Interacting with Tenetd
Tenet Daemon
tenetd
is the tool that enables you to interact with the node that runs on the Tenet network, whether you run it yourself or not. Let us set it up properly. In order to install it, follow the installation procedure.
Setting up tenetd
The main command used to set up tenetd
is the following:
tenetd config <flag> <value>
It allows you to set a default value for each given flag.
First, set up the address of the full-node you want to connect to:
tenetd config node <host>:<port>
# example: tenetd config node https://77.87.106.33:26657
If you run your own full-node, just use tcp://localhost:26657
as the address.
Finally, let us set the chain-id
of the blockchain we want to interact with:
tenetd config chain-id ...
Keys
Keyring
The keyring holds the private/public keypairs used to interact with a node. For instance, a validator key needs to be set up before running the blockchain node, so that blocks can be correctly signed. The private key can be stored in different locations, called "backends", such as a file or the operating system's own key storage.
Headless environments are recommended to use either the file
or pass
backends. More information is available at the SDK documentation page.
Key Types
There are three types of key representations that are used:
tenet
- Derived from account keys generated by
tenetd keys add
- Used to receive funds
- e.g.
tenet15h6vd5f0wqps26zjlwrc6chah08ryu4hzzdwhc
- Derived from account keys generated by
tenetvaloper
- Used to associate a validator to its operator
- Used to invoke staking commands
- e.g.
tenetvaloper1carzvgq3e6y3z5kz5y6gxp3wpy3qdrv928vyah
tenetpub
- Derived from account keys generated by
tenetd keys add
- e.g.
tenetpub1zcjduc3q7fu03jnlu2xpl75s2nkt7krm6grh4cc5aqth73v0zwmea25wj2hsqhlqzm
- Derived from account keys generated by
tenetvalconspub
- Generated when the node is created with
tenetd init
. - Get this value with
tenetd tendermint show-validator
- e.g.
tenetvalconspub1zcjduepq0ms2738680y72v44tfyqm3c9ppduku8fs6sr73fx7m666sjztznqzp2emf
- Generated when the node is created with
Migrate Keys From Legacy On-Disk Keybase To OS Built-in Secret Store
Older versions of tenetd
used store keys in the user's home directory. If you are migrating
from an old version of tenetd
you will need to migrate your old keys into your operating system's
credentials storage by running the following command:
tenetd keys migrate
The command will prompt for every passphrase. If a passphrase is incorrect, it will skip the respective key.
Generate Keys
You'll need an account private and public key pair (a.k.a. sk, pk
respectively) to be able to receive funds, send txs, bond tx, etc.
To generate a new secp256k1 key:
tenetd keys add <account_name>
The output of the above command will contain a seed phrase. It is recommended to save the seed phrase in a safe place so that in case you forget the password of the operating system's credentials store, you could eventually regenerate the key from the seed phrase with the following command:
tenetd keys add --recover
If you check your private keys, you'll now see <account_name>
:
tenetd keys show <account_name>
View the validator operator's address via:
tenetd keys show <account_name> --bech=val
You can see all your available keys by typing:
tenetd keys list
View the validator pubkey for your node by typing:
tenetd tendermint show-validator
Note that this is the Tendermint signing key, not the operator key you will use in delegation transactions.
::: danger Warning We strongly recommend NOT using the same passphrase for multiple keys. The CometBFT team and the Interchain Foundation will not be responsible for the loss of funds. :::
Generate Multisig Public Keys
You can generate and print a multisig public key by typing:
tenetd keys add --multisig=name1,name2,name3[...] --multisig-threshold=K new_key_name
K
is the minimum number of private keys that must have signed the
transactions that carry the public key's address as signer.
The --multisig
flag must contain the name of public keys that will be combined into a
public key that will be generated and stored as new_key_name
in the local database.
All names supplied through --multisig
must already exist in the local database. Unless
the flag --nosort
is set, the order in which the keys are supplied on the command line
does not matter, i.e. the following commands generate two identical keys:
tenetd keys add --multisig=foo,bar,baz --multisig-threshold=2 multisig_address
tenetd keys add --multisig=baz,foo,bar --multisig-threshold=2 multisig_address
Multisig addresses can also be generated on-the-fly and printed through the which command:
tenetd keys show --multisig-threshold K name1 name2 name3 [...]
