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Overview | Hive Commands | Simulators | Clients

Installing Hive

We have not tested hive on any OS other than Linux. It is usually best to use Ubuntu or Debian.

First add build-essential by sudo apt install build-essential. Also install Go version 1.17 or later and add it to your $PATH as described in the Go installation documentation. You can check the installed Go version by running go version.

To get hive, you first need to clone the repository to the location of your choice. Then you can build the hive executable.

git clone https://github.com/ethereum/portal-hive.git
cd ./portal-hive
go build .

To run simulations, you need a working Docker setup. Hive needs to be run on the same machine as dockerd. Using docker remotely is not supported at this time. Install docker and add your user to the docker group to allow using docker without sudo.

sudo usermod -a -G docker <user_name>

Running Hive

All hive commands should be run from within the root of the repository. To run a simulation, use the following command:

./hive --sim <simulation> --client <client(s) you want to test against>

For example, if you want to run the rpc-compat test against trin, fluffy and ultralight here is how the command would look:

./hive --sim rpc-compat --sim.limit discv4 --client trin,ultralight,fluffy

The client list may contain any number of clients. You can select a specific client version by appending it to the client name with _, for example:

./hive --sim rpc-compat --client trin_v0.0.1,fluffy_v06.12.22

Simulation runs can be customized in many ways. Here's an overview of the available command-line options.

--client.checktimelimit <timeout>: The timeout of waiting for clients to open up TCP port 8545. If a very long chain is imported, this timeout may need to be quite long. A lower value means that hive won't wait as long in case the node crashes and never opens the RPC port. Defaults to 3 minutes.

--docker.pull: Setting this option makes hive re-pull the base images of all built docker containers.

--docker.output: This enables printing of all docker container output to stderr.

--docker.nocache <expression>: Regular expression selecting docker images to forcibly rebuild. You can use this option during simulator development to ensure a new image is built even when there are no changes to the simulator code.

--sim.timelimit <timeout>: Simulation timeout. Hive aborts the simulator if it exceeds this time. There is no default timeout.

--sim.loglevel <level>: Selects log level of client instances. Supports values 0-5, defaults to 3. Note that this value may be overridden by simulators for specific clients. This sets the default value of HIVE_LOGLEVEL in client containers.

--sim.parallelism <number>: Sets max number of parallel clients/containers. This is interpreted by simulators. It sets the HIVE_PARALLELISM environment variable. Defaults to 1.

--sim.limit <pattern>: Specifies a regular expression to selectively enable suites and test cases. This is interpreted by simulators. It sets the HIVE_TEST_PATTERN environment variable.

The test pattern expression is usually interpreted as an unanchored match, i.e. an empty pattern matches any suite/test name and the expression can match anywhere in name. To improve command-line ergonomics, the test pattern is split at the first occurrence of /. The part before / matches the suite name and everything after it matches test names.

For example, the following command runs the rpc-compat simulator, limiting the run to the rpc-compat suite and selecting only tests containing the word Store.

./hive --sim rpc-compat --sim.limit rpc-compat/Store

Viewing simulation results (hiveview)

The results of hive simulation runs are stored in JSON files containing test results, and hive also creates several log files containing the output of the simulator and clients. To view test results and logs in a web browser, you can use the hiveview tool. Build it with:

go build ./cmd/hiveview

Run it like this to start the HTTP server:

./hiveview --serve --logdir ./workspace/logs

This command runs a web interface on http://127.0.0.1:8080. The interface shows information about all simulation runs for which information was collected.

Generating Ethereum 1.x test chains (hivechain)

The hivechain tool allows you to create RLP-encoded blockchains for inclusion into simulations. Build it with:

go build ./cmd/hivechain

To generate a chain of a desired length, run the following command:

./hivechain generate -genesis ./genesis.json -length 200

hivechain generates empty blocks by default. The chain will contain non-empty blocks if the following accounts have balance in genesis state. You can find the corresponding private keys in the hivechain source code.

  • 0x71562b71999873DB5b286dF957af199Ec94617F7
  • 0x703c4b2bD70c169f5717101CaeE543299Fc946C7
  • 0x0D3ab14BBaD3D99F4203bd7a11aCB94882050E7e