solana/docs/src/getstarted/local.md

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Local Development Quickstart This quickstart guide will demonstrate how to quickly install and setup your local Solana development environment.
rust
cargo
toml
program
tutorial
intro to solana development
blockchain developer
blockchain tutorial
web3 developer

This quickstart guide will demonstrate how to quickly install and setup your local development environment, getting you ready to start developing and deploying Solana programs to the blockchain.

What you will learn

  • How to install the Solana CLI locally
  • How to setup a localhost Solana cluster/validator
  • How to create a Solana wallet for developing
  • How to airdrop SOL tokens for your wallet

Install the Solana CLI

To interact with the Solana clusters from your terminal, install the Solana CLI tool suite on your local system:

sh -c "$(curl -sSfL https://release.solana.com/stable/install)"

Setup a localhost blockchain cluster

The Solana CLI comes with the test validator built in. This command line tool will allow you to run a full blockchain cluster on your machine.

solana-test-validator

PRO TIP: Run the Solana test validator in a new/separate terminal window that will remain open. The command line program must remain running for your localhost cluster to remain online and ready for action.

Configure your Solana CLI to use your localhost validator for all your future terminal commands:

solana config set --url localhost

At any time, you can view your current Solana CLI configuration settings:

solana config get

Create a file system wallet

To deploy a program with Solana CLI, you will need a Solana wallet with SOL tokens to pay for the cost of transactions.

Let's create a simple file system wallet for testing:

solana-keygen new

By default, the solana-keygen command will create a new file system wallet located at ~/.config/solana/id.json. You can manually specify the output file location using the --outfile /path option.

NOTE: If you already have a file system wallet saved at the default location, this command will NOT override it (unless you explicitly force override using the --force flag).

Set your new wallet as default

With your new file system wallet created, you must tell the Solana CLI to use this wallet to deploy and take ownership of your on chain program:

solana config set -k ~/.config/solana/id.json

Airdrop SOL tokens to your wallet

Once your new wallet is set as the default, you can request a free airdrop of SOL tokens to it:

solana airdrop 2

NOTE: The solana airdrop command has a limit of how many SOL tokens can be requested per airdrop for each cluster (localhost, testnet, or devent). If your airdrop transaction fails, lower your airdrop request quantity and try again.

You can check your current wallet's SOL balance any time:

solana balance

Next steps

See the links below to learn more about writing Rust based Solana programs: