Validator Guide: Starting a Validator
Configure Solana CLI
The solana cli includes get
and set
configuration commands to automatically
set the --url
argument for cli commands. For example:
solana config set --url http://api.devnet.solana.com
While this section demonstrates how to connect to the Devnet cluster, the steps are similar for the other Solana Clusters.
Confirm The Cluster Is Reachable
Before attaching a validator node, sanity check that the cluster is accessible to your machine by fetching the transaction count:
solana transaction-count
View the metrics dashboard for more detail on cluster activity.
Enabling CUDA
If your machine has a GPU with CUDA installed (Linux-only currently), include
the --cuda
argument to agave-validator
.
When your validator is started look for the following log message to indicate
that CUDA is enabled: "[<timestamp> solana::validator] CUDA is enabled"
System Tuning
Linux
If you would prefer to manage system settings on your own, you may do so with the following commands.
Optimize sysctl knobs
sudo bash -c "cat >/etc/sysctl.d/21-agave-validator.conf <<EOF
# Increase UDP buffer sizes
net.core.rmem_default = 134217728
net.core.rmem_max = 134217728
net.core.wmem_default = 134217728
net.core.wmem_max = 134217728
# Increase memory mapped files limit
vm.max_map_count = 1000000
# Increase number of allowed open file descriptors
fs.nr_open = 1000000
EOF"
sudo sysctl -p /etc/sysctl.d/21-agave-validator.conf
Increase systemd and session file limits
Add
LimitNOFILE=1000000
to the [Service]
section of your systemd service file, if you use one,
otherwise add
DefaultLimitNOFILE=1000000
to the [Manager]
section of /etc/systemd/system.conf
.
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo bash -c "cat >/etc/security/limits.d/90-solana-nofiles.conf <<EOF
# Increase process file descriptor count limit
* - nofile 1000000
EOF"
### Close all open sessions (log out then, in again) ###
System Clock
Large system clock drift can prevent a node from properly participating in Solana's gossip protocol. Ensure that your system clock is accurate. To check the current system clock, use:
timedatectl
Operators commonly use an ntp server to maintain an accurate system clock.
Generate identity
Create an identity keypair for your validator by running:
solana-keygen new -o ~/validator-keypair.json
The identity public key can now be viewed by running:
solana-keygen pubkey ~/validator-keypair.json
Note: The "validator-keypair.json” file is also your (ed25519) private key.
Paper Wallet identity
You can create a paper wallet for your identity file instead of writing the keypair file to disk with:
solana-keygen new --no-outfile
The corresponding identity public key can now be viewed by running:
solana-keygen pubkey ASK
and then entering your seed phrase.
See Paper Wallet Usage for more info.
Vanity Keypair
You can generate a custom vanity keypair using solana-keygen. For instance:
solana-keygen grind --starts-with e1v1s:1
You may request that the generated vanity keypair be expressed as a seed phrase which allows recovery of the keypair from the seed phrase and an optionally supplied passphrase (note that this is significantly slower than grinding without a mnemonic):
solana-keygen grind --use-mnemonic --starts-with e1v1s:1
Depending on the string requested, it may take days to find a match...
Your validator identity keypair uniquely identifies your validator within the network. It is crucial to back-up this information.
If you don’t back up this information, you WILL NOT BE ABLE TO RECOVER YOUR VALIDATOR if you lose access to it. If this happens, YOU WILL LOSE YOUR ALLOCATION OF SOL TOO.
To back-up your validator identify keypair, back-up your "validator-keypair.json” file or your seed phrase to a secure location.
More Solana CLI Configuration
Now that you have a keypair, set the solana configuration to use your validator keypair for all following commands:
solana config set --keypair ~/validator-keypair.json
You should see the following output:
Config File: /home/solana/.config/solana/cli/config.yml
RPC URL: http://api.devnet.solana.com
WebSocket URL: ws://api.devnet.solana.com/ (computed)
Keypair Path: /home/solana/validator-keypair.json
Commitment: confirmed
Airdrop & Check Validator Balance
Airdrop yourself some SOL to get started:
solana airdrop 1
Note that airdrops are only available on Devnet and Testnet. Both are limited to 1 SOL per request.
To view your current balance:
solana balance
Or to see in finer detail:
solana balance --lamports
Read more about the difference between SOL and lamports here.
