Terra is a public, open-source blockchain protocol that provides fundamental infrastructure for a decentralized economy and enables open participation in the creation of new financial primitives to power the innovation of money.
Classic is the reference implementation of the Terra protocol, written in Golang. Terra Core is built atop Cosmos SDK and uses Tendermint BFT consensus. If you intend to work on Terra Core source, it is recommended that you familiarize yourself with the concepts in those projects.
The easiest way to get started is by downloading a pre-built binary for your operating system. You can find the latest binaries on the releases page.
Step 1. Install Golang
Go v1.20 is required for Terra Core.
If you haven't already, install Golang by following the official docs. Make sure that your GOPATH
and GOBIN
environment variables are properly set up.
Step 2: Get Terra Core source code
Use git
to retrieve Terra Core from the official repo and checkout the main
branch. This branch contains the latest stable release, which will install the terrad
binary.
git clone https://github.com/classic-terra/core/
cd core
git checkout main
Step 3: Build Terra core
Run the following command to install the executable terrad
to your GOPATH
and build Terra Core. terrad
is the node daemon and CLI for interacting with a Terra node.
# COSMOS_BUILD_OPTIONS=rocksdb make install
make install
Step 4: Verify your installation
Verify that you've installed terrad successfully by running the following command:
terrad version --long
If terrad is installed correctly, the following information is returned:
name: terra
server_name: terrad
version: <version>
commit: <git commit hash>
..
...
....
NOTE: terracli
has been deprecated and all of its functionalities have been merged into terrad
.
terrad
is the all-in-one command for operating and interacting with a running Terra node. For comprehensive coverage on each of the available functions, see the terrad reference information. To view various subcommands and their expected arguments, use the $ terrad --help
command:
$ terrad --help Stargate Terra App Usage: terrad [command] Available Commands: add-genesis-account Add a genesis account to genesis.json collect-gentxs Collect genesis txs and output a genesis.json file debug Tool for helping with debugging your application export Export state to JSON gentx Generate a genesis tx carrying a self delegation help Help about any command init Initialize private validator, p2p, genesis, and application configuration files keys Manage your application's keys migrate Migrate genesis to a specified target version query Querying subcommands rosetta spin up a rosetta server start Run the full node status Query remote node for status tendermint Tendermint subcommands testnet Initialize files for a terrad testnet tx Transactions subcommands unsafe-reset-all Resets the blockchain database, removes address book files, and resets data/priv_validator_state.json to the genesis state validate-genesis validates the genesis file at the default location or at the location passed as an arg version Print the application binary version information Flags: -h, --help help for terrad --home string directory for config and data (default "/Users/$HOME/.terra") --log_format string The logging format (json|plain) (default "plain") --log_level string The logging level (trace|debug|info|warn|error|fatal|panic) (default "info") --trace print out full stack trace on errors Use "terrad [command] --help" for more information about a command.
Once you have terrad
installed, you will need to set up your node to be part of the network.
The following requirements are recommended for running a columbus-5
mainnet node:
- 4 or more CPU cores
- At least 2TB of disk storage
- At least 100mbps network bandwidth
- An Linux distribution
For configuration and migration instructions for setting up a Columbus-5 mainnet node, visit The mainnet repo.
Terra Node Quick Start
terrad init nodename
wget -O ~/.terra/config/genesis.json https://cloudflare-ipfs.com/ipfs/QmZAMcdu85Qr8saFuNpL9VaxVqqLGWNAs72RVFhchL9jWs
curl https://network.terra.dev/addrbook.json > ~/.terrad/config/addrbook.json
terrad start
Several testnets might exist simultaneously. Ensure that your version of terrad
is compatible with the network you want to join.
To set up a node on the latest testnet, visit the testnet repo.
The easiest way to set up a local testing environment is to run LocalTerra, which automatically orchestrates a complete testing environment suited for development with zero configuration.
You can also run a local testnet using a single node. On a local testnet, you will be the sole validator signing blocks.
