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Bridge Deployments

Requirements

Make sure to install docker and docker-compose to be able to run and test bridge deployments. If for whatever reason you can't or don't want to use Docker, you can find some scripts for running the bridge here.

Networks

One of the building blocks we use for our deployments are networks. A network is a collection of homogenous blockchain nodes. We have Docker Compose files for each network that we want to bridge. Each of the compose files found in the ./networks folder is able to independently spin up a network like so:

docker-compose -f ./networks/rialto.yml up

After running this command we would have a network of several nodes producing blocks.

Bridges

A bridge is a way for several networks to connect to one another. Bridge deployments have their own Docker Compose files which can be found in the ./bridges folder. These Compose files typically contain bridge relayers, which are services external to blockchain nodes, and other components such as testing infrastructure, or user interfaces.

Unlike the network Compose files, these cannot be deployed on their own. They must be combined with different networks.

In general, we can deploy the bridge using docker-compose up in the following way:

docker-compose -f <bridge>.yml \
               -f <network_1>.yml \
               -f <network_2>.yml \
               -f <monitoring>.yml up

If you want to see how the Compose commands are actually run, check out the source code of the ./run.sh.

One thing worth noting is that we have a monitoring Compose file. This adds support for Prometheus and Grafana. We cover these in more details in the Monitoring section. At the moment the monitoring Compose file is not optional, and must be included for bridge deployments.

Running and Updating Deployments

We currently support two bridge deployments

  1. Rialto Substrate to Millau Substrate
  2. Westend Substrate to Millau Substrate

These bridges can be deployed using our ./run.sh script.

The first argument it takes is the name of the bridge you want to run. Right now we only support two bridges: rialto-millau and westend-millau.

./run.sh rialto-millau

If you add a second update argument to the script it will pull the latest images from Docker Hub and restart the deployment.

./run.sh rialto-millau update

You can also bring down a deployment using the script with the stop argument.

./run.sh rialto-millau stop

Adding Deployments

We need two main things when adding a new deployment. First, the new network which we want to bridge. A compose file for the network should be added in the /networks/ folder. Secondly we'll need a new bridge Compose file in ./bridges/. This should configure the bridge relayer nodes correctly for the two networks, and add any additional components needed for the deployment. If you want you can also add support in the ./run script for the new deployment. While recommended it's not strictly required.

General Notes

Rialto authorities are named: Alice, Bob, Charlie, Dave, Eve. Millau authorities are named: Alice, Bob, Charlie, Dave, Eve.

Both authorities and following accounts have enough funds (for test purposes) on corresponding Substrate chains:

  • on Rialto: Ferdie, George, Harry.
  • on Millau: Ferdie, George, Harry.

Names of accounts on Substrate (Rialto and Millau) chains may be prefixed with // and used as seeds for the sr25519 keys. This seed may also be used in the signer argument in Substrate relays. Example:

./substrate-relay relay-headers rialto-to-millau \
	--source-host rialto-node-alice \
	--source-port 9944 \
	--target-host millau-node-alice \
	--target-port 9944 \
	--source-signer //Harry \
	--prometheus-host=0.0.0.0

Some accounts are used by bridge components. Using these accounts to sign other transactions is not recommended, because this may lead to nonces conflict.

Following accounts are used when rialto-millau bridge is running:

  • Millau's Charlie signs complex headers+messages relay transactions on Millau chain;
  • Rialto's Charlie signs complex headers+messages relay transactions on Rialto chain;
  • Millau's Dave signs Millau transactions which contain messages for Rialto;
  • Rialto's Dave signs Rialto transactions which contain messages for Millau;
  • Millau's Eve signs relay transactions with message delivery confirmations (lane 00000001) from Rialto to Millau;
  • Rialto's Eve signs relay transactions with messages (lane 00000001) from Millau to Rialto;
  • Millau's Ferdie signs relay transactions with messages (lane 00000001) from Rialto to Millau;
  • Rialto's Ferdie signs relay transactions with message delivery confirmations (lane 00000001) from Millau to Rialto;
  • Millau's RialtoMessagesOwner signs relay transactions with updated Rialto -> Millau conversion rate;
  • Rialto's MillauMessagesOwner signs relay transactions with updated Millau -> Rialto conversion rate.

Following accounts are used when westend-millau bridge is running:

  • Millau's George signs relay transactions with new Westend headers.

