Cosmovisor
cosmovisor
is a process manager for Cosmos SDK application binaries that automates application binary switch at chain upgrades.
It polls the upgrade-info.json
file that is created by the x/upgrade module at upgrade height, and then can automatically download the new binary, stop the current binary, switch from the old binary to the new one, and finally restart the node with the new binary.
Design
Cosmovisor is designed to be used as a wrapper for a Cosmos SDK
app:
- it will pass arguments to the associated app (configured by
DAEMON_NAME
env variable). Runningcosmovisor run arg1 arg2 ....
will runapp arg1 arg2 ...
; - it will manage an app by restarting and upgrading if needed;
- it is configured using environment variables, not positional arguments.
Note: If new versions of the application are not set up to run in-place store migrations, migrations will need to be run manually before restarting cosmovisor
with the new binary. For this reason, we recommend applications adopt in-place store migrations.
Only the lastest version of cosmovisor is actively developed/maintained.
Versions prior to v1.0.0 have a vulnerability that could lead to a DOS. Please upgrade to the latest version.
Contributing
Cosmovisor is part of the Cosmos SDK monorepo, but it's a separate module with it's own release schedule.
Release branches have the following format release/cosmovisor/vA.B.x
, where A and B are a number (e.g. release/cosmovisor/v1.3.x
). Releases are tagged using the following format: cosmovisor/vA.B.C
.
Setup
Installation
You can download Cosmovisor from the GitHub releases.
To install the latest version of cosmovisor
, run the following command:
go install cosmossdk.io/tools/cosmovisor/cmd/cosmovisor@latest
To install a previous version, you can specify the version. IMPORTANT: Chains that use Cosmos SDK v0.44.3 or earlier (eg v0.44.2) and want to use auto-download feature MUST use cosmovisor v0.1.0
go install github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/cosmovisor/cmd/[email protected]
Run cosmovisor version
to check the cosmovisor version.
Alternatively, for building from source, simply run make cosmovisor
. The binary will be located in tools/cosmovisor
.
Building from source using make cosmovisor
won't display the correct cosmovisor
version.
Command Line Arguments And Environment Variables
The first argument passed to cosmovisor
is the action for cosmovisor
to take. Options are:
help
,--help
, or-h
- Outputcosmovisor
help information and check yourcosmovisor
configuration.run
- Run the configured binary using the rest of the provided arguments.version
- Output thecosmovisor
version and also run the binary with theversion
argument.config
- Display the currentcosmovisor
configuration, that means displaying the environment variables value thatcosmovisor
is using.add-upgrade
- Add an upgrade manually tocosmovisor
.
All arguments passed to cosmovisor run
will be passed to the application binary (as a subprocess). cosmovisor
will return /dev/stdout
and /dev/stderr
of the subprocess as its own. For this reason, cosmovisor run
cannot accept any command-line arguments other than those available to the application binary.
Use of cosmovisor
without one of the action arguments is deprecated. For backwards compatibility, if the first argument is not an action argument, run
is assumed. However, this fallback might be removed in future versions, so it is recommended that you always provide run
.
cosmovisor
reads its configuration from environment variables:
DAEMON_HOME
is the location where thecosmovisor/
directory is kept that contains the genesis binary, the upgrade binaries, and any additional auxiliary files associated with each binary (e.g.$HOME/.gaiad
,$HOME/.regend
,$HOME/.simd
, etc.).DAEMON_NAME
is the name of the binary itself (e.g.gaiad
,regend
,simd
, etc.).DAEMON_ALLOW_DOWNLOAD_BINARIES
(optional), if set totrue
, will enable auto-downloading of new binaries (for security reasons, this is intended for full nodes rather than validators). By default,cosmovisor
will not auto-download new binaries.DAEMON_RESTART_AFTER_UPGRADE
(optional, default =true
), iftrue
, restarts the subprocess with the same command-line arguments and flags (but with the new binary) after a successful upgrade. Otherwise (false
),cosmovisor
stops running after an upgrade and requires the system administrator to manually restart it. Note restart is only after the upgrade and does not auto-restart the subprocess after an error occurs.DAEMON_RESTART_DELAY
(optional, default none), allow a node operator to define a delay between the node halt (for upgrade) and backup by the specified time. The value must be a duration (e.g.1s
).DAEMON_POLL_INTERVAL
(optional, default 300 milliseconds), is the interval length for polling the upgrade plan file. The value must be a duration (e.g.1s
).DAEMON_DATA_BACKUP_DIR
option to set a custom backup directory. If not set,DAEMON_HOME
is used.UNSAFE_SKIP_BACKUP
(defaults tofalse
), if set totrue
, upgrades directly without performing a backup. Otherwise (false
, default) backs up the data before trying the upgrade. The default value of false is useful and recommended in case of failures and when a backup needed to rollback. We recommend using the default backup optionUNSAFE_SKIP_BACKUP=false
.DAEMON_PREUPGRADE_MAX_RETRIES
(defaults to0
). The maximum number of times to callpre-upgrade
in the application after exit status of31
. After the maximum number of retries, Cosmovisor fails the upgrade.COSMOVISOR_DISABLE_LOGS
(defaults tofalse
). If set to true, this will disable Cosmovisor logs (but not the underlying process) completely. This may be useful, for example, when a Cosmovisor subcommand you are executing returns a valid JSON you are then parsing, as logs added by Cosmovisor make this output not a valid JSON.
