This document describes the lifecycle of a transaction from creation to committed state changes. Transaction definition is described in a [different doc](../core/transactions.md). The transaction will be referred to as `Tx`. {synopsis}
One of the main application interfaces is the command-line interface. The transaction `Tx` can be created by the user inputting a command in the following format from the [command-line](../interfaces/cli.md), providing the type of transaction in `[command]`, arguments in `[args]`, and configurations such as gas prices in `[flags]`:
This command will automatically **create** the transaction, **sign** it using the account's private key, and **broadcast** it to the specified peer node.
There are several required and optional flags for transaction creation. The `--from` flag specifies which [account](./accounts.md) the transaction is originating from. For example, if the transaction is sending coins, the funds will be drawn from the specified `from` address.
-`--gas` refers to how much [gas](./gas-fees.md), which represents computational resources, `Tx` consumes. Gas is dependent on the transaction and is not precisely calculated until execution, but can be estimated by providing `auto` as the value for `--gas`.
-`--gas-adjustment` (optional) can be used to scale `gas` up in order to avoid underestimating. For example, users can specify their gas adjustment as 1.5 to use 1.5 times the estimated gas.
-`--gas-prices` specifies how much the user is willing pay per unit of gas, which can be one or multiple denominations of tokens. For example, `--gas-prices=0.025uatom, 0.025upho` means the user is willing to pay 0.025uatom AND 0.025upho per unit of gas.
-`--fees` specifies how much in fees the user is willing to pay in total.
-`--timeout-height` specifies a block timeout height to prevent the tx from being committed past a certain height.
The ultimate value of the fees paid is equal to the gas multiplied by the gas prices. In other words, `fees = ceil(gas * gasPrices)`. Thus, since fees can be calculated using gas prices and vice versa, the users specify only one of the two.
Later, validators decide whether or not to include the transaction in their block by comparing the given or calculated `gas-prices` to their local `min-gas-prices`. `Tx` will be rejected if its `gas-prices` is not high enough, so users are incentivized to pay more.
#### CLI Example
Users of application `app` can enter the following command into their CLI to generate a transaction to send 1000uatom from a `senderAddress` to a `recipientAddress`. It specifies how much gas they are willing to pay: an automatic estimate scaled up by 1.5 times, with a gas price of 0.025uatom per unit gas.
The command-line is an easy way to interact with an application, but `Tx` can also be created using a [REST interface](../interfaces/rest.md) or some other entrypoint defined by the application developer. From the user's perspective, the interaction depends on the web interface or wallet they are using (e.g. creating `Tx` using [Lunie.io](https://lunie.io/#/) and signing it with a Ledger Nano S).
`CheckTx`, to the application layer to check for validity, and receives an `abci.ResponseCheckTx`. If the `Tx` passes the checks, it is held in the nodes'
[**Mempool**](https://tendermint.com/docs/tendermint-core/mempool.html#mempool), an in-memory pool of transactions unique to each node) pending inclusion in a block - honest nodes will discard `Tx` if it is found to be invalid. Prior to consensus, nodes continuously check incoming transactions and gossip them to their peers.
When `Tx` is received by the application from the underlying consensus engine (e.g. Tendermint), it is still in its [encoded](../core/encoding.md) `[]byte` form and needs to be unmarshaled in order to be processed. Then, the [`runTx`](../core/baseapp.md#runtx-and-runmsgs) function is called to run in `runTxModeCheck` mode, meaning the function will run all checks but exit before executing messages and writing state changes.
[`Message`s](../core/transactions.md#messages) are extracted from `Tx` and `ValidateBasic`, a method of the `Msg` interface implemented by the module developer, is run for each one. It should include basic **stateless** sanity checks. For example, if the message is to send coins from one address to another, `ValidateBasic` likely checks for nonempty addresses and a nonnegative coin amount, but does not require knowledge of state such as account balance of an address.
The [`AnteHandler`](../basics/gas-fees.md#antehandler), which is technically optional but should be defined for each application, is run. A deep copy of the internal state, `checkState`, is made and the defined `AnteHandler` performs limited checks specified for the transaction type. Using a copy allows the handler to do stateful checks for `Tx` without modifying the last committed state, and revert back to the original if the execution fails.
For example, the [`auth`](https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/tree/master/x/auth/spec) module `AnteHandler` checks and increments sequence numbers, checks signatures and account numbers, and deducts fees from the first signer of the transaction - all state changes are made using the `checkState`.
The [`Context`](../core/context.md), which keeps a `GasMeter` that will track how much gas has been used during the execution of `Tx`, is initialized. The user-provided amount of gas for `Tx` is known as `GasWanted`. If `GasConsumed`, the amount of gas consumed so during execution, ever exceeds `GasWanted`, the execution will stop and the changes made to the cached copy of the state won't be committed. Otherwise, `CheckTx` sets `GasUsed` equal to `GasConsumed` and returns it in the result. After calculating the gas and fee values, validator-nodes check that the user-specified `gas-prices` is less than their locally defined `min-gas-prices`.
- **Decoding:** Since `DeliverTx` is an ABCI call, `Tx` is received in the encoded `[]byte` form.
Nodes first unmarshal the transaction, using the [`TxConfig`](./app-anatomy#register-codec) defined in the app, then call `runTx` in `runTxModeDeliver`, which is very similar to `CheckTx` but also executes and writes state changes.
When they receive enough validator votes (2/3+ _precommits_ weighted by voting power), full nodes commit to a new block to be added to the blockchain and