For more information regarding how to generate, sign and broadcast transactions with a multi signature account see Multisig Transactions.
Tx Broadcasting
When broadcasting transactions, tenetd
accepts a --broadcast-mode
flag. This
flag can have a value of sync
(default), async
, or block
, where sync
makes
the client return a CheckTx response, async
makes the client return immediately,
and block
makes the client wait for the tx to be committed (or timing out).
It is important to note that the block
mode should not be used in most
circumstances. This is because broadcasting can timeout but the tx may still be
included in a block. This can result in many undesirable situations. Therefore, it
is best to use sync
or async
and query by tx hash to determine when the tx
is included in a block.
Fees & Gas
Each transaction may either supply fees or gas prices, but not both.
Validator's have a minimum gas price (multi-denom) configuration and they use
this value when determining if they should include the transaction in a block during CheckTx
, where gasPrices >= minGasPrices
. Note, your transaction must supply fees that are greater than or equal to any of the denominations the validator requires.
Note: With such a mechanism in place, validators may start to prioritize
txs by gasPrice
in the mempool, so providing higher fees or gas prices may yield higher tx priority.
e.g.
tenetd tx bank send ... --fees=50000atenet
or
tenetd tx bank send ... --gas-prices=0.0025atenet
Account
Get Tokens
On a testnet, getting tokens is usually done via a faucet.
Query Account Balance
After receiving tokens to your address, you can view your account's balance by typing:
tenetd query account <account_tenet>
::: warning Note
When you query an account balance with zero tokens, you will get this error: No account with address <account_tenet> was found in the state.
This can also happen if you fund the account before your node has fully synced with the chain. These are both normal.
:::
Send Tokens
The following command could be used to send coins from one account to another:
tenetd tx bank send <sender_key_name_or_address> <recipient_address> 10faucetToken \
--chain-id=<chain_id>
::: warning Note
The amount
argument accepts the format <value|coin_name>
.
:::
::: tip Note
You may want to cap the maximum gas that can be consumed by the transaction via the --gas
flag.
If you pass --gas=auto
, the gas supply will be automatically estimated before executing the transaction.
Gas estimate might be inaccurate as state changes could occur in between the end of the simulation and the actual execution of a transaction, thus an adjustment is applied on top of the original estimate in order to ensure the transaction is broadcasted successfully. The adjustment can be controlled via the --gas-adjustment
flag, whose default value is 1.0.
:::
Now, view the updated balances of the origin and destination accounts:
tenetd query account <account_tenet>
tenetd query account <destination_tenet>
You can also check your balance at a given block by using the --block
flag:
tenetd query account <account_tenet> --block=<block_height>
You can simulate a transaction without actually broadcasting it by appending the
--dry-run
flag to the command line:
tenetd tx bank send <sender_key_name_or_address> <destination_tenetaccaddr> 10faucetToken \
--chain-id=<chain_id> \
--dry-run
Furthermore, you can build a transaction and print its JSON format to STDOUT by
appending --generate-only
to the list of the command line arguments:
tenetd tx bank send <sender_address> <recipient_address> 10faucetToken \
--chain-id=<chain_id> \
--generate-only > unsignedSendTx.json
tenetd tx sign \
--chain-id=<chain_id> \
--from=<key_name> \
unsignedSendTx.json > signedSendTx.json
::: tip Note
The --generate-only
flag prevents tenetd
from accessing the local keybase.
Thus when such flag is supplied <sender_key_name_or_address>
must be an address.
:::
You can validate the transaction's signatures by typing the following:
tenetd tx sign --validate-signatures signedSendTx.json
You can broadcast the signed transaction to a node by providing the JSON file to the following command:
tenetd tx broadcast --node=<node> signedSendTx.json
Query Transactions
Matching a Set of Events
You can use the transaction search command to query for transactions that match a
specific set of events
, which are added on every transaction.
Each event is composed by a key-value pair in the form of {eventType}.{eventAttribute}={value}
.
Events can also be combined to query for a more specific result using the &
symbol.
You can query transactions by events
as follows:
tenetd query txs --events='message.sender=tenet1...'
