THIS FORK IS A WORK IN PROGRESS AND IS UNTESTED AT THIS POINT. DON'T EXPECT IT TO WORK
Project won one of the four prizes allocated by the Golem Project on Gitcoin's Hack New Golem bounty!
Read more on the Golem's Blog article.
- Github Repository
- DockerHub Respository
- Golem Network > Website
- Golem Network > Provider Node Documentation
- Golem Network > Yagna Github Repository
As per the Provider Node Documentation > Prerequisites:
To run Golem Sneak Peek you'll need a physical machine as you may encounter issues when running it on a virtual machine.
Your Docker host must be a physical machine: you will need to give the container access to the /dev/kvm
device.
Furthermore, Golem only supports 64-bit architecture for the moment (see GolemFactory/Yagna Releases Page).
You can clone this repository or use the provided docker-compose.yml
as a base template for your own setup.
A Makefile
is included for convenience but make
is not required to run the node.
Use make
or make help
to list the available shortcuts.
Create a .env.local
file in order to add your ERC20 address as an environment variable
(replace the following placeholder with your own PUBLIC address):
echo "YA_ACCOUNT=0x18f199E8DAb38257ca84D4858FF6F73De1A697eA" >> .env.local
This is important because it will be the address where your earned GLM will be sent.
You can use for instance your Metamask or Ledger public address. This way, you can have your earned GLM tokens sent directly to your account, and you can manage them from there without Golem ever needing to access your wallet.
Use make setup
to run the node for the first time.
The CLI will ask you a few questions: refer to the Provider Node Documentation > Initial Setup for more details.
The node settings will be kept on your host in a ./data-node
repository.
Use make up
to start the node in a detached mode.
Display the last logs at any time by running make logs
.
Use make status
to get your node address and health, and make settings
to display your current node parameters.
Get shell access with make shell
.
The node caches every docker image it uses to run jobs in the following directory:
./data-node/ya-provider/exe-unit/cache/
.
Those images are never removed and can slowly take up a lot of space on your hard drive.
To prevent this a helper command has been introduced: make clean
;
which removes every file older than 7 days in the cache directory.
If you are running the job scheduler for docker environments Ofelia on your host
this task will be done automatically, every day at midnight,
thanks to specific labels added on the node
service.
If you find this template useful you may consider the option of offering me a beer through a donation. Support is very appreciated 🙂
ETH / ERC20 Token: 0x18f199E8DAb38257ca84D4858FF6F73De1A697eA