Fetch Network
Ledger
State-synchronization (state-sync)
Bookmark

State-synchronization (state-sync)

State-sync is a feature which allows you to quickly bootstrap a new node by allowing it to pull a state snapshot taken by other nodes.

⚠️️

The state-sync feature is only available from fetchd v0.10.6 and later on. Prior versions needed to either synchronize from scratch or restore a chain snapshot ↗️, which both could take hours before having the node fully synchronized.

It now takes only a few minutes before having an operational node with state-sync,

Configuring the new node

If you want to instruct the node to sync itself using a state-sync snapshot, it need some configuration in the ~/.fetchd/config/config.toml file. To configure the new node, open this file in an editor and lookup for the statesync section.

By default, it should looks like this:

#######################################################
###         State Sync Configuration Options        ###
#######################################################
 
[statesync]
# State sync rapidly bootstraps a new node by discovering, fetching, and restoring a state machine
# snapshot from peers instead of fetching and replaying historical blocks. Requires some peers in
# the network to take and serve state machine snapshots. State sync is not attempted if the node
# has any local state (LastBlockHeight > 0). The node will have a truncated block history,
# starting from the height of the snapshot.
enable = false
 
# RPC servers (comma-separated) for light client verification of the synced state machine and
# retrieval of state data for node bootstrapping. Also needs a trusted height and corresponding
# header hash obtained from a trusted source, and a period during which validators can be trusted.
 
# For Cosmos SDK-based chains, trust_period should usually be about 2/3 of the unbonding time (~2
# weeks) during which they can be financially punished (slashed) for misbehavior.
rpc_servers = ""
trust_height = 0
trust_hash = ""
trust_period = "168h0m0s"
 
# Time to spend discovering snapshots before initiating a restore.
discovery_time = "15s"
 
# Temporary directory for state sync snapshot chunks, defaults to the OS tempdir (typically /tmp).
# Will create a new, randomly named directory within, and remove it when done.
temp_dir = ""
 
# The timeout duration before re-requesting a chunk, possibly from a different
# peer (default: 1 minute).
chunk_request_timeout = "10s"
 
# The number of concurrent chunk fetchers to run (default: 1).
chunk_fetchers = "4"

A few changes will be needed:

  • First, you will need to set enable = true to activate the state-sync engine.

  • Then, you need to provide at least 2 rpc servers. A good place to find some is the cosmos chain registry ↗️ (opens in a new tab). Servers must be comma separated without space (i.e., rpc_servers = "https://rpc-fetchhub.fetch.ai:443,https://fetch-rpc.polkachu.com:443"). These servers will be used to verify the snapshots, so make sure you trust them enough for this.

  • You will also need a recent trust_height and trust_hash. Recent means it must be contained in the trust_period (168 hours, or ~1 week old by default). These can be obtained from a RPC server you trust to provide you correct data (and the 2nd RPC server from rpc_servers will be charged of confirming that the data are correct).

  • And last, you need to set chunk_request_timeout to 60s (the 10s default value seems too short and can lead to "context deadline exceeded" timeout errors when verifying the hashes).

You can then retrieve the correct value for a Fetch.ai RPC server, and the current network height, using:

curl https://rpc-fetchhub.fetch.ai:443/block | jq -r '{"trusted_hash": .result.block_id.hash, "trusted_height": .result.block.header.height}'
{
  "trusted_hash": "...some hash...",
  "trusted_height": "...some height..."
}

and set the trusted_hash and trusted_height values in the config file.

Once this is set, you will need to make sure you have the correct genesis by downloading it from the RPC node:

curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/fetchai/genesis-fetchhub/fetchhub-4/fetchhub-4/data/genesis_migrated_5300200.json --output ~/.fetchd/config/genesis.json

You can then start the node using the seeds from the chain-registry:

fetchd start --p2p.seeds="17693da418c15c95d629994a320e2c4f51a8069b@connect-fetchhub.fetch.ai:36456,a575c681c2861fe945f77cb3aba0357da294f1f2@connect-fetchhub.fetch.ai:36457,d7cda986c9f59ab9e05058a803c3d0300d15d8da@connect-fetchhub.fetch.ai:36458"

After the node is initialized, it will start searching for available snapshots, and it should print log messages similar to the ones below:

8:22AM INF Discovered new snapshot format=1 hash="� ݫ/��\r�F#C(pD�<��\x066��\x1f��\x1f<i�ݝ" height=2000 module=statesync
8:22AM INF Discovered new snapshot format=1 hash="F�=\x05�Gh�{�|�����,�Q'�=]\x1a�$�b�ֿQ" height=1900 module=statesync

The node will select the one with the height value the closest to the tip of the chain, and it will then start restoring the state, and finish synchronizing the few blocks remaining. If it fails to verify any blocks or hash when restoring, it will attempt to restore the next available snapshot, and, if no more are available, it will fallback in discovery mode until an usable snapshot is made available.

Configure an existing node to provide snapshots

You can configure existing nodes to create snapshot from which they can start on. This requires changes in the ~/.fetchd/config/app.toml file, in the state-sync section:

###############################################################################
###                        State Sync Configuration                         ###
###############################################################################

# State sync snapshots allow other nodes to rapidly join the network without replaying historical
# blocks, instead downloading and applying a snapshot of the application state at a given height.
[state-sync]

# snapshot-interval specifies the block interval at which local state sync snapshots are
# taken (0 to disable). Must be a multiple of pruning-keep-every.
snapshot-interval = 0

# snapshot-keep-recent specifies the number of recent snapshots to keep and serve (0 to keep all).
snapshot-keep-recent = 2

Here, snapshot-interval must be set to a number of blocks between each snapshot creation and it must be a multiple of your node pruning settings (default is 100, so valid values are 100, 1000, 700...).

The number of snapshots to keep can be set with snapshot-keep-recent.

Was this page helpful?

Bookmark