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Dear contributors and users,
# Cumulus ☁️

We would like to inform you that we have recently made significant changes to our repository structure. In order to streamline our development process and foster better contributions, we have merged three separate repositories Cumulus, Substrate and Polkadot into a single new repository: [the Polkadot SDK](https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot-sdk). Go ahead and make sure to support us by giving a star ⭐️ to the new repo.
[![Doc](https://img.shields.io/badge/cumulus%20docs-master-brightgreen)](https://paritytech.github.io/cumulus/)

By consolidating our codebase, we aim to enhance collaboration and provide a more efficient platform for future development.
This repository contains both the Cumulus SDK and also specific chains implemented
on top of this SDK.

If you currently have an open pull request in any of the merged repositories, we kindly request that you resubmit your PR in the new repository. This will ensure that your contributions are considered within the updated context and enable us to review and merge them more effectively.
If you only want to run a **Polkadot Parachain Node**, check out our [container section](./docs/container.md).

We appreciate your understanding and ongoing support throughout this transition. Should you have any questions or require further assistance, please don't hesitate to [reach out to us](https://forum.polkadot.network/t/psa-parity-is-currently-working-on-merging-the-polkadot-stack-repositories-into-one-single-repository/2883).
## Cumulus SDK

Best Regards,
A set of tools for writing [Substrate](https://substrate.io/)-based
[Polkadot](https://wiki.polkadot.network/en/)
[parachains](https://wiki.polkadot.network/docs/en/learn-parachains). Refer to the included
[overview](docs/overview.md) for architectural details, and the
[Connect to a relay chain how-to guide](https://docs.substrate.io/reference/how-to-guides/parachains/connect-to-a-relay-chain/) for a
guided walk-through of using these tools.

Parity Technologies
It's easy to write blockchains using Substrate, and the overhead of writing parachains'
distribution, p2p, database, and synchronization layers should be just as low. This project aims to
make it easy to write parachains for Polkadot by leveraging the power of Substrate.

Cumulus clouds are shaped sort of like dots; together they form a system that is intricate,
beautiful and functional.

### Consensus

[`parachain-consensus`](https://github.com/paritytech/cumulus/blob/master/client/consensus/common/src/parachain_consensus.rs) is a
[consensus engine](https://docs.substrate.io/v3/advanced/consensus) for Substrate
that follows a Polkadot
[relay chain](https://wiki.polkadot.network/docs/en/learn-architecture#relay-chain). This will run
a Polkadot node internally, and dictate to the client and synchronization algorithms which chain
to follow,
[finalize](https://wiki.polkadot.network/docs/en/learn-consensus#probabilistic-vs-provable-finality),
and treat as best.

### Collator

A Polkadot [collator](https://wiki.polkadot.network/docs/en/learn-collator) for the parachain is
implemented by the `polkadot-parachain` binary (previously called `polkadot-collator`).

You may run `polkadot-parachain` locally after building it or using one of the container option described [here](./docs/container.md).

### Relay Chain Interaction
To operate a parachain node, a connection to the corresponding relay chain is necessary. This can be
achieved in one of three ways:
1. Run a full relay chain node within the parachain node (default)
2. Connect to an external relay chain node via WebSocket RPC
3. Run a light client for the relay chain

#### In-process Relay Chain Node
If an external relay chain node is not specified (default behavior), then a full relay chain node is
spawned within the same process.

This node has all of the typical components of a regular Polkadot node and will have to fully sync
with the relay chain to work.

##### Example command
```bash
polkadot-parachain \
--chain parachain-chainspec.json \
--tmp \
-- \
--chain relaychain-chainspec.json
```

#### External Relay Chain Node
An external relay chain node is connected via WebsSocket RPC by using the `--relay-chain-rpc-urls`
command line argument. This option accepts one or more space-separated WebSocket URLs to a full relay
chain node. By default, only the first URL will be used, with the rest as a backup in case the
connection to the first node is lost.

Parachain nodes using this feature won't have to fully sync with the relay chain to work, so in general
they will use fewer system resources.

**Note:** At this time, any parachain nodes using this feature will still spawn a significantly cut-down
relay chain node in-process. Even though they lack the majority of normal Polkadot subsystems, they
will still need to connect directly to the relay chain network.
##### Example command
```bash
polkadot-parachain \
--chain parachain-chainspec.json \
--tmp \
--relay-chain-rpc-urls \
"ws://relaychain-rpc-endpoint:9944" \
"ws://relaychain-rpc-endpoint-backup:9944" \
-- \
--chain relaychain-chainspec.json
```

#### Relay Chain Light Client
An internal relay chain light client provides a fast and lightweight approach for connecting to the relay chain network.
It provides relay chain notifications and facilitates runtime calls.

To specify which chain the light client should connect to, users need to supply a relay chain chain-spec as part of the relay chain arguments.

**Note:** At this time, any parachain nodes using this feature will still spawn a significantly cut-down
relay chain node in-process. Even though they lack the majority of normal Polkadot subsystems, they
will still need to connect directly to the relay chain network.

##### Example command
```bash
polkadot-parachain \
--chain parachain-chainspec.json \
--tmp \
--relay-chain-light-client \
-- \
--chain relaychain-chainspec.json
```

## Installation and Setup
Before building Cumulus SDK based nodes / runtimes prepare your environment by following Substrate
[installation instructions](https://docs.substrate.io/main-docs/install/).

