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Anryton CLI

anryd is the all-in-one command-line interface (CLI). It allows you to run an Anryton node, manage wallets and interact with the Anryton network through queries and transactions. This introduction will explain how to install the anryd binary onto your system and guide you through some simple examples how to use anryd.

Prerequisites

Go

Anryton is built using Go version 1.20+. Check your version with:

go version

Once you have installed the right version, confirm that your GOPATH is correctly configured by running the following command and adding it to your shell startup script:

export PATH=$PATH:$(go env GOPATH)/bin

jq

Anryton scripts are using jq version 1.6+. Check your version with:

jq --version

Installation

You can download the latest binaries from the repo and install them, or you can build and install the anryd binaries from source or using Docker.

Download the binaries

  • Go to the releases section of the repository
  • Choose the desired release or pre-release you want to install on your machine
  • Select and download from the Assets dropdown the corresponding tar or zip file for your OS
  • Extract the files. The anryd binaries is located in the bin directory of the extrated files
  • Add the anryd binaries to your path, e.g. you can move it to $(go env GOPATH)/bin

After installation is done, check that the anryd binaries have been successfully installed:

anryd version

Build From Source

Clone and build the Anryton from source using git. The <tag> refers to a release tag on Github. Check the latest Anryton version on the releases section of the repository:

git clone https://github.com/evmos/evmos.git
cd evmos
git fetch
git checkout <tag>
make install

After installation is done, check that the anryd binaries have been successfully installed:

anryd version
info

If the anryd: command not found error message is returned, confirm that you have configured Go correctly.

Docker

When it comes to using Docker with Anryton, there are two options available: Build a binary of the Anryton daemon inside a dockerized build environment or build a Docker image, that can be used to spin up individual containers running the Anryton binary. For information on how to achieve this, proceed to the dedicated page on working with Docker.

Run an Anryton node

To become familiar with Anryton, you can run a local blockchain node that produces blocks and exposes EVM and Cosmos endpoints. This allows you to deploy and interact with smart contracts locally or test core protocol functionality.

Run the local node by executing the local_node.sh script in the base directory of the repository:

./local_node.sh

The script stores the node configuration including the local default endpoints under ~/.tmp-anryd/config/config.toml. If you have previously run the script, the script allows you to overwrite the existing configuration and start a new local node.

Once your node is running you will see it validating and producing blocks in your local Anryton blockchain:

12:59PM INF executed block height=1 module=state num_invalid_txs=0 num_valid_txs=0 server=node
# ...
1:00PM INF indexed block exents height=7 module=txindex server=node

For more information on how to customize a local node, head over to the Single Node page.

Using anryd

After installing the anryd binary, you can run commands using:

anryd [command]

There is also a -h, --help command available

anryd -h

It is possible to maintain multiple node configurations at the same time. To specify a configuration use the --home flag. In the following examples we will be using the default config for a local node, located at ~/.tmp-anryd.

Manage wallets

You can manage your wallets using the anryd binary to store private keys and sign transactions over CLI. To view all keys use:

anryd keys list \
--home ~/.tmp-anryd \
--keyring-backend test

# Example Output:
# - address: evmos19xnmslvl0pcmydu4m52h2gf0std5ee5pfgpyuf
# name: dev0
# pubkey: '{"@type":"/ethermint.crypto.v1.ethsecp256k1.PubKey","key":"AzKouyoUL0UUS1qRUZdqyVsTPkCAFWwxx3+BTOw36nKp"}'
# type: local

You can generate a new key/mnemonic with a $NAME with:

anryd keys add [name] \
--home ~/.tmp-anryd \
--keyring-backend test

To export your evmos key as an Ethereum private key (for use with Metamask for example):

anryd keys unsafe-export-eth-key [name] \
--home ~/.tmp-anryd \
--keyring-backend test

For more about the available key commands, use the --help flag

anryd keys -h
tip

For more information about the Keyring and its backend options, click here.

Interact with a Network

You can use anryd to query information or submit transactions on the blockchain. Queries and transactions are requests that you send to an Anryton node through the Tendermint RPC.

tip

👉 To use the CLI, you will need to provide a Tendermint RPC address for the --node flag. Look for a publicly available addresses for mainnet in the Networks page.

Set Network Config

In the local setup the node is set to tcp://localhost:26657. You can view your node configuration with:

anryd config \
--home ~/.tmp-anryd
# Example Output
# {
# "chain-id": "evmos_9000-1",
# "keyring-backend": "test",
# "output": "text",
# "node": "tcp://localhost:26657",
# "broadcast-mode": "sync"
# }

You can set your node configuration to send requests to a different network by changing the endpoint with:

anryd config node [tendermint-rpc-endpoint] \
--home ~/.tmp-anryd

Learn about more node configurations here.

Queries

You can query information on the blockchain using anryd query (short anryd q). To view the account balances by its address stored in the bank module, use:

anryd q bank balances [adress] \
--home ~/.tmp-anryd
# # Example Output:
# balances:
# - amount: "99999000000000000000002500"
# denom: aevmos

To view other available query commands, use:

# for all Queries
anryd q

# for querying commands in the bank module
anryd q bank

Transactions

You can submit transactions to the network using anryd tx. This creates, signs and broadcasts a tx in one command. To send tokens from an account in the keyring to another address with the bank module, use:

anryd tx bank send [from_key_or_address] [to_address] [amount] \
--home ~/.tmp-anryd \
--fees 50000000000aevmos \
-b block

# Example Output:
# ...
# txhash: 7BA2618295B789CC24BB13E654D9187CDD264F61FC446EB756EAC07AF3E7C40A

To view other available transaction commands, use:

# for all transaction commands
anryd tx

# for Bank transaction subcommands
anryd tx bank

Now that you've learned the basics of how to run and interact with an Anryton network, head over to configurations for futher customization.