Create Authorized Withdrawer Account
If you haven't already done so, create an authorized-withdrawer keypair to be used as the ultimate authority over your validator. This keypair will have the authority to withdraw from your vote account, and will have the additional authority to change all other aspects of your vote account. Needless to say, this is a very important keypair as anyone who possesses it can make any changes to your vote account, including taking ownership of it permanently. So it is very important to keep your authorized-withdrawer keypair in a safe location. It does not need to be stored on your validator, and should not be stored anywhere from where it could be accessed by unauthorized parties. To create your authorized-withdrawer keypair:
solana-keygen new -o ~/authorized-withdrawer-keypair.json
Create Vote Account
If you haven’t already done so, create a vote-account keypair and create the vote account on the network. If you have completed this step, you should see the “vote-account-keypair.json” in your Solana runtime directory:
solana-keygen new -o ~/vote-account-keypair.json
The following command can be used to create your vote account on the blockchain with all the default options:
solana create-vote-account ~/vote-account-keypair.json ~/validator-keypair.json ~/authorized-withdrawer-keypair.json
Remember to move your authorized withdrawer keypair into a very secure location after running the above command.
Read more about creating and managing a vote account.
Known validators
If you know and respect other validator operators, you can specify this on the
command line with the --known-validator <PUBKEY>
argument to
agave-validator
. You can specify multiple ones by repeating the argument
--known-validator <PUBKEY1> --known-validator <PUBKEY2>
. This has the effect
that when the validator is booting with --only-known-rpc
, it will only ask
that set of known nodes for downloading genesis and snapshot data.
It is highly recommended you use this option to prevent malicious snapshot state download.
Connect Your Validator
Connect to the cluster by running:
agave-validator \
--identity ~/validator-keypair.json \
--vote-account ~/vote-account-keypair.json \
--rpc-port 8899 \
--entrypoint entrypoint.devnet.solana.com:8001 \
--limit-ledger-size \
--log ~/agave-validator.log
To force validator logging to the console add a --log -
argument, otherwise
the validator will automatically log to a file.
The ledger will be placed in the ledger/
directory by default, use the
--ledger
argument to specify a different location.
Note: You can use a paper wallet seed phrase for your
--identity
and/or--authorized-voter
keypairs. To use these, pass the respective argument asagave-validator --identity ASK ... --authorized-voter ASK ...
and you will be prompted to enter your seed phrases and optional passphrase.
Confirm your validator is connected to the network by opening a new terminal and running:
solana gossip
If your validator is connected, its public key and IP address will appear in the list.
Controlling local network port allocation
By default the validator will dynamically select available network ports in the
8000-10000 range, and may be overridden with --dynamic-port-range
. For
example, agave-validator --dynamic-port-range 11000-11020 ...
will restrict
the validator to ports 11000-11020.
Limiting ledger size to conserve disk space
The --limit-ledger-size
parameter allows you to specify how many ledger
shreds your node retains on disk. If you do not
include this parameter, the validator will keep all received ledger data
until it runs out of disk space. Otherwise, the validator will continually
purge the oldest data once to stay under the specified --limit-ledger-size
value.
The default value attempts to keep the blockstore (data within the rocksdb
directory) disk usage under 500 GB. More or less disk usage may be requested
by adding an argument to --limit-ledger-size
if desired. More information
about selecting a custom limit value is available
here.
Note that the above target of 500 GB does not account for other items that
may reside in the ledger
directory, depending on validator configuration.
These items may include (but are not limited to):
- Persistent accounts data
- Persistent accounts index
- Snapshots
Systemd Unit
Running the validator as a systemd unit is one easy way to manage running in the background.
Assuming you have a user called sol
on your machine, create the file /etc/systemd/system/sol.service
with
the following:
[Unit]
Description=Solana Validator
After=network.target
StartLimitIntervalSec=0
[Service]
Type=simple
Restart=always
RestartSec=1
User=sol
LimitNOFILE=1000000
LogRateLimitIntervalSec=0
Environment="PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/home/sol/.local/share/solana/install/active_release/bin"
ExecStart=/home/sol/bin/validator.sh
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Now create /home/sol/bin/validator.sh
to include the desired
agave-validator
command-line. Ensure that the 'exec' command is used to
start the validator process (i.e. "exec agave-validator ..."). This is
important because without it, logrotate will end up killing the validator
every time the logs are rotated.
