Adding a new validator organization in Besu¶
Prerequisites¶
To add a new organization in Besu, an existing besu network should be running, enode information of all existing nodes present in the network should be available, genesis file should be available in base64 encoding and the information of transaction manager nodes and existing validator nodes should be available. The new node account should be unlocked prior adding the new node to the existing besu network.
NOTE: Addition of a new organization has been tested on an existing network which is created by Bevel. Networks created using other methods may be suitable but this has not been tested by Bevel team.
Create Configuration File¶
Refer this guide for details on editing the configuration file.
The network.yaml
file should contain the specific network.organization
details along with the transaction manager node details and existing validator and member node details.
NOTE: Make sure that the genesis flie is provided in base64 encoding. Also, if you are adding node to the same cluster as of another node, make sure that you add the ambassador ports of the existing node present in the cluster to the network.yaml
For reference, sample network-besu-new-validatororg.yaml
file here
##############################################################################################
# Copyright Accenture. All Rights Reserved.
#
# SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0
##############################################################################################
---
# yaml-language-server: $schema=../../../../platforms/network-schema.json
# This is a sample configuration file to add a new validator organization to existing network
# This DOES NOT support proxy=none
# All text values are case-sensitive
network:
# Network level configuration specifies the attributes required for each organization
# to join an existing network.
type: besu
version: 22.10.2 #this is the version of Besu docker image that will be deployed.
#Environment section for Kubernetes setup
env:
type: "besu" # tag for the environment. Important to run multiple flux on single cluster
proxy: ambassador # value has to be 'ambassador' as 'haproxy' has not been implemented for Besu
proxy_namespace: "ambassador"
# These ports are enabled per cluster, so if you have multiple clusters you do not need so many ports
# This sample uses a single cluster, so we have to open 3 ports for each Node. These ports are again specified for each organization below
ambassadorPorts: # Any additional Ambassador ports can be given here, this is valid only if proxy='ambassador'
portRange: # For a range of ports
from: 15020
to: 15023
# ports: [15020,15021] # For specific ports; needs to be an array or list
loadBalancerSourceRanges: # (Optional) Default value is '0.0.0.0/0', this value can be changed to any other IP adres or list (comma-separated without spaces) of IP adresses, this is valid only if proxy='ambassador'
retry_count: 20 # Retry count for the checks on Kubernetes cluster
external_dns: enabled # Should be enabled if using external-dns for automatic route configuration
# Prometheus setup section
prometheus:
enabled: true # Set to "true" to enable Prometheus monitoring, or "false" to disable it.
ambassador_mapping: enabled # Choose "enabled" to make Prometheus publically accessible through Ambassador, or "disabled" to restrict access to local use via port-forwarding.
prometheus_prefix: bevelprom # The prefix added to the organization's external_url_suffix to create the hostname.
port: 80 # The port will be used by Ambassador for Prometheus. Supported values include 80, 443, or any unused port from the network.env.ambassadorPorts range.
# To access Prometheus publicly:
# Use <prometheus_prefix>.<organization's external_url_suffix> if using port 80 or 443.
# Use <random-string>.<organization's external_url_suffix>:<port> if selecting a port from network.env.ambassadorPorts range.
# Docker registry details where images are stored. This will be used to create k8s secrets
# Please ensure all required images are built and stored in this registry.
# Do not check-in docker_password.
docker:
url: "ghcr.io/hyperledger"
username: "docker_username"
password: "docker_password"
# Following are the configurations for the common Besu network
config:
consensus: "qbft" # Options are "ibft2", "qbft", "ibft" and "clique".
## Certificate subject for the root CA of the network.
# This is for development usage only where we create self-signed certificates and the truststores are generated automatically.
# Production systems should generate proper certificates and configure truststores accordingly.
subject: "CN=DLT Root CA,OU=DLT,O=DLT,L=London,C=GB"
transaction_manager: "tessera" # Transaction manager is "tessera" or "none"
# This is the version of "tessera" docker image that will be deployed
tm_version: "21.7.3"
# TLS can be True or False for the tessera tm
tm_tls: True
# Tls trust value
tm_trust: "ca-or-tofu" # Options are: "ca-or-tofu", "ca", "tofu"
