Book Image

Hands-On Blockchain with Hyperledger

By : Nitin Gaur, Luc Desrosiers, Venkatraman Ramakrishna, Petr Novotny, Salman A. Baset, Anthony O'Dowd
Book Image

Hands-On Blockchain with Hyperledger

By: Nitin Gaur, Luc Desrosiers, Venkatraman Ramakrishna, Petr Novotny, Salman A. Baset, Anthony O'Dowd

Overview of this book

Blockchain and Hyperledger technologies are hot topics today. Hyperledger Fabric and Hyperledger Composer are open source projects that help organizations create private, permissioned blockchain networks. These find application in finance, banking, supply chain, and IoT among several other sectors. This book will be an easy reference to explore and build blockchain networks using Hyperledger technologies. The book starts by outlining the evolution of blockchain, including an overview of relevant blockchain technologies. You will learn how to configure Hyperledger Fabric and become familiar with its architectural components. Using these components, you will learn to build private blockchain networks, along with the applications that connect to them. Starting from principles first, you’ll learn to design and launch a network, implement smart contracts in chaincode and much more. By the end of this book, you will be able to build and deploy your own decentralized applications, handling the key pain points encountered in the blockchain life cycle.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Packt Upsell
Foreword
Contributors
Preface
Index

Chapter 5. Exposing Network Assets and Transactions

If you have reached this far, congratulations! You have built the core of your blockchain application and the smart contract that directly reads, and more importantly, manipulates, the ledger that is the System-of-Record for your network. But, you are not close to finishing yet. As you can imagine, the contract is a sensitive piece of code that must be protected from misuse or tampering.

To produce a robust and secure application that is safe to release to business users, you must wrap the smart contract with one or more layers of protection and engineer it as a service that clients can access remotely through appropriate safeguards. In addition, the various stakeholders that wish to share a ledger and a smart contract may have unique and specific business logic needs that only they, and not the others, need to implement over and above the contract. For this reason, one blockchain application running one smart contract may end up offering...