You can use the ./network.sh
script to stand up a simple Fabric test network. The test network has two peer organizations with one peer each and a single node raft ordering service. You can also use the ./network.sh
script to create channels and deploy chaincode. For more information, see Using the Fabric test network. The test network is being introduced in Fabric v2.0 as the long term replacement for the first-network
sample.
Before you can deploy the test network, you need to follow the instructions to Install the Samples, Binaries and Docker Images in the Hyperledger Fabric documentation.
The setOrgEnv.sh
script can be used to setup the environment variables for the ogrganziations, this will will help to be able to use the peer
commands directly.
First, ensure that the peer binaries are on your path, and the Fabric Config path is set Assuming that you're in the test-network
directory.
export PATH=$PATH:$(realpath ../bin)
export FABRIC_CFG_PATH=$(realpath ../config)
You can then set up the environment variables for each organization. The ./setOrgEnv.sh
command is designed to be run as follows.
export $(./setOrgEnv.sh Org2 | xargs)
(Note bash v4 is required for the scripts)
You will now be able to run the peer
commands in the context of Org2. If a different command prompt you can run the same command with Org1 instead.
The setOrgEnv
script outputs a series of <name>=<value>
strings. These can then be fed into the export command for your current shell
To learn more about how to use the improvements to the Chaincode-as-a-service please see this tutorial. It is expected that this will move to augment the tutorial in the Hyperledger Fabric ReadTheDocs
Note - podman support should be considered experimental. There are issues with volume mounting on MacOS that prevent this working. If wish to use podman a LinuxVM is suggested.
A copy of the install_fabric.sh
script is in the test-network
directory. This has been enhanced to support a podman
argument; if used it will use the podman
command to pull down images and tag them rather than docker. The images are the same, just pulled differently
The network.sh
script has been enhanced so that it can use podman
and podman-compose
instead of docker. Ensure that CONTAINER_CLI
is set as below when running network.sh
script.
CONTAINER_CLI=podman ./network.sh up
As there is no Docker-Daemon when using podman, only the ./network.sh deployCCAAS
command will work.