Book Image

Building Blockchain Projects

By : Narayan Prusty
Book Image

Building Blockchain Projects

By: Narayan Prusty

Overview of this book

Blockchain is a decentralized ledger that maintains a continuously growing list of data records that are secured from tampering and revision. Every user is allowed to connect to the network, send new transactions to it, verify transactions, and create new blocks, making it permission-less. This book will teach you what blockchain is, how it maintains data integrity, and how to create real-world blockchain projects using Ethereum. With interesting real-world projects, you will learn how to write smart contracts which run exactly as programmed without any chance of fraud, censorship, or third-party interference, and build end-to-e applications for blockchain. You will learn about concepts such as cryptography in cryptocurrencies, ether security, mining, smart contracts, solidity, and more. You will also learn about web sockets, various API services for Ethereum, and much more. The blockchain is the main technical innovation of bitcoin, where it serves as the public ledger for bitcoin transactions.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Building a contract deployment platform


Now that we have learned how to use solcjs to compile solidity source code, it's time to build a platform that lets us write, compile, and deploy contracts. Our platform will let users provide their account address and private key, using which our platform will deploy contracts.

Before you start building the application, make sure that you are running the geth development instance, which is mining, has rpc enabled, and exposes eth, web3, and txpool APIs over the HTTP-RPC server. You can do all these by running this:

geth --dev --rpc --rpccorsdomain "*" --rpcaddr "0.0.0.0" --rpcport "8545" --mine --rpcapi "eth,txpool,web3"

The project structure

In the exercise files of this chapter, you will find two directories, that is, Final and Initial. Final contains the final source code of the project, whereas Initial contains the empty source code files and libraries to get started with building the application quickly.

Note

To test the Final directory, you will need...