Ensure that running /home/sol/bin/validator.sh
manually starts
the validator as expected. Don't forget to mark it executable with chmod +x /home/sol/bin/validator.sh
Start the service with:
sudo systemctl enable --now sol
Logging
Log output tuning
The messages that a validator emits to the log can be controlled by the RUST_LOG
environment variable. Details can by found in the documentation
for the env_logger
Rust crate.
Note that if logging output is reduced, this may make it difficult to debug issues encountered later. Should support be sought from the team, any changes will need to be reverted and the issue reproduced before help can be provided.
Log rotation
The validator log file, as specified by --log ~/agave-validator.log
, can get
very large over time and it's recommended that log rotation be configured.
The validator will re-open its log file when it receives the USR1
signal, which is the
basic primitive that enables log rotation.
If the validator is being started by a wrapper shell script, it is important to
launch the process with exec
(exec agave-validator ...
) when using logrotate.
This will prevent the USR1
signal from being sent to the script's process
instead of the validator's, which will kill them both.
Using logrotate
An example setup for the logrotate
, which assumes that the validator is
running as a systemd service called sol.service
and writes a log file at
/home/sol/agave-validator.log:
# Setup log rotation
cat > logrotate.sol <<EOF
/home/sol/agave-validator.log {
rotate 7
daily
missingok
postrotate
systemctl kill -s USR1 sol.service
endscript
}
EOF
sudo cp logrotate.sol /etc/logrotate.d/sol
systemctl restart logrotate.service
As mentioned earlier, be sure that if you use logrotate, any script you create which starts the solana validator process uses "exec" to do so (example: "exec agave-validator ..."); otherwise, when logrotate sends its signal to the validator, the enclosing script will die and take the validator process with it.
Using a ramdisk with spill-over into swap for the accounts database to reduce SSD wear
If your machine has plenty of RAM, a tmpfs ramdisk (tmpfs) may be used to hold the accounts database
When using tmpfs it's essential to also configure swap on your machine as well to avoid running out of tmpfs space periodically.
A 300GB tmpfs partition is recommended, with an accompanying 250GB swap partition.
Example configuration:
sudo mkdir /mnt/solana-accounts
- Add a 300GB tmpfs partition by adding a new line containing
tmpfs /mnt/solana-accounts tmpfs rw,size=300G,user=sol 0 0
to/etc/fstab
(assuming your validator is running under the user "sol"). CAREFUL: If you incorrectly edit /etc/fstab your machine may no longer boot - Create at least 250GB of swap space
- Choose a device to use in place of
SWAPDEV
for the remainder of these instructions. Ideally select a free disk partition of 250GB or greater on a fast disk. If one is not available, create a swap file withsudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfile bs=1MiB count=250KiB
, set its permissions withsudo chmod 0600 /swapfile
and use/swapfile
asSWAPDEV
for the remainder of these instructions - Format the device for usage as swap with
sudo mkswap SWAPDEV
- Add the swap file to
/etc/fstab
with a new line containingSWAPDEV swap swap defaults 0 0
- Enable swap with
sudo swapon -a
and mount the tmpfs withsudo mount /mnt/solana-accounts/
- Confirm swap is active with
free -g
and the tmpfs is mounted withmount
Now add the --accounts /mnt/solana-accounts
argument to your agave-validator
command-line arguments and restart the validator.
Account indexing
As the number of populated accounts on the cluster grows, account-data RPC
requests that scan the entire account set -- like
getProgramAccounts
and
SPL-token-specific requests --
may perform poorly. If your validator needs to support any of these requests,
you can use the --account-index
parameter to activate one or more in-memory
account indexes that significantly improve RPC performance by indexing accounts
by the key field. Currently supports the following parameter values:
program-id
: each account indexed by its owning program; used by getProgramAccountsspl-token-mint
: each SPL token account indexed by its token Mint; used by getTokenAccountsByDelegate, and getTokenLargestAccountsspl-token-owner
: each SPL token account indexed by the token-owner address; used by getTokenAccountsByOwner, and getProgramAccounts requests that include an spl-token-owner filter.