Folder Layout
$DAEMON_HOME/cosmovisor
is expected to belong completely to cosmovisor
and the subprocesses that are controlled by it. The folder content is organized as follows:
.
├── current -> genesis or upgrades/<name>
├── genesis
│ └── bin
│ └── $DAEMON_NAME
└── upgrades
└── <name>
├── bin
│ └── $DAEMON_NAME
└── upgrade-info.json
The cosmovisor/
directory incudes a subdirectory for each version of the application (i.e. genesis
or upgrades/<name>
). Within each subdirectory is the application binary (i.e. bin/$DAEMON_NAME
) and any additional auxiliary files associated with each binary. current
is a symbolic link to the currently active directory (i.e. genesis
or upgrades/<name>
). The name
variable in upgrades/<name>
is the lowercased URI-encoded name of the upgrade as specified in the upgrade module plan. Note that the upgrade name path are normalized to be lowercased: for instance, MyUpgrade
is normalized to myupgrade
, and its path is upgrades/myupgrade
.
Please note that $DAEMON_HOME/cosmovisor
only stores the application binaries. The cosmovisor
binary itself can be stored in any typical location (e.g. /usr/local/bin
). The application will continue to store its data in the default data directory (e.g. $HOME/.simapp
) or the data directory specified with the --home
flag. $DAEMON_HOME
is independent of the data directory and can be set to any location. If you set $DAEMON_HOME
to the same directory as the data directory, you will end up with a configuation like the following:
.simapp
├── config
├── data
└── cosmovisor
Usage
The system administrator is responsible for:
- installing the
cosmovisor
binary - configuring the host's init system (e.g.
systemd
,launchd
, etc.) - appropriately setting the environmental variables
- creating the
<DAEMON_HOME>/cosmovisor
directory - creating the
<DAEMON_HOME>/cosmovisor/genesis/bin
folder - creating the
<DAEMON_HOME>/cosmovisor/upgrades/<name>/bin
folders - placing the different versions of the
<DAEMON_NAME>
executable in the appropriatebin
folders.
cosmovisor
will set the current
link to point to genesis
at first start (i.e. when no current
link exists) and then handle switching binaries at the correct points in time so that the system administrator can prepare days in advance and relax at upgrade time.
In order to support downloadable binaries, a tarball for each upgrade binary will need to be packaged up and made available through a canonical URL. Additionally, a tarball that includes the genesis binary and all available upgrade binaries can be packaged up and made available so that all the necessary binaries required to sync a fullnode from start can be easily downloaded.
The DAEMON
specific code and operations (e.g. cometBFT config, the application db, syncing blocks, etc.) all work as expected. The application binaries' directives such as command-line flags and environment variables also work as expected.
Initialization
The cosmovisor init <path to executable>
command creates the folder structure required for using cosmovisor.
It does the following:
- creates the
<DAEMON_HOME>/cosmovisor
folder if it doesn't yet exist - creates the
<DAEMON_HOME>/cosmovisor/genesis/bin
folder if it doesn't yet exist - copies the provided executable file to
<DAEMON_HOME>/cosmovisor/genesis/bin/<DAEMON_NAME>
- creates the
current
link, pointing to thegenesis
folder
It uses the DAEMON_HOME
and DAEMON_NAME
environment variables for folder location and executable name.
The cosmovisor init
command is specifically for initializing cosmovisor, and should not be confused with a chain's init
command (e.g. cosmovisor run init
).
Detecting Upgrades
cosmovisor
is polling the $DAEMON_HOME/data/upgrade-info.json
file for new upgrade instructions. The file is created by the x/upgrade module in BeginBlocker
when an upgrade is detected and the blockchain reaches the upgrade height.