And for using multiple events
:
tenetd query txs --events='message.sender=tenet1...&message.action=withdraw_delegator_reward'
The pagination is supported as well via page
and limit
:
tenetd query txs --events='message.sender=tenet1...' --page=1 --limit=20
::: tip Note
The action tag always equals the message type returned by the Type()
function of the relevant message.
You can find a list of available events
on each of the SDK modules:
Matching a Transaction's Hash
You can also query a single transaction by its hash using the following command:
tenetd query tx [hash]
Slashing
Unjailing
To unjail your jailed validator
tenetd tx slashing unjail --from <validator-operator-addr>
Signing Info
To retrieve a validator's signing info:
tenetd query slashing signing-info <validator-pubkey>
Query Parameters
You can get the current slashing parameters via:
tenetd query slashing params
Minting
You can query for the minting/inflation parameters via:
tenetd query mint params
To query for the current inflation value:
tenetd query mint inflation
To query for the current annual provisions value:
tenetd query mint annual-provisions
Staking
Set up a Validator
Please refer to the Validator Setup section for a more complete guide on how to set up a validator-candidate.
Delegate to a Validator
On the upcoming mainnet, you can delegate atenet
to a validator. These delegators can receive part of the validator's fee revenue.
Query Validators
You can query the list of all validators of a specific chain:
tenetd query staking validators
If you want to get the information of a single validator you can check it with:
tenetd query staking validator <account_tenetval>
Bond Tokens
On the Tenet mainnet, we delegate atenet
, where 1 TENET = 1e18 atenet
. Here's how you can bond tokens to a testnet validator (i.e. delegate):
tenetd tx staking delegate \
--amount=10000000atenet \
--validator=<validator> \
--from=<key_name> \
--chain-id=<chain_id>
<validator>
is the operator address of the validator to which you intend to delegate. If you are running a local testnet, you can find this with:
tenetd keys show [name] --bech val
where [name]
is the name of the key you specified when you initialized tenetd
.
While tokens are bonded, they are pooled with all the other bonded tokens in the network. Validators and delegators obtain a percentage of shares that equal their stake in this pool.
Query Delegations
Once submitted a delegation to a validator, you can see its information by using the following command:
tenetd query staking delegation <delegator_addr> <validator_addr>
Or if you want to check all your current delegations with distinct validators:
tenetd query staking delegations <delegator_addr>
Unbond Tokens
If for any reason the validator misbehaves, or you just want to unbond a certain amount of tokens, use the following command.
tenetd tx staking unbond \
<validator_addr> \
10atenet \
--from=<key_name> \
--chain-id=<chain_id>
The unbonding will be automatically completed when the unbonding period has passed.
Query Unbonding-Delegations
Once you begin an unbonding-delegation, you can see it's information by using the following command:
tenetd query staking unbonding-delegation <delegator_addr> <validator_addr>
Or if you want to check all your current unbonding-delegations with disctinct validators:
tenetd query staking unbonding-delegations <account_tenet>
Additionally, as you can get all the unbonding-delegations from a particular validator:
tenetd query staking unbonding-delegations-from <account_tenetval>
Redelegate Tokens
A redelegation is a type delegation that allows you to bond illiquid tokens from one validator to another:
tenetd tx staking redelegate \
<src-validator-operator-addr> \
<dst-validator-operator-addr> \
10tenet \
--from=<key_name> \
--chain-id=<chain_id>
Here you can also redelegate a specific shares-amount
or a shares-fraction
with the corresponding flags.
The redelegation will be automatically completed when the unbonding period has passed.
Query Redelegations
Once you begin a redelegation, you can see its information by using the following command:
tenetd query staking redelegation <delegator_addr> <src_val_addr> <dst_val_addr>
Or if you want to check all your current unbonding-delegations with distinct validators:
tenetd query staking redelegations <account_tenet>
Additionally, as you can get all the outgoing redelegations from a particular validator:
tenetd query staking redelegations-from <account_tenetval>
Query Parameters
Parameters define high level settings for staking. You can get the current values by using:
tenetd query staking params
With the above command you will get the values for:
- Unbonding time
- Maximum numbers of validators
- Coin denomination for staking
All these values will be subject to updates through a governance
process by ParameterChange
proposals.
