C++ implementation of the Ethereum protocol. It's conceived as an evolution of the Turbo-Geth project, as outlined in its release commentary.
git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/torquem-ch/silkworm.git
To update the submodules later on run
git submodule update --init --recursive
Building silkworm requires:
Once the prerequisites are installed, bootstrap cmake by running
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
(In the future you don't have to run cmake ..
again.)
Then run the build itself
make -j
Now you can run the unit tests
cmd/unit_test
cmd/consensus
You can also execute Ethereum blocks with Silkworm. For that you need an LMDB instance populated with Ethereum blocks, which can be produced by running the first 4 stages of Turbo-Geth sync, prior to the transaction replay stage. Then run
cmd/execute -d <path-to-chaindata>
- Install Visual Studio 2019. Community edition is fine.
- Make sure your setup includes CMake support and Windows 10 SDK.
- Install vcpkg.
.\vcpkg\vcpkg install mpir:x64-windows
- Add <VCPKG_ROOT>\installed\x64-windows\include to your
INCLUDE
environment variable. - Add <VCPKG_ROOT>\installed\x64-windows\bin to your
PATH
environment variable. - Open Visual Studio and select File -> CMake...
- Browse the folder where you have cloned this repository and select the file CMakeLists.txt
- Let CMake cache generation complete (it may take several minutes)
- Solution explorer shows the project tree.
- To build simply
CTRL+Shift+B
- Binaries are written to
%USERPROFILE%\CMakeBuilds\silkworm\build
If you want to change this path simply editCMakeSettings.json
file.
We use the standard C++17 programming language. We follow Google's C++ Style Guide with the following differences:
snake_case
for function names.- .cpp & .hpp file extensions for C++; .c & .h are reserved for C.
- Exceptions are allowed.
- User-defined literals are allowed.
- Maximum line length is 120, indentation is 4 spaces – see
.clang-format
.