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Create a privacy-enabled network

Configuring a network that supports private transactions requires starting a Tessera node for each Hyperledger Besu node. Besu command line options associate the Besu node with the Tessera node.

This tutorial assumes you have completed setting up an IBFT 2.0 network to the point where you have created the genesis file and copied the private keys. If not, complete steps 1 to 5 of the Create an IBFT 2.0 tutorial before continuing.

info

To support privacy, ensure your genesis file includes at least the byzantium milestone.

This tutorial configures a private network using IBFT 2.0 for educational purposes only. IBFT 2.0 requires 4 validators to be Byzantine fault tolerant.

In this tutorial we start Tessera nodes for the four Besu nodes and associate each Besu node with a Tessera node.

Prerequisites

1. Create Tessera directories

Inside each Node-* directory, create a Tessera directory:

IBFT-Network/
├── Node-1
│   ├── data
│ ├── Tessera
├── Node-2
│   ├── data
│ ├── Tessera
├── Node-3
│   ├── data
│ ├── Tessera
└── Node-4
├── data
├── Tessera

2. Generate Tessera keys

This example creates an unlocked private key, meaning you do not need a password to decrypt the private key file.

In each Tessera directory, generate a public/private key pair for the Tessera node:

tessera -keygen -filename nodeKey

At the prompt, press Enter to create an unlocked key.

Tessera generates the public/private key pair and saves the keys in the nodeKey.pub and nodeKey.key files.

3. Create Tessera configuration files

In the Tessera directory for each node, create a file called tessera.conf, with the following configuration:

info

In production environments, only specify tls as OFF if another transport security mechanism, such as WireGuard, is in place.

{
"mode": "orion",
"useWhiteList": false,
"jdbc": {
"username": "sa",
"password": "",
"url": "jdbc:h2:./target/h2/tessera1",
"autoCreateTables": true
},
"serverConfigs": [
{
"app": "ThirdParty",
"serverAddress": "http://localhost:9101",
"communicationType": "REST"
},
{
"app": "Q2T",
"serverAddress": "http://localhost:9102",
"communicationType": "REST"
},
{
"app": "P2P",
"serverAddress": "http://localhost:9103",
"sslConfig": {
"tls": "OFF"
},
"communicationType": "REST"
}
],
"peer": [
{
"url": "http://localhost:9203"
},
{
"url": "http://localhost:9303"
},
{
"url": "http://localhost:9403"
}
],
"keys": {
"passwords": [],
"keyData": [
{
"privateKeyPath": "nodeKey.key",
"publicKeyPath": "nodeKey.pub"
}
]
},
"alwaysSendTo": []
}

In the configuration file, specify:

  • Different port numbers for the various servers in the serverConfigs section.
  • The address of the Tessera nodes to discover, in the peer section.
  • The location of the public/private key pair.

4. Start the Tessera nodes

In each Tessera directory, start Tessera specifying the configuration file created in the previous step:

tessera -configfile tessera.conf
info

After starting the first Tessera node and before starting the other nodes, the log message failed to connect to node displays. This is normal behavior. Until you start the other peer nodes, your node is not connected and displays this warning. You can continue to start the other nodes.

5. Start Besu Node-1

In the Node-1 directory, start Besu Node-1:

besu --data-path=data --genesis-file=../genesis.json --rpc-http-enabled --rpc-http-api=ETH,NET,IBFT,EEA,PRIV --host-allowlist="*" --rpc-http-cors-origins="all" --privacy-enabled --privacy-url=http://127.0.0.1:9102 --privacy-public-key-file=Tessera/nodeKey.pub --min-gas-price=0

The command line specifies privacy options:

note

Use the --privacy-marker-transaction-signing-key-file command line option to sign privacy marker transactions using a supplied key. The command line option is mandatory in privacy-enabled paid gas networks.

When the node starts, the enode URL displays. Copy the enode URL to specify Node-1 as the bootnode in the following steps.

Node 1 Enode URL

6. Start Besu Node-2

In the Node-2 directory, start Besu Node-2 specifying the Node-1 enode URL copied when starting Node-1 as the bootnode:

besu --data-path=data --genesis-file=../genesis.json --bootnodes=<Node-1 Enode URL> --p2p-port=30304 --rpc-http-enabled --rpc-http-api=ETH,NET,IBFT,EEA,PRIV --host-allowlist="*" --rpc-http-cors-origins="all" --rpc-http-port=8546 --privacy-enabled --privacy-url=http://127.0.0.1:9202 --privacy-public-key-file=Tessera/nodeKey.pub --min-gas-price=0

The command line specifies the same options as for Node-1 with different ports and Tessera node URL. The --bootnodes option specifies the enode URL of Node-1.

note

When running Besu from the Docker image, expose ports.

7. Start Besu Node-3

In the Node-3 directory, start Besu Node-3 specifying the Node-1 enode URL copied when starting Node-1 as the bootnode:

besu --data-path=data --genesis-file=../genesis.json --bootnodes=<Node-1 Enode URL> --p2p-port=30305 --rpc-http-enabled --rpc-http-api=ETH,NET,IBFT,EEA,PRIV --host-allowlist="*" --rpc-http-cors-origins="all" --rpc-http-port=8547 --privacy-enabled --privacy-url=http://127.0.0.1:9302 --privacy-public-key-file=Tessera/nodeKey.pub --min-gas-price=0

The command line specifies the same options as for Node-1 with different ports and Tessera node URL. The --bootnodes option specifies the enode URL of Node-1.

8. Start Besu Node-4

In the Node-4 directory, start Besu Node-4 specifying the Node-1 enode URL copied when starting Node-1 as the bootnode:

besu --data-path=data --genesis-file=../genesis.json --bootnodes=<Node-1 Enode URL> --p2p-port=30306 --rpc-http-enabled --rpc-http-api=ETH,NET,IBFT,EEA,PRIV --host-allowlist="*" --rpc-http-cors-origins="all" --rpc-http-port=8548 --privacy-enabled --privacy-url=http://127.0.0.1:9402 --privacy-public-key-file=Tessera/nodeKey.pub --min-gas-price=0

The command line specifies the same options as for Node-1 with different ports and Tessera node URL. The --bootnodes option specifies the enode URL of Node-1.