The following heuristic is applied to detect the upgrade:
- When starting,
cosmovisor
doesn't know much about currently running upgrade, except the binary which iscurrent/bin/
. It tries to read thecurrent/update-info.json
file to get information about the current upgrade name. - If neither
cosmovisor/current/upgrade-info.json
nordata/upgrade-info.json
exist, thencosmovisor
will wait fordata/upgrade-info.json
file to trigger an upgrade. - If
cosmovisor/current/upgrade-info.json
doesn't exist butdata/upgrade-info.json
exists, thencosmovisor
assumes that whatever is indata/upgrade-info.json
is a valid upgrade request. In this casecosmovisor
tries immediately to make an upgrade according to thename
attribute indata/upgrade-info.json
. - Otherwise,
cosmovisor
waits for changes inupgrade-info.json
. As soon as a new upgrade name is recorded in the file,cosmovisor
will trigger an upgrade mechanism.
When the upgrade mechanism is triggered, cosmovisor
will:
- if
DAEMON_ALLOW_DOWNLOAD_BINARIES
is enabled, start by auto-downloading a new binary intocosmovisor/<name>/bin
(where<name>
is theupgrade-info.json:name
attribute); - update the
current
symbolic link to point to the new directory and savedata/upgrade-info.json
tocosmovisor/current/upgrade-info.json
.
Auto-Download
Generally, cosmovisor
requires that the system administrator place all relevant binaries on disk before the upgrade happens. However, for people who don't need such control and want an automated setup (maybe they are syncing a non-validating fullnode and want to do little maintenance), there is another option.
NOTE: we don't recommend using auto-download because it doesn't verify in advance if a binary is available. If there will be any issue with downloading a binary, the cosmovisor will stop and won't restart an App (which could lead to a chain halt).
If DAEMON_ALLOW_DOWNLOAD_BINARIES
is set to true
, and no local binary can be found when an upgrade is triggered, cosmovisor
will attempt to download and install the binary itself based on the instructions in the info
attribute in the data/upgrade-info.json
file. The files is constructed by the x/upgrade module and contains data from the upgrade Plan
object. The Plan
has an info field that is expected to have one of the following two valid formats to specify a download:
Store an os/architecture -> binary URI map in the upgrade plan info field as JSON under the
"binaries"
key. For example:{
"binaries": {
"linux/amd64":"https://example.com/gaia.zip?checksum=sha256:aec070645fe53ee3b3763059376134f058cc337247c978add178b6ccdfb0019f"
}
}You can include multiple binaries at once to ensure more than one environment will receive the correct binaries:
{
"binaries": {
"linux/amd64":"https://example.com/gaia.zip?checksum=sha256:aec070645fe53ee3b3763059376134f058cc337247c978add178b6ccdfb0019f",
"linux/arm64":"https://example.com/gaia.zip?checksum=sha256:aec070645fe53ee3b3763059376134f058cc337247c978add178b6ccdfb0019f",
"darwin/amd64":"https://example.com/gaia.zip?checksum=sha256:aec070645fe53ee3b3763059376134f058cc337247c978add178b6ccdfb0019f"
}
}When submitting this as a proposal ensure there are no spaces. An example command using
gaiad
could look like:> gaiad tx upgrade software-upgrade Vega \
--title Vega \
--deposit 100uatom \
--upgrade-height 7368420 \
--upgrade-info '{"binaries":{"linux/amd64":"https://github.com/cosmos/gaia/releases/download/v6.0.0-rc1/gaiad-v6.0.0-rc1-linux-amd64","linux/arm64":"https://github.com/cosmos/gaia/releases/download/v6.0.0-rc1/gaiad-v6.0.0-rc1-linux-arm64","darwin/amd64":"https://github.com/cosmos/gaia/releases/download/v6.0.0-rc1/gaiad-v6.0.0-rc1-darwin-amd64"}}' \
--summary "upgrade to Vega" \
--gas 400000 \
--from user \
--chain-id test \
--home test/val2 \
--node tcp://localhost:36657 \
--yesStore a link to a file that contains all information in the above format (e.g. if you want to specify lots of binaries, changelog info, etc. without filling up the blockchain). For example:
https://example.com/testnet-1001-info.json?checksum=sha256:deaaa99fda9407c4dbe1d04bd49bab0cc3c1dd76fa392cd55a9425be074af01e
When cosmovisor
is triggered to download the new binary, cosmovisor
will parse the "binaries"
field, download the new binary with go-getter, and unpack the new binary in the upgrades/<name>
folder so that it can be run as if it was installed manually.
