After cloning Fabric, you can can test fabric binaries using a sample configuration. Using the binaries and sample configuration makes it simple and quick to iteratively make code changes, rebuild fabric, and test your changes from an end-to-end consumer perspective.
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peer chaincode invoke -o 127.0.0.1:7050 -C mychannel -n marbles -c '{"Args":["initMarble","marble1","blue","35","tom"]}' --waitForEvent
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peer chaincode invoke -o 127.0.0.1:7050 -C mychannel -n marbles -c '{"Args":["transferMarble","marble1","jerry"]}' --waitForEvent
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Cleanup data, chaincode containers and images
rm -r rf /var/hyperledger/production/
rm marbles.tar.gz
rm mychannel.*
rm sampleconfig/genesisblock
docker rm -f $(docker ps -aq)
docker rmi -f $(docker images -q --filter=reference='*dev*')
The CLI commands can be scripted or copy/pasted to expedite execution:
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peer chaincode install -n marbles -p github.com/hyperledger/fabric/integration/chaincode/marbles/cmd-v 1
peer chaincode instantiate -C mychannel -n marbles -c '{"Args":["init"]}' -v 1 -o 127.0.0.1:7050
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