10 KiB
Bisq developer guide
This guide describes the development setup for developers who want to contribute to Bisq.
Getting started
Please follow the instructions in the README file for running Bisq from source code. Be sure to have the right JDK version installed. Best to use IntelliJ IDEA (there is a free community edition). Please read also the CONTRIBUTING file.
Basic setup
For development you usually want to use regtest mode with localhost (instead using the Tor network).
You want to run typically a setup with those components:
- Bitcoin Core or bitcoind in regtest mode
- A local Bisq seed node
- A local Bisq arbitrator
- 2 Bisq trading peers (BTC buyer and BTC seller for executing a trade)
Bitcoin Core (or bitcoind) in regtest mode
The regtest mode operates a local Bitcoin network on your computer. This environment is ideally suited for testing because you are able to create blocks on demand (no need to wait for confirmations) and you don't need to download the blockchain. By creating blocks you act like a miner and you can generate new Bitcoin. You can find more information about the Bitcoin regtest mode here.
Navigate to the bitcoin.conf file and set regtest=1
, or add -regtest
as a program argument when starting Bitcoin Core.
At first startup you need to create 101 blocks using the command generate 101
from the terminal inside Bitcoin Core. 101 blocks are required because of the coin maturity (100 blocks) so you need one more to have at least 50 BTC available for spending.
Later you can create a new blocks with generate 1
.
Optional for DAO mode
If you want to run Bisq with DAO mode enabled you need to configure the bitcoin.conf
file inside the Bitcoin Core data directory as well adding the blocknotify
file.
bitcoin.conf:
regtest=1
# The default rpcPort for regtest from Bitcoin Core 0.16 and higher is: 18443
# The default rpcPort for testnet is: 18332
# For mainnet: 8332
rpcport=18443
server=1
txindex=1
rpcuser=YOUR_USER_NAME
rpcpassword=YOUR_PW
blocknotify=bash [PATH TO DATA DIR]/blocknotify %s
Please note that txindex
triggers a resync of the entire blockchain (be aware if you set that on mainnet as that it will take a while). Also take care if you use that setting for mainnet. Extra settings for more security are recommended in mainnet mode.
The blocknotify
file need to be added to the Bitcoin Core data directory as well:
#!/bin/bash
echo $1 | nc -w 1 127.0.0.1 5120
echo $1 | nc -w 1 127.0.0.1 5121
echo $1 | nc -w 1 127.0.0.1 5122
echo $1 | nc -w 1 127.0.0.1 5123
It defines the ports where a new block event gets forwarded. Bisq will listen on that port and each Bisq node need to use a different port. You can add or remove ports from the list inside the file if needed.
Local Bisq P2P network
For the local P2P network we prefer to use localhost
, not the Tor network as it is much faster. But if needed you can combine any of the following combinations of Bitcoin network mode and P2P network mode:
- localhost + regtest
- localhost + testnet
- localhost + mainnet
- Tor + regtest
- Tor + testnet
- Tor + mainnet
Program arguments
There are several program arguments required to run in development mode.
Here is an overview:
- --baseCurrencyNetwork: The BTC network to use. Possible values are: BTC_REGTEST, BTC_TESTNET, BTC_MAINNET (default)
- --useLocalhostForP2P: Uses localhost instead of Tor for Bisq P2P network
- --nodePort: Port number for localhost mode. For seed nodes there is a convention with the last digit is marking the network type and there is a list of hard coded seed nodes addresses (see: DefaultSeedNodeAddresses.java). For regtest: 2002 and 3002. For testnet 2001, 3001 and 4001 and for mainnet: 2000, 3000 and 4000. For normal nodes the port can be chosen freely.
- --myAddress: Needed for seed nodes only (e.g.:
localhost:3002
) - --useDevPrivilegeKeys: Important for dev testing to allow the developer key for arbitration registration
- --appName: Custom application name which is used for the data directory. It is important to separate your nodes to not interfere... If not set is uses the default
Bisq
directory.
Program arguments for DAO mode
--daoActivated: If set to true it enables the DAO mode. For testnet and regtest it is enabled by default.
--genesisBlockHeight: If set it overrides the hard coded block height of the genesis tx. Set it to your local genesis tx height.
--genesisTxId: If set it overrides the hard coded genesis tx ID. Set it to your local genesis tx ID.
--fullDaoNode: If true it enables full DAO node mode (in contrast to default lite node mode). At least one seed node must be running as a full DAO node to support other lite nodes.
--rpcUser: RPC user as defined in bitcoin.conf
--rpcPassword: RPC pw as defined in bitcoin.conf
--rpcPort: RPC port. For regtest 18443
--rpcBlockNotificationPort: One of the ports defined in the blocknotify
file inside the Bitcoin data directory (see: DAO setup for Bitcoin Core).
