6.0 KiB
Build and run Haveno
These are the steps needed to build and run Haveno. You can test it locally or on our test network using the official Haveno repository.
Note
Trying to use Haveno on mainnet?
The official Haveno repository does not operate or endorse any mainnet network.
Find a third party network and use their installer or build their repository. Alternatively create your own mainnet network.
Install dependencies
On Ubuntu: sudo apt install make wget git
On Windows, first install MSYS2:
-
Install MSYS2.
-
Start MSYS2 MINGW64 or MSYS MINGW32 depending on your system. Use MSYS2 for all commands throughout this document.
-
Update pacman:
pacman -Syy
-
Install dependencies. During installation, use default=all by leaving the input blank and pressing enter.
64-bit:
pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-toolchain make mingw-w64-x86_64-cmake git
32-bit:
pacman -S mingw-w64-i686-toolchain make mingw-w64-i686-cmake git
On all platforms, install Java JDK 21:
curl -s "https://get.sdkman.io" | bash
sdk install java 21.0.2.fx-librca
Build Haveno
If it's the first time you are building Haveno, run the following commands to download the repository, the needed dependencies, and build the latest release. If using a third party network, replace the repository URL with theirs:
git clone https://github.com/haveno-dex/haveno.git
cd haveno
git checkout master
make
If you only want to quickly build the binaries, use make skip-tests
instead of make
. It will skip the tests and increase the build speed drastically.
If you are updating from a previous version, run from the root of the repository:
git checkout master
git pull
make clean && make
Run Haveno
Note
When you run Haveno, your application folder will be installed to:
- Linux:
~/.local/share/Haveno/
- macOS:
~/Library/Application\ Support/Haveno/
- Windows:
~\AppData\Roaming\Haveno\
Mainnet
If you are building a third party repository which supports mainnet, you can start Haveno with:
make haveno-desktop-mainnet
Join the public test network
If you want to try Haveno in a live setup, launch a Haveno instance that will connect to other peers on our public test environment, which runs on Monero's stagenet (you won't need to download the blockchain locally). You'll be able to make test trades with other users and have a preview of Haveno's trade protocol in action. Note that development is very much ongoing. Things are slow and might break.
Steps:
- Run
make user1-desktop-stagenet
to start the application. - Click on the "Funds" tab in the top menu and copy the generated XMR address.
- Go to the stagenet faucet and paste the address above in the "Get XMR" field. Submit and see the stagenet coins being sent to your Haveno instance.
- While you wait the 10 confirmations (20 minutes) needed for your funds to be spendable, create a fiat account by clicking on "Account" in the top menu, select the "National currency accounts" tab, then add a new account. For simplicity, we suggest to test using a Revolut account with a random ID.
- Now pick up an existing offer or open a new one. Fund your trade and wait 10 blocks for your deposit to be unlocked.
- Now if you are taking a trade you'll be asked to confirm you have sent the payment outside Haveno. Confirm in the app and wait for the confirmation of received payment from the other trader.
- Once the other trader confirms, deposits are sent back to the owners and the trade is complete.
Run a local test network
If you are a developer who wants to test Haveno in a more controlled way, follow the next steps to build a local test environment.
Run a local XMR testnet
- In a new terminal window run
make monerod1-local
- In a new terminal window run
make monerod2-local
- Now mine the first 150 blocks to a random address before using, so wallets only use the latest output type. Run in one of the terminal windows opened above:
start_mining 9tsUiG9bwcU7oTbAdBwBk2PzxFtysge5qcEsHEpetmEKgerHQa1fDqH7a4FiquZmms7yM22jdifVAD7jAb2e63GSJMuhY75 1
Deploy
If you are a screen user, simply run make deploy-screen
. This command will open all needed Haveno instances (seednode, user1, user2, arbitrator) using screen.
If you are a tmux user, simply run make deploy-tmux
. This command will open all needed Haveno instances (seednode, user1, user2, arbitrator) using tmux and attach them to splitted view.
If you don't use screen or tmux, open 4 terminal windows and run in each one of them:
make seednode-local
make user1-desktop-local
or if you want to run user1 as a daemon:make user1-daemon-local
make user2-desktop-local
or if you want to run user2 as a daemon:make user2-daemon-local
make arbitrator-desktop-local
or if you want to run arbitrator as a daemon:make arbitrator-daemon-local
- Optionally run a local price node
If this is the first time launching the arbitrator desktop application, register the arbitrator after the interface opens. Go to the Account tab and press cmd+r
. Confirm the registration of the arbitrator.
Fund your wallets
When running user1 and user2, you'll see a Monero address prompted in the terminal. Send test XMR to the addresses of both user1 and user2 to be able to initiate a trade.
You can fund the two wallets by mining some test XMR coins to those addresses. To do so, open a terminal where you ran monerod and run: start_mining ADDRESS 1
.
monerod will start mining local testnet coins on your device using one thread. Replace ADDRESS
with the address of user1 first, and then user2's. Run stop_mining
to stop mining.
Start testing
You are all set. Now that everything is running and your wallets are funded, you can create test trades between user1 and user2. Remember to mine a few blocks after opening and accepting the test trade so the transaction will be confirmed.