kleros/kleros-v2

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services/graph-node/README.md

Summary

Maintainability
Test Coverage
_Adapted from the [scaffold-eth service package](https://github.com/scaffold-eth/scaffold-eth/tree/master/packages/services/graph-node)_

# Graph Node Docker Image

Preconfigured Docker image for running a Graph Node.

## Usage

```sh
docker run -it \
  -e postgres_host=<HOST>[:<PORT>] \
  -e postgres_user=<USER> \
  -e postgres_pass=<PASSWORD> \
  -e postgres_db=<DBNAME> \
  -e ipfs=<HOST>:<PORT> \
  -e ethereum=<NETWORK_NAME>:<ETHEREUM_RPC_URL> \
  graphprotocol/graph-node:latest
```

### Example usage

```sh
docker run -it \
  -e postgres_host=host.docker.internal:5432
  -e postgres_user=graph-node \
  -e postgres_pass=oh-hello \
  -e postgres_db=graph-node \
  -e ipfs=host.docker.internal:5001 \
  -e ethereum=mainnet:http://localhost:8545/ \
  graphprotocol/graph-node:latest
```

## Docker Compose

The Docker Compose setup requires an Ethereum network name and node
to connect to. By default, it will use `mainnet:http://host.docker.internal:8545`
in order to connect to an Ethereum node running on your host machine.
You can replace this with anything else in `docker-compose.yaml`.

> **Note for Linux users:** On Linux, if you have docker v20.10 and above, you will need to make
> sure you have extra_hosts in the docker-compose.yml file. If you have a docker older than v20.10,
> `host.docker.internal` is not supported. Instead, you will have to replace it with the
> IP address of your Docker host (from the perspective of the Graph
> Node container).
> To do this, run:
>
> ```
> CONTAINER_ID=$(docker container ls | grep graph-node | cut -d' ' -f1)
> docker exec $CONTAINER_ID /bin/bash -c 'ip route | awk \'/^default via /{print $3}\''
> ```
>
> This will print the host's IP address. Then, put it into `docker-compose.yml`:
>
> ```
> sed -i -e 's/host.docker.internal/<IP ADDRESS>/g' docker-compose.yml
> ```

After you have set up an Ethereum node—e.g. Ganache or Parity—simply
clone this repository and run

```sh
docker-compose up
```

This will start IPFS, Postgres and Graph Node in Docker and create persistent
data directories for IPFS and Postgres in `./data/ipfs` and `./data/postgres`. You
can access these via:

- Graph Node:
  - GraphiQL: `http://localhost:8000/`
  - HTTP: `http://localhost:8000/subgraphs/name/<subgraph-name>`
  - WebSockets: `ws://localhost:8001/subgraphs/name/<subgraph-name>`
  - Admin: `http://localhost:8020/`
- IPFS:
  - `127.0.0.1:5001` or `/ip4/127.0.0.1/tcp/5001`
- Postgres:
  - `postgresql://graph-node:let-me-in@localhost:5432/graph-node`

Once this is up and running, you can use
[`graph-cli`](https://github.com/graphprotocol/graph-cli) to create and
deploy your subgraph to the running Graph Node.