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Vanir

Forge your own transactions with a public key whitelist

Installation

Clone

yarn global add @itsanametoo/vanir

Register Plugin

Edit the plugin config file located at:

~/.config/ark-core/{mainnet|devnet|testnet}/plugins.js

Add the following snippet to the end of the file (or at least after core-p2p gets included):

module.exports = {
    '@arkecosystem/core-event-emitter': {},
    '@arkecosystem/core-logger-winston': {},
    ...
    // Snippet to add
    '@itsanametoo/vanir': {
        enabled: true, // Enables the plugin, default value is false
        publicKeys: [ // A list of public keys for which transactions will not be broadcasted
            'examplePublicKey1',
            'examplePublicKey2'
        ]
    }

You will need to configure this a little bit in order to forge your own transactions. The configuration includes an enabled flag and an array of public keys publicKeys that will be used to filter transactions on. This means that every transaction that is sent to your forger from and address in the public key list will be kept and not broadcasted to the network; hence self-forging the transaction.

From the example config, this will result in the addresses belonging to the two specified public keys to have their transactions kept and self-forged when they are sent to the node.

Compendia

When using vanir on the Compendia network, you need to perform an additional step for core to pick up the plugin. After globally installing it with yarn, you have to move it to the core installation by running cp -r ~/.config/yarn/global/node_modules/@itsanametoo/ ~/compendia-core/node_modules/. This will not persist between Compendia core updates, meaning you will have to run the above line after each Compendia update.

Enabling

Before the plugin will be picked up by the core implementation, you need to restart the process. The easiest way to achieve this is by running the pm2 restart all command. Afterwards you can check if everything is running fine again with the pm2 logs command.

It's also possible to restart the services through the Core Commander.

Testing

You can (and SHOULD) test if Vanir is properly configured by sending a transaction to your node from an address belonging to one of the public keys you specified in the configuration. If properly configured, Vanir will filter that transaction and it will be confirmed in the next block you forge! If you have the latest version of Vanir installed, the DEBUG logs will show if it has filtered any transactions: [VANIR] Filtered 1 transaction to self-forge.

Update notes

In case of updates, this section will describe the steps needed to successfully update the plugin if there are any additional steps. In general you can get fetch and install the latest changes of the plugin as follows:

yarn global upgrade @itsanametoo/vanir

Credits

License

MIT © ItsANameToo

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Ark Core plugin to forge your own transactions

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