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docs/content/concepts/testnets.md
2019-05-09 13:30:18 +02:00

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Testnets An overview of public test networks that you can test Ocean Protocol applications against.

You can test an Ocean Protocol application (such as a marketplace) against the test networks (testnets) described below. This page is a brief overview of those testnets. The tutorials cover more details (e.g. how to connect to specific ones).

A Spree Testnet (for Local Development)

Formerly called Ocean Protocol Testnet v0.1, it was announced as part of the Plankton milestone.

By default, Barge will deploy a local "Spree Testnet" on your machine: a local testnet not connected to any external public testnet.

When running a Spree Testnet, you can connect to a node at RPC URL http://localhost:8545 (called "Localhost 8545" in MetaMask).

Spree Testnet details can be found in the Barge README.md file. You can configure the Spree nodes by editing the files in the barge/networks/spree/ directory.

Note: Spree testnets are named after the Spree River, the main river flowing through Berlin, Germany, where many Ocean Protocol developers are located.

The Nile Testnet

Also known as the Nile Beta Network. Formerly called the Ocean POA Testnet.

The Nile Testnet is similar to the Kovan Testnet, except all the nodes are operated by BigchainDB GmbH.

For developers building on Ocean Protocol, we recommend starting with a Spree Testnet.

Connect to the Nile Testnet

See the tutorial page about connecting to Ocean-related networks.

Nile Blockchain Explorers

There is a Nile blockchain explorer at https://submarine.dev-ocean.com/. You can use it to check the status of a transaction, the balance of an account, and more. It uses the following symbols for Nile Ether and Nile Ocean Tokens:

Cryptocurrency Symbol used
Nile Ether POA
Nile Ocean Tokens OCEAN or SBT-OCN

Ocean Components Connected to Nile

There are several Ocean Protocol software components that are live, connected to the Nile Testnet, and operated by BigchainDB GmbH:

Internal note: The private "atlantic" repo documents the internal details of the Nile Testnet in networks/nile/README.md.

Using Barge with Nile

If you run Barge with the --local-nile-node option, then Barge will run a Nile node on your local machine (along with everything else Barge runs). There might be many blocks in the Nile Testnet's blockchain, so it might take a long time for your local Nile node to sync, i.e. to download a local copy of all the blocks. In the meantime, the local Nile node won't be able to do certain things.

The Kovan Testnet

The Kovan Testnet (or just "Kovan") is a public Ethereum Testnet operated by members of the Ethereum community. The Ocean Protocol keeper contracts are deployed to the Kovan Testnet.

For developers building on Ocean Protocol, we recommend starting with a Spree Testnet.

Kovan Blockchain Explorers

There are some Kovan blockchain explorers, e.g. Etherscan for Kovan and BlockScout for Kovan. You can use those to check the status of a transaction, the balance of an account, and more.

Ocean Components Connected to Kovan

There is a Secret Store connected to the Kovan Testnet for use by Ocean Protocol projects (including your projects). It's operated by BigchainDB GmbH. Its URL is:

https://secret-store-kovan.dev-ocean.com/

Aside from the Secret Store, there is no other Ocean Protocol software component (e.g. Aquarius) that is live, connected to the Kovan Testnet, and operated by BigchainDB GmbH.

Using Barge with Kovan

If you run Barge with the the --local-kovan-node option, then Barge will run a Kovan node on your local machine (along with everything else Barge runs). There are many blocks in the Kovan Testnet's blockchain, so it can take a long time for your local Kovan node to sync, i.e. to download a local copy of all the blocks. In the meantime, the local Kovan node won't be able to do certain things.

A Ganache-Based Testnet (for Local Development)

A local testnet similar to Spree but launched by using the --local-ganache-node option with Barge.

Note: You shouldn't use a Ganache-Based Testnet unless you know why you're doing so. For example, a Ganache-based testnet can be used to test some smart contracts, but it can't be used with a Secret Store.