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@golem-sdk/task-executor
Advanced tools
A golem-js based library allowing running computation tasks on Golem, designed for batch map-reduce like scenarios
TaskExecutor facilitates building of applications that utilize the computational power of the Golem Network in a transparent and efficient manner. It is a @golem-sdk/golem-js based library allowing running computation tasks, designed for batch map-reduce like scenarios.
With TaskExecutor, developers can focus on implementing their computational tasks without delving into the details of communicating with the Golem Network or managing modules such as payments or market.
To use task-executor
, it is necessary to have yagna installed, with a minimum version requirement of v0.13.2. Yagna is a
service that communicates and performs operations on the Golem Network, upon your requests via the SDK. You
can follow these instructions
to set it up.
In order to get started and on Golem Network and obtain test GLM tokens (tGLM
) that will allow you to build on the
test network, follow these steps:
# Join the network as a requestor
curl -sSf https://join.golem.network/as-requestor | bash -
# Start the golem node on your machine,
# you can use `daemonize` to run this in background
yagna service run
# IN SEPARATE TERMINAL (if not daemonized)
# Initialize your requestor
yagna payment init --sender --network goerli
# Request funds on the test network
yagna payment fund --network goerli
# Check the status of the funds
yagna payment status --network goerli
app-key
to use with TaskExecutorIf you don't have any app-keys available from yagna app-key list
, go ahead and create one with the command below.
You will need this key in order to communicate with yagna
from your application via golem-js
.You can set it
as YAGNA_APPKEY
environment variable.
yagna app-key create my-golem-app
@golem-sdk/task-executor
is available as a NPM package.
npm install @golem-sdk/task-executor
To build a library available to the Node.js environment:
npm run build
This will generate production code in the dist/
directory ready to be used in your Node.js or browser applications.
import { TaskExecutor, WorkContext } from "@golem-sdk/task-executor";
(async function main() {
const executor = await TaskExecutor.create("golem/alpine:latest");
try {
const task = async (ctx: WorkContext) => (await ctx.run("echo 'Hello World'")).stdout?.toString();
const result = await executor.run(task);
console.log("Result:", result);
} catch (error) {
console.error("Computation failed:", error);
} finally {
await executor.shutdown();
}
})();
The examples directory in the repository contains various usage patterns for the TaskExecutor. You can browse through them and learn about the recommended practices. All examples are automatically tested during our release process.
In case you find an issue with the examples, feel free to submit an issue report to the repository.
You can find even more examples and tutorials in the JavaScript API section of the Golem Network Docs.
The library is designed to work with LTS versions of Node (starting from 18) and with browsers.
The Golem Network provides an open marketplace where anyone can join as a Provider and supply the network with their computing power. In return for their service, they are billing Requestors (users of this library) according to the pricing that they define.
As a Requestor, you might want to:
To make this easy, we provided you with a set of predefined market proposal filters, which you can combine to implement your own market strategy (described below).
When you obtain resources from the Provider and start using them, the billing cycle will start immediately. Since reliable service and payments are important for all actors in the Golem Network, the library makes use of the mid-agreement payments model and implements best practices for the market, which include:
By default, the library will:
You can learn more about the mid-agreement and other payment models from the official docs.
These values are defaults and can be influenced by the following settings:
DemandOptions.expirationSec
DemandOptions.debitNotesAcceptanceTimeoutSec
DemandOptions.midAgreementPaymentTimeoutSec
If you're using TaskExecutor
to run tasks on Golem, you can pass them as part of the configuration object accepted
by TaskExecutor.create
.
import { TaskExecutor, ProposalFilterFactory } from "@golem-sdk/task-executor";
const executor = await TaskExecutor.create({
// What do you want to run
package: "golem/alpine:3.18.2",
// How much you wish to spend
budget: 2.0,
proposalFilter: ProposalFilterFactory.limitPriceFilter({
start: 1.0,
cpuPerSec: 1.0 / 3600,
envPerSec: 1.0 / 3600,
}),
// Where you want to spend
payment: {
network: "polygon",
},
});
To learn more about other filters, please check the API reference of the market/strategy module
The getHealthyProvidersWhiteList
helper will provide you with a list of Provider ID's that were checked with basic
health-checks. Using this whitelist will increase the chance of working with a reliable provider. Please note, that you
can also build up your own list of favourite providers and use it in a similar fashion.
import { MarketHelpers, ProposalFilterFactory, TaskExecutor } from "@golem-sdk/task-executor";
// Collect the whitelist
const verifiedProviders = await MarketHelpers.getHealthyProvidersWhiteList();
// Prepare the whitelist filter
const whiteList = ProposalFilterFactory.allowProvidersById(verifiedProviders);
// Prepare the price filter
const acceptablePrice = ProposalFilterFactory.limitPriceFilter({
start: 1.0,
cpuPerSec: 1.0 / 3600,
envPerSec: 1.0 / 3600,
});
const executor = await TaskExecutor.create({
// What do you want to run
package: "golem/alpine:3.18.2",
// How much you wish to spend
budget: 2.0,
proposalFilter: (proposal) => acceptablePrice(proposal) && whiteList(proposal),
// Where you want to spend
payment: {
network: "polygon",
},
});
The library uses the debug package to provide debug logs. To enable them, set the DEBUG
environment variable to task-executor:*
to see the related log lines. For more information, please refer to the debug package documentation.
Read the dedicated testing documentation to learn more about how to run tests of the library.
It is recommended to run unit tests and static code analysis before committing changes.
npm run lint
# and
npm run format
FAQs
A golem-js based library allowing running computation tasks on Golem, designed for batch map-reduce like scenarios
The npm package @golem-sdk/task-executor receives a total of 28 weekly downloads. As such, @golem-sdk/task-executor popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @golem-sdk/task-executor demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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