To launch a local network, you can use [zombienet](https://github.com/paritytech/zombienet) for
quick setup and experimentation or follow the [manual setup](#manual-setup).

### Zombienet
We use Zombienet to spin up networks for integration tests and local networks.
Follow [these installation steps](https://github.com/paritytech/zombienet#requirements-by-provider)
to set it up on your machine. A simple network specification with two relay chain nodes and one collator is
located at [zombienet/examples/small_network.toml](zombienet/examples/small_network.toml).


#### Which provider should I use?
Zombienet offers multiple providers to run networks. Choose the one that best fits your needs:
- **Podman:** Choose this if you want to spin up a network quick and easy.
- **Native:** Choose this if you want to develop and deploy your changes. Requires compilation
of the binaries.
- **Kubernetes:** Choose this for advanced use-cases or running on cloud-infrastructure.

#### How to run
To run the example network, use the following commands:

```bash
# Podman provider
zombienet --provider podman spawn ./zombienet/examples/small_network.toml

# Native provider, assumes polkadot and polkadot-parachains binary in $PATH
zombienet --provider native spawn ./zombienet/examples/small_network.toml
```

### Manual Setup
#### Launch the Relay Chain

```bash
# Clone
git clone https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot
cd polkadot

# Compile Polkadot with the real overseer feature
cargo build --release --bin polkadot

# Generate a raw chain spec
./target/release/polkadot build-spec --chain rococo-local --disable-default-bootnode --raw > rococo-local-cfde.json

# Alice
./target/release/polkadot --chain rococo-local-cfde.json --alice --tmp

# Bob (In a separate terminal)
./target/release/polkadot --chain rococo-local-cfde.json --bob --tmp --port 30334
```

#### Launch the Parachain

```bash
# Clone
git clone https://github.com/paritytech/cumulus
cd cumulus

# Compile
cargo build --release --bin polkadot-parachain

# Export genesis state
./target/release/polkadot-parachain export-genesis-state > genesis-state

# Export genesis wasm
./target/release/polkadot-parachain export-genesis-wasm > genesis-wasm

# Collator1
./target/release/polkadot-parachain --collator --alice --force-authoring --tmp --port 40335 --rpc-port 9946 -- --chain ../polkadot/rococo-local-cfde.json --port 30335

# Collator2
./target/release/polkadot-parachain --collator --bob --force-authoring --tmp --port 40336 --rpc-port 9947 -- --chain ../polkadot/rococo-local-cfde.json --port 30336

# Parachain Full Node 1
./target/release/polkadot-parachain --tmp --port 40337 --rpc-port 9948 -- --chain ../polkadot/rococo-local-cfde.json --port 30337
```

#### Register the parachain

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2915325/99548884-1be13580-2987-11eb-9a8b-20be658d34f9.png)


## Asset Hub 🪙

This repository also contains the Asset Hub runtimes. Asset Hub is a system parachain providing an
asset store for the Polkadot ecosystem.

### Build & Launch a Node

To run an Asset Hub node, you will need to compile the `polkadot-parachain` binary:

```bash
cargo build --release --locked --bin polkadot-parachain
```

Once the executable is built, launch the parachain node via:

```bash
CHAIN=asset-hub-westend # or asset-hub-kusama
./target/release/polkadot-parachain --chain $CHAIN
```

Refer to the [setup instructions](#manual-setup) to run a local network for development.

## Contracts 📝

See [the `contracts-rococo` readme](parachains/runtimes/contracts/contracts-rococo/README.md) for details.

## Bridge-hub 📝

See [the `bridge-hubs` readme](parachains/runtimes/bridge-hubs/README.md) for details.

## Rococo 👑

[Rococo](https://polkadot.js.org/apps/?rpc=wss://rococo-rpc.polkadot.io) is becoming a
[Community Parachain Testbed](https://polkadot.network/blog/rococo-revamp-becoming-a-community-parachain-testbed/)
for parachain teams in the Polkadot ecosystem. It supports multiple parachains with the
differentiation of long-term connections and recurring short-term connections, to see which
parachains are currently connected and how long they will be connected for
[see here](https://polkadot.js.org/apps/?rpc=wss%3A%2F%2Frococo-rpc.polkadot.io#/parachains).

Rococo is an elaborate style of design and the name describes the painstaking effort that has gone
into this project.

### Build & Launch Rococo Collators

Collators are similar to validators in the relay chain. These nodes build the blocks that will
eventually be included by the relay chain for a parachain.

To run a Rococo collator you will need to compile the following binary:

```bash
cargo build --release --locked --bin polkadot-parachain
```

Once the executable is built, launch collators for each parachain (repeat once each for chain
`tick`, `trick`, `track`):

```bash
./target/release/polkadot-parachain --chain $CHAIN --validator
```

You can also build [using a container](./docs/container.md).

### Parachains

* [Asset Hub](https://polkadot.js.org/apps/?rpc=wss%3A%2F%2Frococo-statemint-rpc.polkadot.io#/explorer)
* [Contracts on Rococo](https://polkadot.js.org/apps/?rpc=wss%3A%2F%2Frococo-contracts-rpc.polkadot.io#/explorer)
* [RILT](https://polkadot.js.org/apps/?rpc=wss%3A%2F%2Frococo.kilt.io#/explorer)

The network uses horizontal message passing (HRMP) to enable communication between parachains and
the relay chain and, in turn, between parachains. This means that every message is sent to the relay
chain, and from the relay chain to its destination parachain.
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