Tier 1 | Tier 2 | Tier 3 | Production | License |
The Mina Indexer is a redesigned version of the software collectively called the "Mina archive node."
Note: As the project is in active development, be aware that the public APIs and functionalities are subject to change.
Working with the Mina Archive Node can be complex and time-consuming. It requires the exact configuration of multiple components — a Mina Node, an Archive Node, and a Postgres database — and an in-depth knowledge of SQL and the Mina blockchain.
Additionally, even with a proper setup, the Archive Node system is prone to missing blocks, creating gaps in the data. These gaps require manual intervention for resolution, which adds layers of complexity to the system's management.
A major problem with the Archive Node is its reliance on a pg_dump
from a currently active node for initial setup. This approach
centralizes data, necessitating trust from the operator's side.
The Mina Indexer addresses this by simplifying the initial configuration by using precomputed blocks as the source of truth, bypassing the need for external database dumps.
We designed the Mina Indexer to be a comprehensive replacement for the Mina Archive Node, providing an easier-to-use platform with native support for the Rosetta API. We aim to streamline blockchain interaction for developers within the Mina ecosystem by providing developers and operators with a better toolset optimized for the Mina ecosystem.
- Install Nix (with Flakes) using The Determinate Nix Installer.
- Install and configure Direnv.
Invoking mina-indexer database create
on very large blocks directories will
ingest the blocks at very high speed. This requires setting ulimit -n
to a
larger-than-default value (for many Linux distros). 1024 is not sufficient. See
your distro's documentation on how to set ulimit -n
(max open files) to 4096
or more.
Normal operation of the 'mina-indexer' does not require this change.
Run just check
to verify that the project compiles. This will compile the
mina-indexer
binary in debug mode.
The default storage location is on /mnt
because the testing code may download
large volumes of test data, and placing on /mnt
gives an opportunity to use
different storage volumes from one's build directory.
Set the VOLUMES_DIR
environment variable if you want to replace /mnt
with
another path.
Execute unit tests to validate code functionality with:
just test-unit
To invoke the regression test suite, the directory /mnt/mina-indexer-dev
must
exist.
To quickly perform regression tests, which check for new bugs in existing features after updates, use:
just dev
To perform the test battery that the (tier-1) CI runs, use:
just tier1
To invoke a more comprehensive regression test suite, the directory
/mnt/mina-indexer-test
must exist.
Invoke:
just tier2
Or, for even more testing:
just tier3
To deploy a mina-indexer locally, the directory /mnt/mina-indexer-prod
must exist.
There are two options to start an instance:
just deploy-local-prod
uses the release binaryjust deploy-local-prod-dev
uses the debug binary
Note: This requires the Docker Engine to be installed.
Building the OCI (Docker) image from Nix must happen from an x86-64-linux
machine.
Issue the following command to build the image and load it into Docker:
just build-image
Copyright 2022-2024 Granola Systems Inc.
This software is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
This project uses C4(Collective Code Construction Contract) process for contributions. Additionally, maintainers and select members of Granola-Team have direct access and are permitted to push directly to 'main'.