# Grin - Build, Configuration, and Running ## Supported Platforms Longer term, most platforms will likely be supported to some extent. Grin's programming language `rust` has buildĀ targets for most platforms. What's working so far? * Linux x86\_64 and MacOS [grin + mining + development] * Not Windows 10 yet [grin kind-of builds. No mining yet. Help wanted!] ## Requirements * rust 1.26+ (use [rustup]((https://www.rustup.rs/))- i.e. `curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh; source $HOME/.cargo/env`) * if rust is already installed, you can simply update version with `rustup update` * clang * ncurses and libs (ncurses, ncursesw5) * zlib libs (zlib1g-dev or zlib-devel) * pkg-config * libssl-dev * linux-headers (reported needed on Alpine linux) For Debian-based distributions (Debian, Ubuntu, Mint, etc), all in one line (except Rust): ```sh apt install build-essential cmake git libgit2-dev clang libncurses5-dev libncursesw5-dev zlib1g-dev pkg-config libssl-dev ``` ## Build steps ```sh git clone https://github.com/mimblewimble/grin.git cd grin cargo build --release ``` Grin can also be built in debug mode (without the `--release` flag, but using the `--debug` or the `--verbose` flag) but this will render fast sync prohibitively slow due to the large overhead of cryptographic operations. ## Build errors See [Troubleshooting](https://github.com/mimblewimble/docs/wiki/Troubleshooting) ## What was built? A successful build gets you: * `target/release/grin` - the main grin binary All data, configuration and log files created and used by grin are located in the hidden `~/.grin` directory (under your user home directory) by default. You can modify all configuration values by editing the file `~/.grin/grin-server.toml`. It is also possible to have grin create its data files in the current directory. To do this, run ```sh grin server config ``` Which will generate a `grin-server.toml` file in the current directory, pre-configured to use the current directory for all of its data. Running grin from a directory that contains a `grin-server.toml` file will use the values in that file instead of the default `~/.grin/grin-server.toml`. While testing, put the grin binary on your path like this: ```sh export PATH=/path/to/grin/dir/target/debug:$PATH ``` Where path/to/grin/dir is your absolute path to the root directory of your Grin installation. You can then run `grin` directly (try `grin help` for more options). ## Configuration Grin attempts to run with sensible defaults, and can be further configured via the `grin-server.toml` file. This file is generated by grin on its first run, and contains documentation on each available option. While it's recommended that you perform all grin server configuration via `grin-server.toml`, it's also possible to supply command line switches to grin that override any settings in the file. For help on grin commands and their switches, try: ```sh grin help grin wallet help grin client help ``` ## Docker ```sh docker build -t grin . ``` You can bind-mount your grin cache to run inside the container. ```sh docker run -it -d -v $HOME/.grin:/root/.grin grin ``` ## Cross-platform builds Rust (cargo) can build grin for many platforms, so in theory running `grin` as a validating node on your low powered device might be possible. To cross-compile `grin` on a x86 Linux platform and produce ARM binaries, say, for a Raspberry Pi. ## Using grin The wiki page [How to use grin](https://github.com/mimblewimble/docs/wiki/How-to-use-grin) and linked pages have more information on what features we have, troubleshooting, etc. ## Mining in Grin Please note that all mining functions for Grin have moved into a separate, standalone package called [grin_miner](https://github.com/mimblewimble/grin-miner). Once your Grin code node is up and running, you can start mining by building and running grin-miner against your running Grin node.