cronos_0.6.11_Linux_x86_64.tar.gz $ tar -zxvf cronos_0.6.11_Linux_x86_64.tar.gz
Afterward, you can check the version of
cronosd
by$ ./cronosd version 0.6.11
-
If you have joined
cronostestnet_338-3
before, you would have to clean up the old blockchain data and start over again, it can be done by running:$ ./cronosd unsafe-reset-all
and remove the old genesis file by
$ rm ~/.cronos/config/genesis.json
Before kick-starting your node, we will have to configure your node so that it connects to the Cronos mainnet:
-
First of all, you can initialize cronosd by:
$ ./cronosd init [moniker] --chain-id cronosmainnet_25-1
This
moniker
will be the displayed id of your node when connected to Cronos Chain network.When providing the moniker value, make sure you drop the square brackets since they are not needed. The example below shows how to initialize a node named
pegasus-node
:$ ./cronosd init pegasus-node --chain-id cronosmainnet_25-1
{% hint style="info" %} Note:
- Depending on your cronosd home setting, the cronosd configuration will be initialized to that home directory. To simply the following steps, we will use the default cronosd home directory
~/.cronos/
for illustration. - You can also put the
cronosd
to your binary path and run it bycronosd
{% endhint %}
-
Download and replace the Cronos Mainnet
genesis.json
by:$ curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/crypto-org-chain/cronos-mainnet/master/cronosmainnet_25-1/genesis.json > ~/.cronos/config/genesis.json
-
Verify sha256sum checksum of the downloaded
genesis.json
. You should seeOK!
if the sha256sum checksum matches.$ if [[ $(sha256sum ~/.cronos/config/genesis.json | awk '{print $1}') = "58f17545056267f57a2d95f4c9c00ac1d689a580e220c5d4de96570fbbc832e1" ]]; then echo "OK"; else echo "MISMATCHED"; fi; OK!
{% hint style="info" %} NOTE
For Mac environment, sha256sum
was not installed by default. In this case, you may setup sha256sum
with this command:
function sha256sum() { shasum -a 256 "$@" ; } && export -f sha256sum
{% endhint %}
-
For network configuration, in
~/.cronos/config/config.toml
, validator nodes need to modify the configurations ofseed
,create_empty_blocks_interval
andtimeout_commit
$ sed -i.bak -E 's#^(seeds[[:space:]]+=[[:space:]]+).*$#\1"0d5cf1394a1cfde28dc8f023567222abc0f47534@cronos-seed-0.crypto.org:26656,3032073adc06d710dd512240281637c1bd0c8a7b@cronos-seed-1.crypto.org:26656,04f43116b4c6c70054d9c2b7485383df5b1ed1da@cronos-seed-2.crypto.org:26656,337377dcda43d79c537d2c4d93ad3b698ce9452e@bd-cronos-mainnet-seed-node-01.bdnodes.net:26656"#' ~/.cronos/config/config.toml $ sed -i.bak -E 's#^(create_empty_blocks_interval[[:space:]]+=[[:space:]]+).*$#\1"5s"#' ~/.cronos/config/config.toml $ sed -i.bak -E 's#^(timeout_commit[[:space:]]+=[[:space:]]+).*$#\1"5s"#' ~/.cronos/config/config.toml
-
If you would like to build an archive node that allows you to query all the historical block data - kindly update the pruning setting to
"nothing"
by$ sed -i.bak -E 's#^(pruning[[:space:]]+=[[:space:]]+).*$#\1"nothing"#' ~/.cronos/config/app.toml
{% hint style="info" %} NOTE
For Mac environment, if jq
is missing, you may install it by: brew install jq
{% endhint %}
{% hint style="warning" %} CAUTION
This page only shows the minimal setup for validator / full node.
Furthermore, you may want to run full nodes as sentries (see Tendermint), restrict your validator connections to only connect to your full nodes, test secure storage of validator keys etc. {% endhint %}
Once cronosd
has been configured, we are ready to start the node and sync the blockchain data:
- Start cronosd, e.g.:
$ ./cronosd start
{% hint style="info" %} Remarks:
If you see errors saying too many files opened...
, then you need to set a higher number for maximum open file descriptors in your OS.
If you are on OSX or Linux, then the following could be useful:
# Check current max fd
$ ulimit -n
# Set a new max fd
$ ulimit -Sn [NEW_MAX_FILE_DESCRIPTOR]
# Example
$ ulimit -Sn 4096
{% endhint %}
- (Optional for Linux) Start cronosd with systemd service, e.g.:
$ curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/crypto-org-chain/cronos-docs/master/systemd/create-service.sh -o create-service.sh && curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/crypto-org-chain/cronos-docs/master/systemd/cronosd.service.template -o cronosd.service.template
$ chmod +x ./create-service.sh && ./create-service.sh
$ sudo systemctl start cronosd
# view log
$ journalctl -u cronosd -f
{% hint style="info" %} Example: /etc/systemd/system/cronosd.service created by script
# /etc/systemd/system/cronosd.service
[Unit]
Description=cronosd
ConditionPathExists=/usr/local/bin/cronosd
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
User=ubuntu
WorkingDirectory=/usr/local/bin
ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/cronosd start --home /home/ubuntu/.cronos
Restart=on-failure
RestartSec=10
LimitNOFILE=50000
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
{% endhint %}
It should begin fetching blocks from the other peers.
-
You can query the node syncing status by
$ ./cronosd status 2>&1 | jq '.SyncInfo.catching_up'
If the above command returns
false
, It means that your node is fully synced; otherwise, it returnstrue
and implies your node is still catching up. -
One can check the current block height by querying the public full node by:
curl -s https://rpc.cronos.org/commit | jq "{height: .result.signed_header.header.height}"
and you can check your node's progress (in terms of block height) by
$ ./cronosd status 2>&1 | jq '.SyncInfo.latest_block_height'