Bisq seednode
For localhost/regtest mode run the SeedNodeMain.java class or the seednode.jar (inside the seednode/build/libs folder) with following program arguments:
--baseCurrencyNetwork=BTC_REGTEST --useLocalhostForP2P=true --useDevPrivilegeKeys=true --nodePort=2002 --myAddress=localhost:2002 --appName=bisq-BTC_REGTEST_Seed_2002
Bisq arbitrator instance
For localhost/regtest mode run the BisqAppMain.java class or the desktop.jar (inside the desktop/build/libs folder) with following program arguments:
--baseCurrencyNetwork=BTC_REGTEST --useLocalhostForP2P=true --useDevPrivilegeKeys=true --nodePort=4444 --appName=bisq-BTC_REGTEST_arbitrator
Once it has started up go to Account and click cmd +r
. This will open a new tab for Arbitration registration
. Select the tab and you will see a popup with a pre-filled private key. That is the developer private key (which is only valid if useDevPrivilegeKeys is set) which allows you to register a new arbitrator. Follow the next screen and complete registration.
Note: You need only register once but if you have shut down all nodes (including seed node) you need to start up the arbitrator again after you start the seed node so the arbitrator re-publishes his data to the P2P network. After it has started up you can close it again. You cannot trade without having an arbitrator available.
Bisq trade instances
For localhost/regtest mode run the BisqAppMain.java class or the desktop.jar (inside the desktop/build/libs folder) with following program arguments:
--baseCurrencyNetwork=BTC_REGTEST --useLocalhostForP2P=true --useDevPrivilegeKeys=true --nodePort=5555 --appName=bisq-BTC_REGTEST_Alice
and
--baseCurrencyNetwork=BTC_REGTEST --useLocalhostForP2P=true --useDevPrivilegeKeys=true --nodePort=6666 --appName=bisq-BTC_REGTEST_Bob
At this point you can now perform trades between Alice and Bob using your local regtest environment and test from both the buyer's and seller's perspective. You can also open disputes with cmd+o
and see how the arbitration system works (run the arbitrator in that case as well).
Remember to generate a new block in the Bitcoin Core console after taking an offer using the command generate 1
to trigger a block confirmation.
DAO mode
If you want to run any instance in DAO mode use those program arguments:
Full node mode:
--daoActivated=true --genesisBlockHeight=111 --genesisTxId=30af0050040befd8af25068cc697e418e09c2d8ebd8d411d2240591b9ec203cf --baseCurrencyNetwork=BTC_REGTEST --useDevPrivilegeKeys=true --useLocalhostForP2P=true --nodePort=7777 --appName=bisq-BTC_REGTEST_Alice_dao --fullDaoNode=true --rpcUser=YOUR_USER_NAME --rpcPassword=YOUR_PW --rpcPort=18443 --rpcBlockNotificationPort=5120
Lite node mode:
--daoActivated=true --genesisBlockHeight=111 --genesisTxId=30af0050040befd8af25068cc697e418e09c2d8ebd8d411d2240591b9ec203cf --baseCurrencyNetwork=BTC_REGTEST --useDevPrivilegeKeys=true --useLocalhostForP2P=true --nodePort=8888 --appName=bisq-BTC_REGTEST_Bob_dao
Don't forget to use different rpcBlockNotificationPorts for different full node instances, otherwise only one node will receive the new block event forwarded to that port.
DAO genesis transaction
Use the predefined setup
The creation of the genesis tx is a bit cumbersome. To make it easier to get started you can use the Bisq_DAO_regtest_setup.zip file.
Extract the file and use those data directories for the Bitcoin Core as well as the Alice and Bob instances which are configured to have the genesis tx as defined in the above program arguments (30af0050040befd8af25068cc697e418e09c2d8ebd8d411d2240591b9ec203cf
at height 111
).
You need to adjust the path to the blocknotify
file inside of bitcoin.conf
before starting Bitcoin Core.
Setup a custom DAO genesis transaction
To create your own genesis transaction follow those steps:
- Send 2.50010000 BTC from Bitcoin Core to another address inside Bitcoin Core (label it with
Genesis funding address
). - Go to the send screen and open the coin control feature. Select the labeled transaction output of the address labeled with
Genesis funding address
. Use that as the only input source for the genesis tx. - Start Alice in full or lite node mode and go to the DAO/Wallet/Receive screen. Copy the BSQ address and use it for one of the receivers of the genesis tx. When pasting into Bitcoin Core remove the
B
prefix - that prefix is marking a BSQ address but technically it is a BTC address. - Do the same with Bob.
- You send in sum exactly 2.5 BTC to both Alice and Bob. You can choose how to distribute it (e.g. 1 BTC to Alice 1.5 BTC to Bob).
- Set the miner fee so that it is exactly the remaining 0.00010000 BTC. That might be the tricky part as miner fee selection is not very convenient in Bitcoin Core. In worst case if you cannot get the right miner fee you can add the difference to one of the receivers (e.g. send 1.0000234 BTC instead of 1 BTC).
Note: It is important that there is exactly 2.5 BTC spent entirely as described, otherwise the genesis tx is invalid.
Open questions?
If there are any open questions or instructions are not clear, please add a PR for improving that file and/or join us on Slack and get in touch.