/tao

Build transparent organization.

Primary LanguageRustThe UnlicenseUnlicense

TAO - Transparent Autonomous Organization

Using Substrate to build a blockchain which can land the organisations in reality.

Possible features:

  • create an organisation
  • issue tokens for founders
  • create role for staff
  • define workflow between roles
  • asign tasks under certain role
  • periodcally pay salary for staff
  • deposit initial fund
  • process fund raising
  • create vote for above activity changes

Components

A new FRAME-based Substrate node, ready for hacking.

Build

Install Rust:

curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh

Initialize your Wasm Build environment:

./scripts/init.sh

Build Wasm and native code:

cargo build --release

Run

Single Node Development Chain

Purge any existing developer chain state:

./target/release/node-template purge-chain --dev

Start a development chain with:

./target/release/node-template --dev

Detailed logs may be shown by running the node with the following environment variables set: RUST_LOG=debug RUST_BACKTRACE=1 cargo run -- --dev.

Multi-Node Local Testnet

If you want to see the multi-node consensus algorithm in action locally, then you can create a local testnet with two validator nodes for Alice and Bob, who are the initial authorities of the genesis chain that have been endowed with testnet units.

Optionally, give each node a name and expose them so they are listed on the Polkadot telemetry site.

You'll need two terminal windows open.

We'll start Alice's substrate node first on default TCP port 30333 with her chain database stored locally at /tmp/alice. The bootnode ID of her node is QmRpheLN4JWdAnY7HGJfWFNbfkQCb6tFf4vvA6hgjMZKrR, which is generated from the --node-key value that we specify below:

cargo run -- \
  --base-path /tmp/alice \
  --chain=local \
  --alice \
  --node-key 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000001 \
  --telemetry-url 'ws://telemetry.polkadot.io:1024 0' \
  --validator

In the second terminal, we'll start Bob's substrate node on a different TCP port of 30334, and with his chain database stored locally at /tmp/bob. We'll specify a value for the --bootnodes option that will connect his node to Alice's bootnode ID on TCP port 30333:

cargo run -- \
  --base-path /tmp/bob \
  --bootnodes /ip4/127.0.0.1/tcp/30333/p2p/QmRpheLN4JWdAnY7HGJfWFNbfkQCb6tFf4vvA6hgjMZKrR \
  --chain=local \
  --bob \
  --port 30334 \
  --telemetry-url 'ws://telemetry.polkadot.io:1024 0' \
  --validator

Additional CLI usage options are available and may be shown by running cargo run -- --help.

Run in Docker

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/node-template --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/node-template --dev --ws-external

# Purge the local dev chain
./scripts/docker_run.sh ./target/release/node-template purge-chain --dev

# Check whether the code is compilable
./scripts/docker_run.sh cargo check

Advanced: Generate Your Own Substrate Node Template

A substrate node template is always based on a certain version of Substrate. You can inspect it by opening Cargo.toml and see the template referred to a specific Substrate commit( rev field), branch, or version.

You can generate your own Substrate node-template based on a particular Substrate version/commit by running following commands:

# git clone from the main Substrate repo
git clone https://github.com/paritytech/substrate.git
cd substrate

# Switch to a particular branch or commit of the Substrate repo your node-template based on
git checkout <branch/tag/sha1>

# Run the helper script to generate a node template.
# This script compiles Substrate and takes a while to complete. It takes a relative file path
#   from the current dir. to output the compressed node template.
.maintain/node-template-release.sh ../node-template.tar.gz

Noted though you will likely get faster and more thorough support if you stick with the releases provided in this repository.

⚡ Run public testnet

  • Modify the genesis config in chain_spec.rs
  • Build spec, ./target/release/<your-project-name> build-spec --chain staging > my-staging.json
  • Change original spec to encoded raw spec, ./target/release/<your-project-name> build-spec --chain=my-staging.json --raw > my-staging-raw.json
  • Start your bootnodes, node key can be generate with command ./target/release/substrate key generate-node-key.
    ./target/release/<your-project-name> \
         --node-key <your-node-key> \
         --base-path /tmp/bootnode1 \
         --chain my-staging-raw.json \
         --name bootnode1
  • Start your initial validators,
    ./target/release/<your-project-name> \
        --base-path  /tmp/validator1 \
        --chain   my-staging-raw.json \
        --bootnodes  /ip4/<your-bootnode-ip>/tcp/30333/p2p/<your-bootnode-peerid> \
        --port 30336 \
        --ws-port 9947 \
        --rpc-port 9936 \
        --name  validator1 \
        --validator 
  • Insert session keys
  • Attract enough validators from community in waiting
  • Call force_new_era in staking pallet with sudo, rotate to PoS validators
  • Enable governance, and remove sudo
  • Enable transfer and other functions