FS directly connects supply and demand of house-owners & renters and houses & investors. It removes the financial barrier of investing in real estate for investors that don't have the means to fully invest in a house themselves.
Goal is to give investors a social return while renters can have cheapers housing. In between the end-users, there is of of coordination between stakeholders to achieve this system so it's safe and the desired outcome is achieved.
The FS is essentially a DAO with a mission to make housing cheaper, that relies and requires real world actors to achieve it's goal. The real world actors the following real-world actors to fullfill tasks and get paid out by the digital society.
We are zooming much more on the problem definition, stakeholders and the solution in our paper on our website. To learn more and get in touch with us, please join our discord channel FS
- complete the basic Rust setup instructions.
cargo run --release -- --dev --tmp
in the root of the fs-node repo.
The cargo run
command will perform an initial build. Use the following command to build the node
without launching it:
cargo build --release
Once the node template is running locally, you can connect it with Polkadot-JS Apps front-end to interact with your chain. Click here connecting the Apps to your local node template.
First, install Docker and Docker Compose.
Then run the following command to start a single node development chain.
./scripts/docker_run.sh
This command will firstly compile your code, and then start a local development network. You can
also replace the default command
(cargo build --release && ./target/release/fs-node --dev --ws-external
)
by appending your own. A few useful ones are as follow.
# Run Substrate node without re-compiling
./scripts/docker_run.sh ./target/release/fs-node --dev --ws-external
# Purge the local dev chain
./scripts/docker_run.sh ./target/release/fs-node purge-chain --dev
# Check whether the code is compilable
./scripts/docker_run.sh cargo check