Testing zkApps with Lightnet
The most efficient way to deploy and run a lightweight Mina blockchain network for testing purposes is to spin up a lightweight Mina network (Lightnet) in a single Docker container. Lightnet is a resource-efficient solution with fast startup and syncing times.
Lightnet lets you test your zkApp locally on an accurate representation of Mina blockchain before you test with a live network.
Lightnet provides the following benefits:
- Reduces the time from ideation to launch by letting you test your applications and changes against a close-to-real Mina network.
- Starts a single-node network or a multi-node network with diverse types of participants.
- Creates and funds accounts so that you can deploy and interact with your zkApp. The genesis ledger is configured with 1000 pre-funded accounts with a 1550 MINA balance on each account.
- Optionally runs a Mina archive node.
- Provides the Mina accounts manager helper tool so you can automate account retrieval.
- Launches a lightweight Mina explorer in a web browser so you can monitor transactions.
- Simplifies zkApp troubleshooting by providing convenient access to detailed logs.
Use of Lightnet is appropriate for local development and testing only. It is not intended to replicate all aspects of the full network.
Prerequisites
Docker Engine is required for your environment, see Install Docker Engine.
High-Level Workflow for Lightnet
- Write tests for your smart contract and test locally on a simulated local blockchain
- Start Docker Engine. Docker Engine must be running before you can start the Lightnet Docker container.
- Start Lightnet
- Manage the log files of the local network
- Use Lightweight Mina Explorer to visualize the local network state
- Develop, iterate, and troubleshoot
- Stop the local network
The best way to experience Lightnet is by using it from the zkApp CLI.
Start a local network
Most of your zkApp testing can be done on a single node network.
Start a single node network
To start a single node network with default behavior:
zk lightnet start
This command performs the following operations that successfully serve the majority of testing requirements:
- Pulls the latest Docker image for your environment from the Docker Hub repository
- Prepares the file system
- Forms the network with a single node
- Configures the network to be fast
- Disables the blockchain SNARK proofs
- Uses the
o1js-main
branch of the Mina repository - Starts the Mina archive process and the Archive-Node-API application.
- Waits for the network to reach a synchronized state
- Sets the Mina process logging level to trace
Start a local network with other settings
To see the options to start a local blockchain network with non-default settings:
zk lightnet start --help
You can configure different network properties. For example, to start a multi-node local blockchain network with slower, close-to-real-world properties:
zk lightnet start --mode multi-node --type real
Keep current versions
New Docker images are built and published to the Docker Hub every night. You might not always want to get the latest product versions. For example, when your zkApp relies on well-defined APIs and you want to continue developing in your current environment.
To keep your current working versions of o1js and Mina:
zk lightnet start --no-pull
Restart for a clean slate
To reinstantiate Lightnet so you can redeploy and retest:
zk lightnet stop
zk lightnet start
Stop the local network
To stop the local network, remove the Docker container, and clean up the environment:
zk lightnet stop
When Lightnet is stopped, the log files for Docker container services are saved to the host file system at ${HOME}/.cache/zkapp-cli/lightnet/logs/
.
To disable saving of log files:
zk lightnet stop --no-save-logs
Troubleshoot transactions
Tools are provided for troubleshooting.
Lightweight Mina Explorer
To monitor transactions, launch the lightweight Mina Explorer:
zk lightnet explorer
By default, this command downloads (if needed) and launches the latest version of lightweight Mina explorer.
To list versions, their published dates, and show the version in use:
zk lightnet explorer --list
To use a specific version of the lightweight Mina Explorer:
zk lightnet explorer use <version>
Log files
Log files for various processes are saved inside the Docker container as:
/root/logs/*.log
/root/.mina-network/mina-local-network-2-1-1/nodes/**/logs/*.log
To save the log files that are produced by Docker container processes to the host machine file system:
zk lightnet logs save
To debug your zkApp, you can monitor the Docker container process logs in real time.
On a different terminal window, to stream the process logs:
zk lightnet logs follow
Select the Docker container process to follow. Press Ctrl+C to stop streaming.
Lightnet status
To get the network status:
zk lightnet status
The network status is returned, including HTTP endpoints. For example, the default single node network status returns these endpoints:
- Mina Daemon GraphQL endpoint │ http://localhost:8080/graphql
- Accounts Manager endpoint │ http://localhost:8181
- Archive-Node-API endpoint │ http://localhost:8282
- PostgreSQL connection string │ postgresql://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/archive
Use these URLs when you configure your zkApp.
Lightnet status includes blockchain network properties, the Docker container state, and a code snippet of a zkApp using o1js API.
Blockchain network properties include:
- Sync status
- Commit ID
- Chain ID
- Consensus mechanism
- Consensus configuration
- Transaction finality ("k" blocks)
- Slot duration (new block every ~)
- Slots per Epoch
- SNARK work fee
- Known accounts
- Uptime
Accounts
Each Docker image is packaged with a genesis ledger that is configured with more than 1000 prefunded accounts. Each account has a balance of 1550 MINA.
The Mina Accounts-Manager helper tool provides a random public/private key pair that operates with accounts already configured in the genesis ledger. On Lightnet, the Mina Accounts-Manager is deployed to http://localhost:8181/. This endpoint is the same for all users and is available when Lightnet is up and running.
Use HTTP endpoints to acquire, release, list, lock, and unlock accounts:
.:: Mina Accounts-Manager ::.
-----------------------------
Application initialized and is running at: http://localhost:8181
Available endpoints:
HTTP GET:
http://localhost:8181/acquire-account
Supported Query params:
isRegularAccount=<boolean>, default: true
Useful if you need to get non-zkApp account.
unlockAccount=<boolean>, default: false
Useful if you need to get unlocked account.
Returns JSON account key-pair:
{ pk:"", sk:"" }
HTTP PUT:
http://localhost:8181/release-account
Accepts JSON account key-pair as request payload:
{ pk:"", sk:"" }
Returns JSON status message
HTTP GET:
http://localhost:8181/list-acquired-accounts
Returns JSON list of acquired accounts key-pairs:
[ { pk:"", sk:"" }, ... ]
HTTP PUT:
http://localhost:8181/lock-account
Accepts JSON account key-pair as request payload:
{ pk:"", sk:"" }
Returns JSON status message
HTTP PUT:
http://localhost:8181/unlock-account
Accepts JSON account key-pair as request payload:
{ pk:"", sk:"" }
Returns JSON status message
Operating with:
Mina Genesis ledger: /root/.mina-network/mina-local-network-2-1-1/daemon.json
Mina GraphQL endpoint: http://localhost:8080/graphql
Advanced The genesis ledger configuration file is daemon.json
. You can manually access the Docker container file system to view and download the file.
zkApp Account Interactions
The acquireKeyPair()
, releaseKeyPair()
, and listAcquiredKeyPairs()
methods in the Lightnet
o1js API namespace handle zkApp access to account information, including public keys, private keys, and secret keys.
For details, see the doc comments in the code.
For a real-world example of using Lightnet accounts, see run_live.ts example file used in Tutorial 1: Hello World.