Step 1. Create network and account
First, initialize your genesis file to bootstrap your network. Create a name for your local testnet and provide a moniker to refer to your node:
terrad init --chain-id=<testnet_name> <node_moniker>
Next, create a Terra account by running the following command:
terrad keys add <account_name>
Step 2. Add account to genesis
Next, add your account to genesis and set an initial balance to start. Run the following commands to add your account and set the initial balance:
terrad add-genesis-account $(terrad keys show <account_name> -a) 100000000uluna,1000usd
terrad gentx <account_name> 10000000uluna --chain-id=<testnet_name>
terrad collect-gentxs
Step 3. Run Terra daemon
Now you can start your private Terra network:
terrad start
Your terrad
node will be running a node on tcp://localhost:26656
, listening for incoming transactions and signing blocks.
Congratulations, you've successfully set up your local Terra network!
NOTE: This guide only covers general settings for a production-level full node. You can find further details on considerations for operating a validator node by visiting the Terra validator guide.
This guide has been tested against Linux distributions only. To ensure you successfully set up your production environment, consider setting it up on an Linux system.
terrad
can't open more than 1024 files (the default maximum) concurrently.
You can increase this limit by modifying /etc/security/limits.conf
and raising the nofile
capability.
* soft nofile 65535
* hard nofile 65535
It is recommended that you run terrad
as a normal user. Super-user accounts are only recommended during setup to create and modify files.
terrad
uses several TCP ports for different purposes.
-
26656
: The default port for the P2P protocol. Use this port to communicate with other nodes. While this port must be open to join a network, it does not have to be open to the public. Validator nodes should configurepersistent_peers
and close this port to the public. -
26657
: The default port for the RPC protocol. This port is used for querying / sending transactions and must be open to serve queries fromterrad
. DO NOT open this port to the public unless you are planning to run a public node. -
1317
: The default port for Lite Client Daemon (LCD), which can be enabled in~/.terra/config/app.toml
. The LCD provides an HTTP RESTful API layer to allow applications and services to interact with yourterrad
instance through RPC. Check the Terra REST API for usage examples. Don't open this port unless you need to use the LCD. -
26660
: The default port for interacting with the Prometheus database. You can use Promethues to monitor an environment. This port is closed by default.
Important:
Keep terrad
running at all times. The simplest solution is to register terrad
as a systemd
service so that it automatically starts after system reboots and other events.
First, create a service definition file in /etc/systemd/system
.
Sample file: /etc/systemd/system/terrad.service
[Unit]
Description=Terra Daemon
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
User=terra
ExecStart=/data/terra/go/bin/terrad start
Restart=on-abort
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
[Service]
LimitNOFILE=65535
Modify the Service
section from the given sample above to suit your settings.
Note that even if you raised the number of open files for a process, you still need to include LimitNOFILE
.
After creating a service definition file, you should execute systemctl daemon-reload
.
Use systemctl
to control (start, stop, restart)
# Start
systemctl start terrad
# Stop
systemctl stop terrad
# Restart
systemctl restart terrad
# Entire log
journalctl -t terrad
# Entire log reversed
journalctl -t terrad -r
# Latest and continuous
journalctl -t terrad -f
-
Install Docker
-
Create a new folder on your local machine and copy docker-compose\docker-compose.yml
-
Review the docker-compose.yml contents
-
Bring up your stack by running
docker compose up -d
-
Add your wallet
docker compose exec node sh /keys-add.sh
-
Copy your terra wallet address and go to the terra faucet here -> http://45.79.139.229:3000/ Put your address in and give yourself luna coins.
-
Start the validator
docker compose exec node sh /create-validator.sh
docker compose up -d
docker compose down
docker compose logs -f
docker compose exec node terrad status
docker compose down
docker compose pull
docker compose up -d
make build-all -f contrib/terra-operator/Makefile
-
Developer Tools
- Terra developer documentation(https://docs.terra.money)
- TerraWiki.org - The Terra community wiki.
- SDKs
- Terra.js for JavaScript
- terra-sdk-python for Python
- Faucet can be used to get tokens for testnets
- LocalTerra can be used to set up a private local testnet with configurable world state
-
Developer Forums
-
Block Explorers
- Terra Finder - Terra's basic block explorer.
- Terrascope - A community-run block explorer with extra features.
- Stake ID - A block explorer made by Staking Fund
- Hubble - by Figment
-
Wallets
-
Terra Station - The official Terra wallet.
-
Terra Station Mobile
-
-
Research
- Agora - Research forum
- White Paper
If you are interested in contributing to Terra Core source, please review our code of conduct.
This software is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license. Read more about it here.
© 2022 Terraform Labs, PTE LTD