## Transaction Manager nodes public addresses should be provided.
# - "https://node.test.besu.blockchaincloudpoc-develop.com"
# The above domain name is formed by the (http or https)://(peer.name).(org.external_url_suffix):(ambassador tessera node port)
tm_nodes:
- "https://carrier.test.besu.blockchaincloudpoc-develop.com:443"
# Besu rpc public address list for existing validator and member nodes
# - "http://noderpc.test.besu.blockchaincloudpoc-develop.com"
# The above domain name is formed by the (http)://(peer.name)rpc.(org.external_url_suffix):(ambassador node rpc port)
besu_nodes:
- "http://validator-1rpc.test.besu.blockchaincloudpoc-develop.com"
- "http://validator-2rpc.test.besu.blockchaincloudpoc-develop.com"
- "http://validator-3rpc.test.besu.blockchaincloudpoc-develop.com"
- "http://validator-4rpc.test.besu.blockchaincloudpoc-develop.com"
# Allows specification of one or many organizations that will be connecting to a network.
organizations:
# Specification for the 1st organization. Each organization should map to a VPC and a separate k8s cluster for production deployments
- organization:
name: newvalidator
type: validator
# Provide the url suffix that will be added in DNS recordset. Must be different for different clusters
external_url_suffix: test.besu.blockchaincloudpoc.com
#Providing issuer as letsencrypt would create tls certificate using letsencrypt CA,
#This is Optional, if no value or default is provided, self signed certificates will be created
issuer: default
org_status: new # Choose from new | existing
cloud_provider: aws # Options: aws, azure, gcp
aws:
access_key: "aws_access_key" # AWS Access key, only used when cloud_provider=aws
secret_key: "aws_secret_key" # AWS Secret key, only used when cloud_provider=aws
region: "aws_region" # AWS Region where cluster and EIPs are created
# Kubernetes cluster deployment variables. The config file path and name has to be provided in case
# the cluster has already been created.
k8s:
context: "cluster_context"
config_file: "cluster_config"
# Hashicorp Vault server address and root-token. Vault should be unsealed.
# Do not check-in root_token
vault:
url: "vault_addr"
root_token: "vault_root_token"
secret_path: "secretsv2"
# Git Repo details which will be used by GitOps/Flux.
# Do not check-in git_access_token
gitops:
git_protocol: "https" # Option for git over https or ssh
git_url: "https://github.com/<username>/bevel.git" # Gitops https or ssh url for flux value files
branch: "develop" # Git branch where release is being made
release_dir: "platforms/hyperledger-besu/releases/dev" # Relative Path in the Git repo for flux sync per environment.
chart_source: "platforms/hyperledger-besu/charts" # Relative Path where the Helm charts are stored in Git repo
git_repo: "github.com/<username>/bevel.git" # Gitops git repository URL for git push
username: "git_username" # Git Service user who has rights to check-in in all branches
password: "git_access_token" # Git Server user password/token (Optional for ssh; Required for https)
email: "git@email.com" # Email to use in git config
private_key: "path_to_private_key" # Path to private key file which has write-access to the git repo (Optional for https; Required for ssh)
# As this is the validator org, it is hosting a few validators as services
services:
validators:
- validator:
name: validator5
status: new # needed to know which validator node exists
bootnode: true # true if the validator node is used also a bootnode for the network
cactus_connector: enabled # set to enabled to create a cactus connector for Besu
p2p:
port: 30303
ambassador: 15026 #Port exposed on ambassador service (use one port per org if using single cluster)
rpc:
port: 8545
ambassador: 80 # Will only support port 80
ws:
port: 8546
metrics:
enabled: false # Set this to true to enable Prometheus monitoring for this node, or false to disable it.
port: 9545 # Specify the port that Prometheus will use to collect metrics for this node.
- validator:
name: validator6
status: new # needed to know which validator node exists
bootnode: true # true if the validator node is used also a bootnode for the network
p2p:
port: 30303
ambassador: 15028 #Port exposed on ambassador service (use one port per org if using single cluster)
rpc:
port: 8545
ambassador: 80 # Will only support port 80
ws:
port: 8546
metrics:
enabled: false # Set this to true to enable Prometheus monitoring for this node, or false to disable it.
port: 9545 # Specify the port that Prometheus will use to collect metrics for this node.
Three new sections are added to the network.yaml
Field | Description |
---|---|
tm_nodes | Existing network's transaction manager nodes' public addresses with nodeports. |
besu_nodes | Existing network's besu nodes' public addresses with rpc ports. |
genesis | Path to existing network's genesis.json in base64. |
Run playbook¶
The add-validator.yaml playbook is used to add a new validator organization to the existing network. This can be done using the following command