Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Title Page Copyright and Credits
Hands-On Blockchain with Hyperledger
Packt Upsell
Why subscribe? PacktPub.com
Foreword Contributors
About the authors Packt is searching for authors like you
Preface
Who this book is for What this book covers To get the most out of this book
Download the example code files Conventions used
Get in touch
Reviews
Blockchain - Enterprise and Industry Perspective
Defining the terms – what is a blockchain? Four core building blocks of blockchain framworks
Additional capabilities to consider
Fundamentals of the secure transaction processing protocol Where blockchain technology has been and where it's going
The great divide An economic model for blockchain delivery Learning as we go The promise of trust and accountability
Industries putting blockchain technology to work Blockchain in the enterprise
What applications are a good fit? How does the enterprise view blockchain? Litmus testing to justify the application of blockchain technology Integrating a blockchain infrastructure for the whole enterprise
Enterprise design principles
Business drivers and evolution Ensuring sustainability The principles that drive blockchain adoption
Business considerations for choosing a blockchain framework Technology considerations for choosing a blockchain framework
Identity management Scalability Enterprise security Development tooling Crypto-economic models Decentralization with systemic governance Enterprise support Use case-driven pluggability choices
Shared ledger technology Consensus Crypto algorithms and encryption technology Use case-driven pluggable choices
Enterprise integration and designing for extensibility Other considerations
Consensus, ACID property, and CAP
CAP ACID
Attestation – SSCs are signed and encrypted Use of HSMs
Summary
Exploring Hyperledger Fabric
Building on the foundations of open computing
Fundamentals of the Hyperledger project
The Linux Foundation  Hyperledger Open source and open standards
Hyperledger frameworks, tools, and building blocks
Hyperledger frameworks Hyperledger tools The building blocks of blockchain solutions
Hyperledger Fabric component design
Principles of Hyperledger design CAP Theorem Hyperledger Fabric reference architecture Hyperledger Fabric runtime architecture Strengths and advantages of componentized design
Hyperledger Fabric – the journey of a sample transaction Hyperledger Fabric explored
Components in a blockchain network Developer interaction
Understanding governance in business networks powered by blockchain
Governance structure and landscape Information technology governance Blockchain network governance Business network governance
Summary
Setting the Stage with a Business Scenario
Trading and letter of credit
The importance of trust in facilitating trade The letter of credit process today
Business scenario and use case
Overview Real-world processes Simplified and modified processes Terms used in trade finance and logistics Shared process workflow Shared assets and data Participants' roles and capabilities Benefits of blockchain applications over current real-world processes
Setting up the development environment
Designing a network Installing prerequisites Forking and cloning the trade-finance-logistics repository Creating and running a network configuration 
Preparing the network Generating network cryptographic material Generating channel artifacts Generating the configuration in one operation Composing a sample trade network
Network components' configuration files Launching a sample trade network Summary
Designing a Data and Transaction Model with Golang
Starting the chaincode development
Compiling and running chaincode Installing and instantiating chaincode Invoking chaincode
Creating a chaincode
The chaincode interface Setting up the chaincode file
The Invoke method
Access control
ABAC
Registering a user Enrolling a user Retrieving user identities and attributes in chaincode
Implementing chaincode functions
Defining chaincode assets Coding chaincode functions Creating an asset Reading and modifying an asset Main function
Testing chaincode
SHIM mocking
Testing the Init method Testing the Invoke method Running tests
Chaincode design topics
Composite keys Range queries State queries and CouchDB Indexes ReadSet and WriteSet Multiversion concurrency control
Logging output
Configuration Logging API SHIM logging levels Stdout and stderr Additional SHIM API functions
Summary
Exposing Network Assets and Transactions
Building a complete application
The nature of a Hyperledger Fabric application
Application and transaction stages Application model and architecture
Building the application Middleware – wrapping and driving the chaincode
Installation of tools and dependencies
Prerequisites for creating and running the middleware Installation of dependencies
Creating and running the middleware
Network configuration Endorsement policy User records Client registration and enrollment Creating a channel Joining a channel Installation of chaincode Instantiation of chaincode Invoking the chaincode Querying the chaincode Completing the loop – subscribing to blockchain events Putting it all together
User application – exporting the service and API
Applications User and session management Designing an API Creating and launching a service
User and session management Network administration Exercising the application User/client interaction modes
Testing the Middleware and Application
Integration with existing systems and processes
Design considerations Decentralization Process alignment
Message affinity
Service discovery Identity mapping Integration design pattern
Enterprise system integration Integrating with an existing system of record Integrating with an operational data store Microservice and event-driven architecture
Considering reliability, availability, and serviceability
Reliability Availability Serviceability
Summary
Business Networks
A busy world of purposeful activity
Why a language for business networks?
