In addition to Wormhole itself, you need to run your own verifying node for every chain that Wormhole connects to:
-
Solana. There is no light client for Solana yet, so you'll have to run a full solana-validator node. It does not have to actually be a validator - you can run solana-validator in non-validating mode if you are not a validator.
Refer to the Solana documentation on how to run a validator. The validator requirements as stated in their docs are excessive - for the current iteration for mainnet-beta, the "low end" config with no GPU is perfectly adequate, and will have enough spare capacity. Solana's Discord server is a great resource for questions regarding validator ops.
-
Ethereum. See below - you need at least a light client. For stability reasons, a full node is recommended.
-
Terra requires a full node and an LCD server pointing to your full node. Refer to the Terra documentation on how to run a full node. From a security point of view, running only an LCD server with
--trust-node=false
pointed to somebody else's full node would be sufficient, but you'd then depend on that single node for availability unless you set up a load balancer pointing to a set of nodes. -
Binance Smart Chain: Same requirements as Ethereum. Note that BSC has higher throughput than Ethereum and roughly requires twice as many compute resources.
Do NOT use third-party RPC service providers for any of the chains! You'd fully trust them, and they could lie to you on whether an event has actually been observed. The whole point of Wormhole is not to rely on centralized nodes!
We strongly recommend running your own full nodes for both testnet and mainnet (where applicable) so you can test changes for your mainnet full nodes and gain operational experience.
Your Solana RPC node needs the following parameters enabled:
--enable-rpc-transaction-history
--enable-cpi-and-log-storage
--enable-rpc-transaction-history
enables historic transactions to be retrieved via the getConfirmedBlock API,
which is required for Wormhole to find transactions.
--enable-cpi-and-log-storage
stores metadata about CPI calls.
Be aware that these require extra disk space!
If you use the same RPC node for Wormhole v1, you also need the following additional parameters to speed up
getProgramAccount
queries:
[... see above for other required parameters ...]
--account-index program-id
--account-index-include-key WormT3McKhFJ2RkiGpdw9GKvNCrB2aB54gb2uV9MfQC # for mainnet
--account-index-include-key 5gQf5AUhAgWYgUCt9ouShm9H7dzzXUsLdssYwe5krKhg # for testnet
Alternatively, if you want to run a general-purpose RPC node with indexes for all programs instead of only Wormhole, leave out the filtering:
--account-index program-id
On mainnet, we strongly recommend blacklisting KIN and the token program to speed up catchup:
--account-index-exclude-key kinXdEcpDQeHPEuQnqmUgtYykqKGVFq6CeVX5iAHJq6 # Mainnet only
--account-index-exclude-key TokenkegQfeZyiNwAJbNbGKPFXCWuBvf9Ss623VQ5DA # Mainnet only
Note that these indexes require extra disk space and may slow down catchup. The first startup after adding these parameters will be slow since Solana needs to recreate all indexes.
In order to observe events on the Ethereum chain, you need access to an Ethereum RPC endpoint. The most common choice is geth, but for the sake of diversity, you may want to run something that isn't geth.
With RPC providers such as Alchemy, Infura, etc. you trust those operators to provide you with untampered chain data and have no way of verifying correctness. Therefore, Wormhole requires either an Ethereum full-node or a light-client. The node can be operated in the full, quick or light modes with no impact on security or performance of the bridge software. As long as the node supports the Ethereum JSON RPC API, it will be compatible with the bridge so all major implementations will work fine.
Generally, full-nodes will work better and be more reliable than light clients which are susceptible to DoS attacks since only very few nodes support the light client protocol.
Running a full node typically requires ~500G of SSD storage, 8G of RAM and 4-8 CPU threads (depending on clock frequency). Light clients have much lower hardware requirements.
For security reasons, we do not provide a pre-built binary. You need to check out the repo and build the guardiand binary from source. A Git repo is much harder to tamper with than release binaries.
To build the Wormhole node, you need Go >= 1.19.0
First, check out the version of the Wormhole repo that you want to deploy:
git clone https://github.com/wormhole-foundation/wormhole && cd wormhole
git checkout v2.0.x
Then, compile the release binary as an unprivileged build user:
make node
You'll end up with a guardiand
binary in build/
.
Consider these recommendations, not a tutorial to be followed blindly. You'll want to integrate this with your existing build pipeline. If you need Dockerfile examples, you can take a look at our devnet deployment.
If you want to compile and deploy locally, you can run sudo make install
to install the binary to /usr/local/bin.
If you deploy using a custom pipeline, you need to set the CAP_IPC_LOCK
capability on the binary (e.g. doing the
equivalent to sudo setcap cap_ipc_lock=+ep
) to allow it to lock its memory pages to prevent them from being paged out.
See below on why - this is a generic defense-in-depth mitigation which ensures that process memory is never swapped out
to disk. Please create a GitHub issue if this extra capability represents an operational or compliance concern.
To generate a guardian key, install guardiand first. If you generate the key on a separate machine, you may want to compile guardiand only without installing it:
make node
sudo setcap cap_ipc_lock=+ep ./build/bin/guardiand
Otherwise, use the same guardiand binary that you compiled using the regular instructions above.
Generate a new key using the keygen
subcommand:
guardiand keygen --desc "Testnet key foo" /path/to/your.key
The key file includes a human-readable part which includes the public key hashes and the description.
We strongly recommend a separate user and systemd services for the Wormhole services.
See the separate wormhole-networks repository for examples on how to set up the guardiand unit for a specific network.
You need to open port 8999/udp in your firewall for the P2P network. Nothing else has to be exposed externally.
journalctl can show guardiand's colored output using the -a
flag for binary output, i.e.: journalctl -a -f -u guardiand
.
Kubernetes deployment is fully supported.
Refer to devnet/ for example k8s deployments as a starting point for your own production deployment. You'll have to build your own containers. Unless you already run Kubernetes in production, we strongly recommend a traditional deployment on a dedicated instance - it's easier to understand and troubleshoot.
Wormhole exposes a status server for readiness and metrics. By default, it listens on port 6060 on localhost.
You can use a command line argument to expose it publicly: --statusAddr=[::]:6060
.
This endpoint returns a 200 OK status code once the Wormhole node is ready to serve requests. A node is considered ready as soon as it has successfully connected to all chains and started processing requests.
This is only for startup signalling - it will not tell whether it stopped processing requests at some later point. Once it's true, it stays true! Use metrics to figure that out.
This endpoint serves Prometheus metrics for alerting and introspection. We recommend using Prometheus and Alertmanager, but any monitoring tool that can ingest metrics using the standardized Prometheus exposition format will work.
Once we gained more operational experience with Wormhole, specific recommendations on appropriate symptoms-based alerting will be documented here.
See Wormhole.json for an example Grafana dashboard.
NOTE: Parsing the log output for monitoring is NOT recommended. Log output is meant for human consumption and is not considered a stable API. Log messages may be added, modified or removed without notice. Use the metrics :-)
Wormhole v2 no longer uses Solana as a data availability layer (see design document). Instead, it relies on Guardian nodes exposing an API which web wallets and other clients can use to retrieve the signed VAA message for a given transaction.
Guardian nodes are strongly encouraged to expose a public API endpoint to improve the protocol's robustness.
guardiand comes with a built-in REST and grpc-web server which can be enabled using the --publicWeb
flag:
--publicWeb=[::]:443
For usage with web wallets, TLS needs to be supported. guardiand has built-in Let's Encrypt support:
--tlsHostname=wormhole-v2-mainnet-api.example.com
--tlsProdEnv=true
Alternatively, you can use a managed reverse proxy like CloudFlare to terminate TLS.
It is safe to expose the publicWeb port on signing nodes. For better resiliency against denial of service attacks, future guardiand releases will include listen-only mode such that multiple guardiand instances without guardian keys can be operated behind a load balancer.
If you want to bind --publicWeb
to a port <1024, you need to assign the CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE capability.
This can be accomplished by either adding the capability to the binary (like in non-systemd environments):
sudo setcap cap_net_bind_service=+ep guardiand
...or by extending the capability set in guardiand.service
:
AmbientCapabilities=CAP_IPC_LOCK CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE
CapabilityBoundingSet=CAP_IPC_LOCK CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE
You'll have to manage the following keys:
-
The guardian key, which is the bridge consensus key. This key is very critical - your node uses it to certify VAA messages. The public key's hash is stored in the guardian set on all connected chains. It does not accrue rewards. It's your share of the multisig mechanism that protect the Wormhole network. The guardian set can be replaced if a majority of the guardians agree to sign and publish a new guardian set.
-
A node key, which identifies it on the gossip network, similar to Solana's node identity or a Tendermint node key. It is used by the peer-to-peer network for routing and transport layer encryption. An attacker could potentially use it to censor your messages on the network. Other than that, it's not very critical and can be rotated. The node will automatically create a node key at the path you specify if it doesn't exist. While the node key can be replaced, we recommend using a persistent node key. This will make it easier to identify your node in monitoring data and improves p2p connectivity.
For production, we strongly recommend to either encrypt your disks, and/or take care to never have hot guardian keys touch the disk. One way to accomplish is to store keys on an in-memory ramfs, which can't be swapped out, and restore it from cold storage or an HSM/vault whenever the node is rebooted. You might want to disable swap altogether. None of that is specific to Wormhole - this applies to any hot keys.
Our node software takes extra care to lock memory using mlock(2) to prevent keys from being swapped out to disk, which is why it requires extra capabilities. Yes, other chains might want to do this too :-)
Storing keys on an HSM or using remote signers only partially mitigates the risk of server compromise - it means the key can't get stolen, but an attacker could still cause the HSM to sign malicious payloads. Future iterations of Wormhole may include support for remote signing using a signer like SignOS.