Query Pool
A staking Pool
defines the dynamic parameters of the current state. You can query them with the following command:
tenetd query staking pool
With the pool
command you will get the values for:
- Not-bonded and bonded tokens
- Token supply
- Current annual inflation and the block in which the last inflation was processed
- Last recorded bonded shares
Query Delegations To Validator
You can also query all of the delegations to a particular validator:
tenetd query delegations-to <account_tenetval>
Governance
Governance is the process from which users in the Tenet can come to consensus
on software upgrades, parameters of the mainnet or signaling mechanisms through
text proposals. This is done through voting on proposals, which will be submitted
by TENET
holders on the mainnet.
Some considerations about the voting process:
- Voting is done by bonded
TENET
holders on a 1 bondedTENET
1 vote basis - Delegators inherit the vote of their validator if they don't vote
- Votes are tallied at the end of the voting period (2 weeks on mainnet) where
each address can vote multiple times to update its
Option
value (paying the transaction fee each time), only the most recently cast vote will count as valid - Voters can choose between options
Yes
,No
,NoWithVeto
andAbstain
- At the end of the voting period, a proposal is accepted iff:
(YesVotes / (YesVotes+NoVotes+NoWithVetoVotes)) > 1/2
(NoWithVetoVotes / (YesVotes+NoVotes+NoWithVetoVotes)) < 1/3
((YesVotes+NoVotes+NoWithVetoVotes) / totalBondedStake) >= quorum
For more information about the governance process and how it works, please check out the Governance module specification.
Create a Governance Proposal
In order to create a governance proposal, you must submit an initial deposit
along with a title and description. Various modules outside of governance may
implement their own proposal types and handlers (eg. parameter changes), where
the governance module itself supports Text
proposals. Any module
outside of governance has its command mounted on top of submit-proposal
.
To submit a Text
proposal:
tenetd tx gov submit-proposal \
--title=<title> \
--description=<description> \
--type="Text" \
--deposit="1000000atenet" \
--from=<name> \
--chain-id=<chain_id>
You may also provide the proposal directly through the --proposal
flag which
points to a JSON file containing the proposal.
To submit a parameter change proposal, you must provide a proposal file as its contents are less friendly to CLI input:
tenetd tx gov submit-proposal param-change <path/to/proposal.json> \
--from=<name> \
--chain-id=<chain_id>
Where proposal.json
contains the following:
{
"title": "Param Change",
"description": "Update max validators",
"changes": [
{
"subspace": "staking",
"key": "MaxValidators",
"value": 105
}
],
"deposit": [
{
"denom": "stake",
"amount": "10000000"
}
]
}
::: danger Warning
Currently parameter changes are evaluated but not validated, so it is very important
that any value
change is valid (ie. correct type and within bounds) for its
respective parameter, eg. MaxValidators
should be an integer and not a decimal.
Proper vetting of a parameter change proposal should prevent this from happening (no deposits should occur during the governance process), but it should be noted regardless.
:::
::: tip Note
The SoftwareUpgrade
is currently not supported as it's not implemented and
currently does not differ from the semantics of a Text
proposal.
:::
Query Proposals
Once created, you can now query information of the proposal:
tenetd query gov proposal <proposal_id>
Or query all available proposals:
tenetd query gov proposals
You can also query proposals filtered by voter
or depositor
by using the corresponding flags.
To query for the proposer of a given governance proposal:
tenetd query gov proposer <proposal_id>
Increase Deposit
In order for a proposal to be broadcasted to the network, the amount deposited must be above a minDeposit
value (initial value: 512000000atenet
). If the proposal you previously created didn't meet this requirement, you can still increase the total amount deposited to activate it. Once the minimum deposit is reached, the proposal enters voting period:
tenetd tx gov deposit <proposal_id> "10000000atenet" \
--from=<name> \
--chain-id=<chain_id>
NOTE: Proposals that don't meet this requirement will be deleted after
MaxDepositPeriod
is reached.