Docker Usage

When the network is running you can query logs from individual nodes using:

docker logs rialto_millau-node-charlie_1 -f

To kill all leftover containers and start the network from scratch next time:

docker ps -a --format "{{.ID}}" | xargs docker rm # This removes all containers!

Docker Compose Usage

If you're not familiar with how to use docker-compose here are some useful commands you'll need when interacting with the bridge deployments:

docker-compose pull   # Get the latest images from the Docker Hub
docker-compose build  # This is going to build images
docker-compose up     # Start all the nodes
docker-compose up -d  # Start the nodes in detached mode.
docker-compose down   # Stop the network.

Note that for the you'll need to add the appropriate -f arguments that were mentioned in the Bridges section. You can read more about using multiple Compose files here. One thing worth noting is that the order the compose files are specified in matters. A different order will result in a different configuration.

You can sanity check the final config like so:

docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml -f docker-compose.override.yml config > docker-compose.merged.yml

Docker and Git Deployment

It is also possible to avoid using images from the Docker Hub and instead build containers from Git. There are two ways to build the images this way.

Git Repo

If you have cloned the bridges repo you can build local Docker images by running the following command at the top level of the repo:

docker build . -t local/<project_you're_building> --build-arg=PROJECT=<project>

This will build a local image of a particular component with a tag of local/<project_you're_building>. This tag can be used in Docker Compose files.

You can configure the build using using Docker build arguments. Here are the arguments currently supported:

  • BRIDGE_REPO: Git repository of the bridge node and relay code
  • BRIDGE_HASH: Commit hash within that repo (can also be a branch or tag)
  • ETHEREUM_REPO: Git repository of the OpenEthereum client
  • ETHEREUM_HASH: Commit hash within that repo (can also be a branch or tag)
  • PROJECT: Project to build withing bridges repo. Can be one of:
    • rialto-bridge-node
    • millau-bridge-node
    • substrate-relay

GitHub Actions

We have a nightly job which runs and publishes Docker images for the different nodes and relayers to the ParityTech Docker Hub organization. These images are used for our ephemeral (temporary) test networks. Additionally, any time a tag in the form of v* is pushed to GitHub the publishing job is run. This will build all the components (nodes, relayers) and publish them.

With images built using either method, all you have to do to use them in a deployment is change the image field in the existing Docker Compose files to point to the tag of the image you want to use.

Monitoring

Prometheus is used by the bridge relay to monitor information such as system resource use, and block data (e.g the best blocks it knows about). In order to visualize this data a Grafana dashboard can be used.

As part of the Rialto docker-compose setup we spin up a Prometheus server and Grafana dashboard. The Prometheus server connects to the Prometheus data endpoint exposed by the bridge relay. The Grafana dashboard uses the Prometheus server as its data source.

The default port for the bridge relay's Prometheus data is 9616. The host and port can be configured though the --prometheus-host and --prometheus-port flags. The Prometheus server's dashboard can be accessed at http://localhost:9090. The Grafana dashboard can be accessed at http://localhost:3000. Note that the default log-in credentials for Grafana are admin:admin.

Environment Variables

Here is an example .env file which is used for production deployments and network updates. For security reasons it is not kept as part of version control. When deploying a network this file should be correctly populated and kept in the appropriate bridges deployment folder.

The UI_SUBSTRATE_PROVIDER variable lets you define the url of the Substrate node that the user interface will connect to. UI_ETHEREUM_PROVIDER is used only as a guidance for users to connect Metamask to the right Ethereum network. UI_EXPECTED_ETHEREUM_NETWORK_ID is used by the user interface as a fail safe to prevent users from connecting their Metamask extension to an unexpected network.

GRAFANA_ADMIN_PASS=admin_pass
GRAFANA_SERVER_ROOT_URL=%(protocol)s://%(domain)s:%(http_port)s/
GRAFANA_SERVER_DOMAIN=server.domain.io
MATRIX_ACCESS_TOKEN="access-token"
WITH_PROXY=1 # Optional
UI_SUBSTRATE_PROVIDER=ws://localhost:9944
UI_ETHEREUM_PROVIDER=http://localhost:8545
UI_EXPECTED_ETHEREUM_NETWORK_ID=105

UI

Use wss://rialto.bridges.test-installations.parity.io/ as a custom endpoint for https://polkadot.js.org/apps/.

Polkadot.js UI

To teach the UI decode our custom types used in the pallet, go to: Settings -> Developer and import the ./types.json

Scripts

The are some bash scripts in scripts folder that allow testing Relay without running the entire network within docker. Use if needed for development.