This is fork from Cosmovisor
This is a tiny shim around Cosmos SDK binaries that use the upgrade
module that allows for smooth and configurable management of upgrading
binaries as a live chain is upgraded, and can be used to simplify validator
devops while doing upgrades or to make syncing a full node for genesis
simple. The cosmovisor
will monitor the stdout of the daemon to look
for messages from the upgrade module indicating a pending or required upgrade
and act appropriately. (With better integrations possible in the future).
cosmovisor
is a shim around a native binary. All arguments passed to the cosmovisor
command will be passed to the current daemon binary (as a subprocess).
It will return stdout and stderr of the subprocess as
it's own. Because of that, it cannot accept any command line arguments, nor
print anything to output (unless it dies before executing a binary).
Configuration will be passed in the following environmental variables:
DAEMON_HOME
is the location where upgrade binaries should be kept (can be$HOME/.gaiad
or$HOME/.xrnd
)DAEMON_NAME
is the name of the binary itself (eg.xrnd
,gaiad
,simd
)DAEMON_ALLOW_DOWNLOAD_BINARIES
(optional) if set totrue
will enable auto-downloading of new binaries (for security reasons, this is intended for fullnodes rather than validators)DAEMON_RESTART_AFTER_UPGRADE
(optional) if set totrue
it will restart the sub-process with the same args (but new binary) after a successful upgrade. By default, thecosmovisor
dies afterward and allows the cosmovisor to restart it if needed. Note that this will not auto-restart the child if there was an error.
$DAEMON_HOME/cosmovisor
is expected to belong completely to the cosmovisor and
subprocesses
controlled by it. Under this folder, we will see the following:
.
├── current -> genesis or upgrades/<name>
├── genesis
│ └── bin
│ └── $DAEMON_NAME
└── upgrades
└── <name>
└── bin
└── $DAEMON_NAME
Each version of the chain is stored under either genesis
or upgrades/<name>
, which holds bin/$DAEMON_NAME
along with any other needed files (maybe the cli client? maybe some dlls?). current
is a symlink to the currently
active folder (so current/bin/$DAEMON_NAME
is the binary)
Note: the <name>
after upgrades
is the URI-encoded name of the upgrade as specified in the upgrade module plan.
Please note that $DAEMON_HOME/cosmovisor
just stores the binaries and associated program code.
The cosmovisor
binary can be stored in any typical location (eg /usr/local/bin
). The actual blockchain
program will store it's data under $GAIA_HOME
etc, which is independent of the $DAEMON_HOME
. You can
choose to export GAIA_HOME=$DAEMON_HOME
and then end up with a configuation like the following, but this
is left as a choice to the admin for best directory layout.
.gaiad
├── config
├── data
└── cosmovisor
Basic Usage:
- The admin is responsible for installing the
cosmovisor
and setting it as a eg. systemd service to auto-restart, along with proper environmental variables - The admin is responsible for installing the
genesis
folder manually - The
cosmovisor
will set thecurrent
link to point togenesis
at first start (when nocurrent
link exists) - The admin is (generally) responsible for installing the
upgrades/<name>
folders manually - The
cosmovisor
handles switching over the binaries at the correct points, so the admin can prepare days in advance and relax at upgrade time
Note that chains that wish to support upgrades may package up a genesis cosmovisor
tar file with this info, just as they
prepare the genesis binary tar file. In fact, they may offer a tar file will all upgrades up to current point for easy download
for those who wish to sync a fullnode from start.
The DAEMON
specific code, like the tendermint config, the application db, syncing blocks, etc is done as normal.
The same eg. GAIA_HOME
directives and command-line flags work, just the binary name is different.
In the basic version, the cosmovisor
will read the stdout log messages
to determine when an upgrade is needed. We are considering more complex solutions
via signaling of some sort, but starting with the simple design:
- when an upgrade is needed the binary will print a line that matches this
regular expression:
UPGRADE "(.*)" NEEDED at height (\d+):(.*)
. - the second match in the above regular expression can be a JSON object with
a
binaries
key as described above
The name (first regexp) will be used to select the new binary to run. If it is present,
the current subprocess will be killed, current
will be upgraded to the new directory,
and the new binary will be launched.
Question should we just kill the cosmovisor
after it does the updates?
so it gets a clean restart and just runs the new binary (under current
).
it should be safe to restart (as a service).
Generally, the system requires that the administrator place all relevant binaries on the disk before the upgrade happens. However, for people who don't need such control and want an easier setup (maybe they are syncing a non-validating fullnode and want to do little maintenance), there is another option.
If you set DAEMON_ALLOW_DOWNLOAD_BINARIES=on
then when an upgrade is triggered and no local binary
can be found, the cosmovisor
will attempt to download and install the binary itself.
The plan stored in the upgrade module has an info field for arbitrary json.
This info is expected to be outputed on the halt log message. There are two
valid format to specify a download in such a message:
- Store an os/architecture -> binary URI map in the upgrade plan info field
as JSON under the
"binaries"
key, eg:
{
"binaries": {
"linux/amd64":"https://example.com/gaia.zip?checksum=sha256:aec070645fe53ee3b3763059376134f058cc337247c978add178b6ccdfb0019f"
}
}
The "any"
key, if it exists, will be used as a default if there is not a specific os/architecture key.
2. Store a link to a file that contains all information in the above format (eg. if you want
to specify lots of binaries, changelog info, etc without filling up the blockchain).
e.g https://example.com/testnet-1001-info.json?checksum=sha256:deaaa99fda9407c4dbe1d04bd49bab0cc3c1dd76fa392cd55a9425be074af01e
This file contained in link will be retrieved by go-getter and the "binaries" field will be parsed as above.
If there is no local binary, DAEMON_ALLOW_DOWNLOAD_BINARIES=true
, and we can access a canonical url for the new binary,
then the cosmovisor
will download it with go-getter and
unpack it into the upgrades/<name>
folder to be run as if we installed it manually
Note that for this mechanism to provide strong security guarantees, all URLs should include a sha{256,512} checksum. This ensures that no false binary is run, even if someone hacks the server or hijacks the dns. go-getter will always ensure the downloaded file matches the checksum if it is provided. And also handles unpacking archives into directories (so these download links should be a zip of all data in the bin directory).
To properly create a checksum on linux, you can use the sha256sum
utility. eg.
sha256sum ./testdata/repo/zip_directory/autod.zip
which should return 29139e1381b8177aec909fab9a75d11381cab5adf7d3af0c05ff1c9c117743a7
.
You can also use sha512sum
if you like longer hashes, or md5sum
if you like to use broken hashes.
Make sure to set the hash algorithm properly in the checksum argument to the url.