Setting up the development environment¶
Prerequisites¶
- Git client
- Go version 1.14.x
- Docker version 18.03 or later
- (macOS) Xcode Command Line Tools
- SoftHSM
- jq
Steps¶
Install the Prerequisites¶
For macOS, we recommend using Homebrew to manage the development prereqs. The Xcode command line tools will be installed as part of the Homebrew installation.
Once Homebrew is ready, installing the necessary prerequisites is very easy:
brew install git go jq softhsm
brew cask install --appdir="/Applications" docker
Docker Desktop must be launched to complete the installation so be sure to open the application after installing it:
open /Applications/Docker.app
Developing on Windows¶
On Windows 10 you should use the native Docker distribution and you
may use the Windows PowerShell. However, for the binaries
command to succeed you will still need to have the uname
command
available. You can get it as part of Git but beware that only the
64bit version is supported.
Before running any git clone
commands, run the following commands:
git config --global core.autocrlf false
git config --global core.longpaths true
You can check the setting of these parameters with the following commands:
git config --get core.autocrlf
git config --get core.longpaths
These need to be false
and true
respectively.
The curl
command that comes with Git and Docker Toolbox is old and
does not handle properly the redirect used in
Getting Started. Make sure you have and use a newer version
which can be downloaded from the cURL downloads page
Clone the Hyperledger Fabric source¶
First navigate to https://github.com/hyperledger/fabric and fork the fabric repository using the fork button in the top-right corner. After forking, clone the repository.
mkdir -p github.com/<your_github_userid>
cd github.com/<your_github_userid>
git clone https://github.com/<your_github_userid>/fabric
Nota
If you are running Windows, before cloning the repository, run the following command:
git config --get core.autocrlf
If core.autocrlf
is set to true
, you must set it to false
by
running:
git config --global core.autocrlf false
Configure SoftHSM¶
A PKCS #11 cryptographic token implementation is required to run the unit tests. The PKCS #11 API is used by the bccsp component of Fabric to interact with hardware security modules (HSMs) that store cryptographic information and perform cryptographic computations. For test environments, SoftHSM can be used to satisfy this requirement.
SoftHSM generally requires additional configuration before it can be used. For example, the default configuration will attempt to store token data in a system directory that unprivileged users are unable to write to.
SoftHSM configuration typically involves copying /etc/softhsm2.conf
to
$HOME/.config/softhsm2/softhsm2.conf
and changing directories.tokendir
to an appropriate location. Please see the man page for softhsm2.conf
for
details.
After SoftHSM has been configured, the following command can be used to initialize the token required by the unit tests:
softhsm2-util --init-token --slot 0 --label "ForFabric" --so-pin 1234 --pin 98765432
If tests are unable to locate the libsofthsm2.so library in your environment, specify the library path, the PIN, and the label of your token in the appropriate environment variables. For example, on macOS:
export PKCS11_LIB="/usr/local/Cellar/softhsm/2.6.1/lib/softhsm/libsofthsm2.so"
export PKCS11_PIN=98765432
export PKCS11_LABEL="ForFabric"
Install the development tools¶
Once the repository is cloned, you can use make
to install some of the
tools used in the development environment. By default, these tools will be
installed into $HOME/go/bin
. Please be sure your PATH
includes that
directory.
make gotools
After installing the tools, the build environment can be verified by running a few commands.
make basic-checks integration-test-prereqs
ginkgo -r ./integration/nwo
If those commands completely successfully, you’re ready to Go!
If you plan to use the Hyperledger Fabric application SDKs then be sure to check out their prerequisites in the Node.js SDK README and Java SDK README.