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Horizon Development Guide |
This document describes how to build Horizon from source, so that you can test and edit the code locally to develop bug fixes and new features.
If you are just starting with Horizon and want to try it out, consider the Quickstart Guide instead. For information about administrating a Horizon instance in production, check out the Administration Guide.
Building Horizon requires the following developer tools:
- A Unix-like operating system with the common core commands (cp, tar, mkdir, bash, etc.)
- Golang 1.9 or later
- git (to check out Horizon's source code)
- go-dep (package manager for Go)
- mercurial (needed for
go-dep
)
- Set your GOPATH environment variable, if you haven't already. The default
GOPATH
is$HOME/go
. - Clone the Stellar Go monorepo:
go get github.com/stellar/go
. You should see the repository present at$GOPATH/src/github.com/stellar/go
. - Enter the source dir:
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/stellar/go
, and download external dependencies:dep ensure -v
. You should see the downloaded third party dependencies in$GOPATH/pkg
. - Compile the Horizon binary:
cd $GOPATH; go install github.com/stellar/go/services/horizon
. You should see the resultinghorizon
executable in$GOPATH/bin
. - Add Go binaries to your PATH in your
bashrc
or equivalent, for easy access:export PATH=${GOPATH//://bin:}/bin:$PATH
Open a new terminal. Confirm everything worked by running horizon --help
successfully. You should see an informative message listing the command line options supported by Horizon.
Horizon uses a Postgres database backend to store test fixtures and record information ingested from an associated Stellar Core. To set this up:
- Install PostgreSQL.
- Run
createdb horizon_dev
to initialise an empty database for Horizon's use. - Run
horizon db init --db-url postgres://localhost/horizon_dev
to install Horizon's database schema.
- Depending on your installation's defaults, you may need to configure a Postgres DB user with appropriate permissions for Horizon to access the database you created. Refer to the Postgres documentation for details. Note: Remember to restart the Postgres server after making any changes to
pg_hba.conf
(the Postgres configuration file), or your changes won't take effect! - Make sure you pass the appropriate database name and user (and port, if using something non-standard) to Horizon using
--db-url
. One way is to use a Postgres URI with the following form:postgres://USERNAME:PASSWORD@localhost:PORT/DB_NAME
. - If you get the error
connect failed: pq: SSL is not enabled on the server
, add?sslmode=disable
to the end of the Postgres URI to allow connecting without SSL. - If your server is responding strangely, and you've exhausted all other options, reboot the machine. On some systems
service postgresql restart
or equivalent may not fully reset the state of the server.
At this point you should be able to run Horizon's unit tests:
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/stellar/go/services/horizon
bash ../../support/scripts/run_tests
Horizon provides an API to the Stellar network. It does this by ingesting data from an associated stellar-core
instance. Thus, to run a full Horizon instance requires a stellar-core
instance to be configured, up to date with the network state, and accessible to Horizon. Horizon accesses stellar-core
through both an HTTP endpoint and by connecting directly to the stellar-core
Postgres database.
The simplest way to set up Stellar Core is using the Stellar Quickstart Docker Image. This is a Docker container that provides both stellar-core
and horizon
, pre-configured for testing.
- Install Docker.
- Verify your Docker installation works:
docker run hello-world
- Create a local directory that the container can use to record state. This is helpful because it can take a few minutes to sync a new
stellar-core
with enough data for testing, and because it allows you to inspect and modify the configuration if needed. Here, we create a directory calledstellar
to use as the persistent volume:cd $HOME; mkdir stellar
- Download and run the Stellar Quickstart container:
docker run --rm -it -p "8000:8000" -p "11626:11626" -p "11625:11625" -p"8002:5432" -v $HOME/stellar:/opt/stellar --name stellar stellar/quickstart --testnet
In this example we run the container in interactive mode. We map the container's Horizon HTTP port (8000
), the stellar-core
HTTP port (11626
), and the stellar-core
peer node port (11625
) from the container to the corresponding ports on localhost
. Importantly, we map the container's postgresql
port (5432
) to a custom port (8002
) on localhost
, so that it doesn't clash with our local Postgres install.
The -v
option mounts the stellar
directory for use by the container. See the Quickstart Image documentation for a detailed explanation of these options.
- The container is running both a
stellar-core
and ahorizon
instance. Log in to the container and stop Horizon:
docker exec -it stellar /bin/bash
supervisorctl
stop horizon
Stellar Core takes some time to synchronise with the rest of the network. The default configuration will pull roughly a couple of day's worth of ledgers, and may take 15 - 30 minutes to catch up. Logs are stored in the container at /var/log/supervisor
. You can check the progress by monitoring logs with supervisorctl
:
docker exec -it stellar /bin/bash
supervisorctl tail -f stellar-core
You can also check status by looking at the HTTP endpoint, e.g. by visiting http://localhost:11626 in your browser.
You can connect Horizon to stellar-core
at any time, but Horizon will not begin ingesting data until stellar-core
has completed its catch-up process.
Now run your development version of Horizon (which is outside of the container), pointing it at the stellar-core
running inside the container:
horizon --db-url="postgres://localhost/horizon_dev" --stellar-core-db-url="postgres://stellar:postgres@localhost:8002/core" --stellar-core-url="http://localhost:11626" --port 8001 --network-passphrase "Test SDF Network ; September 2015" --ingest
If all is well, you should see ingest logs written to standard out. You can test your Horizon instance with a query like: http://localhost:8001/transactions?limit=10&order=asc. Use the Stellar Laboratory to craft other queries to try out, and read about the available endpoints and see examples in the Horizon API reference.
Congratulations! You can now run the full development cycle to build and test your code.
- Write code + tests
- Run tests
- Compile Horizon:
go install github.com/stellar/go/services/horizon
- Run Horizon (pointing at your running
stellar-core
) - Try Horizon queries
Check out the Stellar Contributing Guide to see how to contribute your work to the Stellar repositories. Once you've got something that works, open a pull request, linking to the issue that you are resolving with your contribution. We'll get back to you as quickly as we can.