Note that for this mechanism to provide strong security guarantees, all URLs should include a SHA 256/512 checksum. This ensures that no false binary is run, even if someone hacks the server or hijacks the DNS. go-getter
will always ensure the downloaded file matches the checksum if it is provided. go-getter
will also handle unpacking archives into directories (in this case the download link should point to a zip
file of all data in the bin
directory).
To properly create a sha256 checksum on linux, you can use the sha256sum
utility. For example:
sha256sum ./testdata/repo/zip_directory/autod.zip
The result will look something like the following: 29139e1381b8177aec909fab9a75d11381cab5adf7d3af0c05ff1c9c117743a7
.
You can also use sha512sum
if you would prefer to use longer hashes, or md5sum
if you would prefer to use broken hashes. Whichever you choose, make sure to set the hash algorithm properly in the checksum argument to the URL.
Example: SimApp Upgrade
The following instructions provide a demonstration of cosmovisor
using the simulation application (simapp
) shipped with the Cosmos SDK's source code. The following commands are to be run from within the cosmos-sdk
repository.
Chain Setup
Let's create a new chain using the v0.44
version of simapp (the Cosmos SDK demo app):
git checkout v0.44.6
make build
Clean ~/.simapp
(never do this in a production environment):
./build/simd unsafe-reset-all
Set up app config:
./build/simd config set client chain-id test
./build/simd config set client keyring-backend test
./build/simd config set client broadcast-mode sync
Initialize the node and overwrite any previous genesis file (never do this in a production environment):
./build/simd init test --chain-id test --overwrite
Set the minimum gas price to 0stake
in ~/.simapp/config/app.toml
:
minimum-gas-prices = "0stake"
For the sake of this demonstration, amend voting_period
in genesis.json
to a reduced time of 20 seconds (20s
):
cat <<< $(jq '.app_state.gov.voting_params.voting_period = "20s"' $HOME/.simapp/config/genesis.json) > $HOME/.simapp/config/genesis.json
Create a validator, and setup genesis transaction:
./build/simd keys add validator
./build/simd genesis add-genesis-account validator 1000000000stake --keyring-backend test
./build/simd genesis gentx validator 1000000stake --chain-id test
./build/simd genesis collect-gentxs
Prepare Cosmovisor and Start the Chain
Set the required environment variables:
export DAEMON_NAME=simd
export DAEMON_HOME=$HOME/.simapp
Set the optional environment variable to trigger an automatic app restart:
export DAEMON_RESTART_AFTER_UPGRADE=true
Create the folder for the genesis binary and copy the simd
binary:
mkdir -p $DAEMON_HOME/cosmovisor/genesis/bin
cp ./build/simd $DAEMON_HOME/cosmovisor/genesis/bin
Now you can run cosmovisor with simapp v0.44:
cosmovisor run start
Update App
Update app to the latest version (e.g. v0.45).
Next, we can add a migration - which is defined using x/upgrade
upgrade plan (you may refer to a past version if you are using an older Cosmos SDK release). In a migration we can do any deterministic state change.
Build the new version simd
binary:
make build
Add the new simd
binary and the upgrade name:
The migration name must match the one defined in the migration plan.
mkdir -p $DAEMON_HOME/cosmovisor/upgrades/test1/bin
cp ./build/simd $DAEMON_HOME/cosmovisor/upgrades/test1/bin
Open a new terminal window and submit an upgrade proposal along with a deposit and a vote (these commands must be run within 20 seconds of each other):
<= v0.45:
./build/simd tx gov submit-proposal software-upgrade test1 --title upgrade --description upgrade --upgrade-height 200 --from validator --yes
./build/simd tx gov deposit 1 10000000stake --from validator --yes
./build/simd tx gov vote 1 yes --from validator --yes
v0.46, v0.47:
./build/simd tx gov submit-legacy-proposal software-upgrade test1 --title upgrade --description upgrade --upgrade-height 200 --from validator --yes
./build/simd tx gov deposit 1 10000000stake --from validator --yes
./build/simd tx gov vote 1 yes --from validator --yes
>= v0.50+:
./build/simd tx upgrade software-upgrade test1 --title upgrade --summary upgrade --upgrade-height 200 --from validator --yes
./build/simd tx gov deposit 1 10000000stake --from validator --yes
./build/simd tx gov vote 1 yes --from validator --yes
The upgrade will occur automatically at height 200. Note: you may need to change the upgrade height in the snippet above if your test play takes more time.