Query Deposits
Once a new proposal is created, you can query all the deposits submitted to it:
tenetd query gov deposits <proposal_id>
You can also query a deposit submitted by a specific address:
tenetd query gov deposit <proposal_id> <depositor_address>
Vote on a Proposal
After a proposal's deposit reaches the MinDeposit
value, the voting period opens. Bonded TENET
holders can then cast vote on it:
tenetd tx gov vote <proposal_id> <Yes/No/NoWithVeto/Abstain> \
--from=<name> \
--chain-id=<chain_id>
Query Votes
Check the vote with the option you just submitted:
tenetd query gov vote <proposal_id> <voter_address>
You can also get all the previous votes submitted to the proposal with:
tenetd query gov votes <proposal_id>
Query proposal tally results
To check the current tally of a given proposal you can use the tally
command:
tenetd query gov tally <proposal_id>
Query Governance Parameters
To check the current governance parameters run:
tenetd query gov params
To query subsets of the governance parameters run:
tenetd query gov param voting
tenetd query gov param tallying
tenetd query gov param deposit
Fee Distribution
Query Distribution Parameters
To check the current distribution parameters, run:
tenetd query distribution params
Query distribution Community Pool
To query all coins in the community pool which is under Governance control:
tenetd query distribution community-pool
Query outstanding rewards
To check the current outstanding (un-withdrawn) rewards, run:
tenetd query distribution outstanding-rewards
Query Validator Commission
To check the current outstanding commission for a validator, run:
tenetd query distribution commission <validator_address>
Query Validator Slashes
To check historical slashes for a validator, run:
tenetd query distribution slashes <validator_address> <start_height> <end_height>
Query Delegator Rewards
To check current rewards for a delegation (were they to be withdrawn), run:
tenetd query distribution rewards <delegator_address> <validator_address>
Query All Delegator Rewards
To check all current rewards for a delegation (were they to be withdrawn), run:
tenetd query distribution rewards <delegator_address>
Multisig Transactions
Multisig transactions require signatures of multiple private keys. Thus, generating and signing a transaction from a multisig account involve cooperation among the parties involved. A multisig transaction can be initiated by any of the key holders, and at least one of them would need to import other parties' public keys into their Keybase and generate a multisig public key in order to finalize and broadcast the transaction.
For example, given a multisig key comprising the keys p1
, p2
, and p3
, each of which is held
by a distinct party, the user holding p1
would require to import both p2
and p3
in order to
generate the multisig account public key:
tenetd keys add \
p2 \
--pubkey=tenetpub1addwnpepqtd28uwa0yxtwal5223qqr5aqf5y57tc7kk7z8qd4zplrdlk5ez5kdnlrj4
tenetd keys add \
p3 \
--pubkey=tenetpub1addwnpepqgj04jpm9wrdml5qnss9kjxkmxzywuklnkj0g3a3f8l5wx9z4ennz84ym5t
tenetd keys add \
p1p2p3 \
--multisig-threshold=2 \
--multisig=p1,p2,p3
A new multisig public key p1p2p3
has been stored, and its address will be
used as signer of multisig transactions:
tenetd keys show --address p1p2p3
You may also view multisig threshold, pubkey constituents and respective weights
by viewing the JSON output of the key or passing the --show-multisig
flag:
tenetd keys show p1p2p3 -o json
tenetd keys show p1p2p3 --show-multisig
The first step to create a multisig transaction is to initiate it on behalf of the multisig address created above:
tenetd tx bank send tenet1570v2fq3twt0f0x02vhxpuzc9jc4yl30q2qned 1000000atenet \
--from=<multisig_address> \
--generate-only > unsignedTx.json
The file unsignedTx.json
contains the unsigned transaction encoded in JSON.
p1
can now sign the transaction with its own private key:
tenetd tx sign \
unsignedTx.json \
--multisig=<multisig_address> \
--from=p1 \
--output-document=p1signature.json
Once the signature is generated, p1
transmits both unsignedTx.json
and
p1signature.json
to p2
or p3
, which in turn will generate their
respective signature:
tenetd tx sign \
unsignedTx.json \
--multisig=<multisig_address> \
--from=p2 \
--output-document=p2signature.json
p1p2p3
is a 2-of-3 multisig key, therefore one additional signature
is sufficient. Any the key holders can now generate the multisig
transaction by combining the required signature files:
tenetd tx multisign \
unsignedTx.json \
p1p2p3 \
p1signature.json p2signature.json > signedTx.json
The transaction can now be sent to the node:
tenetd tx broadcast signedTx.json