Defining business networks
A deeper idea
Introducing participants
Types of participant
Individual participants Organizational participants System or device participants
Participants are agents Participants and identity
Introducing assets
Assets flow between participants Tangible and intangible assets The structure of assets Ownership is a special relationship Asset life cycles Describing asset's life cycles in detail with transactions
Introducing transactions
Change as a fundamental concept Transaction definition and instance Implicit and explicit transactions The importance of contracts Signatures Smart contracts for multi-party transaction processing Digital transaction processing Initiating transactions Transaction history Transaction streams Separating transactions into different business networks Transaction history and asset states A business network as a history of transactions Regulators and business networks
Discussing events from the perspective of designing a business network using Composer
A universal concept Messages carry event notifications An example to illustrate event structure Events and transactions External versus explicit events Events cause participants to act Loosely coupled design The utility of events
Implementing a business network
The importance of de-materialization Blockchain benefits for B2B and EDI Participants that interact with the blockchain Accessing the business network with APIs A 3-tier systems architecture Hyperledger Fabric and Hyperledger Composer
Summary
A Business Network Example
The letter of credit sample
Installing the sample Running the sample
Step 1 – preparing to request a letter of credit Step 2 – requesting a letter of credit Step 3 – importing bank approval Step 4 – exporting bank approval Step 5 – letter received by exporter Step 6 – shipment Step 7 – goods received Step 8 – payment Step 9 – closing the letter Step 10 – Bob receives payment
Recapping the process
Analyzing the letter of credit process
The Playground Viewing the business network
A description of the business network
The participant descriptions The asset descriptions The transaction descriptions The event descriptions
A model of the business network
Namespaces Enumerations Asset definitions Participant definitions Concept definitions Transaction definitions Event definitions
Examining the live network
Examining a letter of credit instance Examining participant instances Examining transaction instances Submitting a new transaction to the network Understanding how transactions are implemented
Creating business network APIs
SWAGGER API definitions Querying the network using SWAGGER Testing the network from the command line Creating a new letter using SWAGGER Network cards and wallets Access-control lists
Summary
Agility in a Blockchain Network
Defining the promotion process
Smart contract considerations Integration layer considerations Promotion process overview
Configuring a continuous integration pipeline
Customizing the pipeline process
Local build Configuring Travis CI Customizing the pipeline using .travis.yml
Publishing our smart contract package
Configuring your Git repository
Setting the code owners of our smart contract
Sample content of the CODEOWNERS
Protecting the master branch Configuring Git for commit signing and validation
Configuring GPG on your local workstation
Testing the end-to-end process
Creating a new transaction
Pushing a commit to the master branch directly Submitting a pull request with an unsigned commit
Adding test cases
Submitting a pull request with a signed commit Adding the mergeAssets unit test
Releasing the new version
Updating the network
Notifying the consortium Upgrading the business network
Downloading a new version Updating the business network
Summary
Life in a Blockchain Network
Modifying or upgrading a Hyperledger Fabric application
Fabric blockchain and application life cycle Channel configuration updates
Prerequisites for adding a new organization to the network Generating network cryptographic material Generating channel artifacts Generating the configuration and network components in one operation Launching the network components for the new organization Updating the channel configuration Adding the new organization to the network
Smart contract and policy updates
Modification in chaincode logic Dependency upgrades in chaincode Ledger resetting Endorsement policy update Upgrading chaincode and endorsement policy on the trade channel
Platform upgrades
System monitoring and performance
Measurement and analytics What should we measure or understand in a Fabric application
Blockchain applications vis-à-vis traditional transaction processing applications Metrics for performance analysis
Measurement and data collection in a Fabric application
Collecting health and capacity information Profiling containers and applications Measuring application performance
Fabric engineering guidelines for performance
Platform performance characteristics System bottlenecks Configuration and tuning Ledger data availability and caching
Redundant committing peer Data caching
Fabric performance measurement and benchmarking
Summary
Governance, Necessary Evil of Regulated Industries
Decentralization and governance Exploring the business models
Blockchain benefits
Supply chain management Healthcare Finance – letter of credit
From benefits to profits Network business model
Founder-led network Consortium-based network Community-based network Hybrid models
Joint venture New corporation
Role of governance in a business network Business domains and processes
Membership life cycle Funding and fees Regulation Education Service life cycle Disputes
Governance structure
Centralized governance
Strategic governance Operational governance Tactical governance
Decentralized governance
Governance and the IT solution
Managed on-boarding
Summary
Hyperledger Fabric Security
Hyperledger Fabric design goals impacting security Hyperledger Fabric architecture 
Fabric CA or membership service provider Peer Smart contract or chaincode Ledger Private data Ordering service
Network bootstrap and governance – the first step towards security
Creating the network Adding new members Deploying and updating chaincode  Data model
Strong identities – the key to the security of the Hyperledger Fabric network
Bootstrapping Fabric CA
Register Default Fabric roles  Enroll
Which crypto protocols are allowed in certificate signing requests?
Revoking identities 
Practical considerations in managing users in Fabric CA
Chaincode security
How is chaincode shared with other endorsing peers? Who can install chaincode? Chaincode encryption Attribute-based access control
Pros and cons of attribute-based access control
Common threats and how Hyperledger Fabric mitigates them 
Transaction privacy in Hyperledger Fabric
Channels Private data Encrypting transaction data
Hyperledger Fabric and Quantum Computing General data protection regulation (GDPR) considerations Summary
The Future of Blockchain and the Challenges Ahead
Summary of key Hyperledger projects
Hyperledger framework – business blockchain technology Hyperledger tools
Hyperledger Composer
The road ahead for Blockchain
Addressing the divide – the enterprise blockchain and crypto asset-driven ecosystem Interoperability – understanding business service integration Scalability and economic viability of the blockchain solution 
Staying engaged with the Hyperledger blockchain  Summary
Other Books You May Enjoy
Leave a review - let other readers know what you think
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion