Instructions

Yagna management for requestors

Introduction

In this article, we present commands related to the daily management of your Yagna.

  • Checking the wallet address
  • Checking the status of the wallet
  • Getting test funds
  • Generating the unique app-keys

Prerequisites

Yagna service is installed and running.

Your Golem wallet address

Golem's wallet is automatically initialized for you the first time you start your yagna service and thus, an address associated with it is also generated automatically.

To have any kind of funds transferred to your Golem's wallet, you'll need its address. You may obtain it using the id command:

yagna id show

The value described as nodeId in the output is the Ethereum address of your Golem node and it's also the address of its wallet. Note it down so you can use it to supply your node with funds.

Checking the status of your accounts

When you run yagna payment status to verify the state of your payment account and the amount of GLM tokens you have at your disposal, you may need to add the specific network and driver parameters to point to the network/driver combination that you're interested in.

In the context of running Golem on mainnet, here are the commands for each of the supported mainnet platforms:

yagna payment status --network=polygon --driver=erc20

Sending test funds to your account

You can top up your wallet with test GLMs by running:

yagna payment fund

Golem will transfer test tokens from our custom faucet (a service that transfers test tokens to an address that asks for them).

Generating the app key

With the service running, enter the service's directory using another shell and generate the yagna app key that will be used by your requestor agent to access yagna's REST API. Note that the requestor in the command is a tag of the key.

yagna app-key create requestor

This should produce a 32-character-long hexadecimal app key that you need to note down as it will be needed to run the requestor agent.

warning

If you intend to expose your yagna service's REST API port to the outside world (which we strongly discourage), you should absolutely ensure that you keep this key secret, as anyone with access to the key and the port will have complete control over your service.

In case you lose your app key, you can retrieve it with:

yagna app-key list

the value in the key column is the key you need.

Was this helpful?