`cosmovisor` is a small process manager for Cosmos SDK binaries that monitors the governance module via stdout for incoming chain upgrade proposals. If it sees a proposal that gets approved, it can be run manually or automatically to download the new binary, stop the current binary, run the migration script, replace the old node binary with the new one, and finally restart the node with the new genesis file.
All arguments passed to the `cosmovisor` program will be passed to the current daemon binary (as a subprocess). `cosmovisor` will return `/dev/stdout` and `/dev/stderr` of the subprocess as its own. For this reason, `cosmovisor` cannot accept any command line arguments, nor print anything to output (unless it terminates unexpectedly before executing a binary).
*`DAEMON_HOME` is the location where the `cosmovisor/` directory is kept that contains the upgrade binaries (e.g. `$HOME/.gaiad`, `$HOME/.regend`, `$HOME/.simd`, etc.).
*`DAEMON_NAME` is the name of the binary itself (e.g. `gaiad`, `regend`, `simd`, etc.).
*`DAEMON_ALLOW_DOWNLOAD_BINARIES` (*optional*), if set to `true`, will enable auto-downloading of new binaries (for security reasons, this is intended for full nodes rather than validators). By default, `cosmovisor` will not auto-download new binaries.
*`DAEMON_RESTART_AFTER_UPGRADE` (*optional*), if set to `true`, will restart the subprocess with the same command line arguments and flags (but with the new binary) after a successful upgrade. By default, `cosmovisor` stops running after an upgrade and requires the system administrator to manually restart it. Note that `cosmovisor` will not auto-restart the subprocess if there was an error.
`$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:
Each version of the Cosmos SDK application is stored under either `genesis` or `upgrades/<name>`, which holds `bin/$DAEMON_NAME` along with any other needed files such as auxiliary client programs or libraries. `current` is a symbolic link to the currently active folder and `current/bin/$DAEMON_NAME` is the currently active binary.
Please note that `$DAEMON_HOME/cosmovisor` just stores the *binaries* and associated *program code*. The `cosmovisor` binary can be stored in any typical location (e.g. `/usr/local/bin`). The actual blockchain program will store its data under the default data directory (e.g. `$HOME/.gaiad`) which is independent of `$DAEMON_HOME`. `$DAEMON_HOME` can be set to any location. If you set `$DAEMON_HOME` to the default data directory, you will end up with a configuation like the following:
`cosmovisor` will set the `current` link to point to `genesis` at first start (when no `current` link exists) and will handle switching binaries at the correct points in time so that the system administrator can prepare days in advance and relax at upgrade time.
Note that blockchain applications that wish to support upgrades may package up a genesis `cosmovisor` tarball with this information, just as they prepare the genesis binary tarball. In fact, they may package up a tarball with all upgrades up to a current point so that the upgrades can be easily downloaded for others who wish to sync a fullnode from start.
The `DAEMON` specific code and operations (e.g. tendermint 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.
Generally, the system requires that the system administrator place all relevant binaries on the disk before the upgrade happens. However, for people who don't need such control and want an easier setup (maybe they are syncing a non-validating fullnode and want to do little maintenance), there is another option.
If you set `DAEMON_ALLOW_DOWNLOAD_BINARIES=true`, and no local binary can be found when an upgrade is triggered, `cosmovisor` will attempt to download and install the binary itself. The plan stored in the upgrade module has an info field for arbitrary JSON. This info is expected to be outputed on the halt log message. There are two valid formats to specify a download in such a message:
2. Store 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:
This file contained in the link will be retrieved by [go-getter](https://github.com/hashicorp/go-getter) and the `"binaries"` field will be parsed as above.
If there is no local binary, `DAEMON_ALLOW_DOWNLOAD_BINARIES=true`, and we can access a canonical url for the new binary, then the `cosmovisor` will download it with [go-getter](https://github.com/hashicorp/go-getter) and unpack it into the `upgrades/<name>` folder to be run as if we installed it 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:
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.
The following instructions provide a demonstration of `cosmovisor`'s integration with the `simd` application shipped along the Cosmos SDK's source code. The following commands are to be run from within the `cosmos-sdk` repository.
For the sake of this demonstration, amend `voting_params.voting_period` in `$HOME/.simapp/config/genesis.json` to a reduced time of ~5 minutes (`300s`) and then start `cosmosvisor`:
For the sake of this demonstration, we will hardcode a modification in `simapp` to simulate a code change. In `simapp/app.go`, find the line containing the `UpgradeKeeper` initialization. It should look like the following:
Now recompile a new binary and make a copy of it in `$DAEMON_HOME/cosmosvisor/upgrades/test1/bin` (you may need to run `export DAEMON_HOME=$HOME/.simapp` again if you are using a new window):