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DFX

Getting Started

dfx is the command-line interface for managing your Internet Computer project and the best place to start.

Installing

You can install dfx a few different ways.

via curl (recommended)

sh -ci "$(curl -fsSL https://internetcomputer.org/install.sh)"

This command will install a binary compatible with your operating system, and add it to /usr/local/bin.

via GitHub Releases

Find a release for your architecture here.

Getting Help

Once dfx is installed, get acquainted with its capabilities by entering.

dfx help

Contributing to the DFINITY SDK

See our contributing guidelines here.

Building DFX

Building dfx is very simple:

cargo build

Release Process

DFX is released in two steps:

  1. Publishing a new DFX release.

  2. Publishing a new manifest.json and install.sh to instruct the installer to actually download and install the new DFX release.

Publishing DFX

  1. The release manager makes sure the dfx stable branch points to the revision that should be released and that the revision is tagged with a version (like 0.5.6).

  2. The sdk-release jobset on Hydra tracks the stable branch and starts evaluating shortly after stable advances.

  3. As you can see it only has the single job publish.dfx which is defined here in terms of the dfx job. Note that the publish.dfx job only exists when the revision has a proper version tag. This prevents publishing of untagged revisions.

  4. Our CD system running at deployer.dfinity.systems is configured with the publish-sdk-dfx-release job. It will monitor the aforementioned publish.dfx job for new builds, whenever there's a new build it will download the output (the CD script) and execute it.

  5. As you can see the script also sends a message to the #build-notifications Slack channel so you can see when and if the SDK has been published.

Publishing manifest.json and install.sh

After the DFX has been released it's available for download but the install script at https://sdk.dfinity.org/install.sh won't immediately install it. To make sure the installer actually downloads and installs the new DFX release the manifest.json file at https://sdk.dfinity.org/manifest.json has to set its tags.latest field to the new version. The following explains how to do that.

  1. Edit the public/manifest.json file such that it points to the new DFX version and make sure this is merged in master.

  2. Similarly to releasing the DFX there's a install-sh job that builds a CD script for publishing the manifest.json and install.sh to our CDN.

  3. This job is built on the sdk jobset which tracks the master branch.

  4. deployer.dfinity.systems is configured with the publish-sdk-install-sh job which will monitor the aforementioned publish.install-sh.x86_64-linux job for new builds, whenever there's a new build it will download the output (the CD script) and execute it.

Troubleshooting

This section provides solutions to problems you might encounter when using dfx

Project Reset

This command will remove the build directory and restart your replica:

dfx stop && dfx start --clean --background

Using Internet Identity Locally

You can deploy the Internet Identity canister into your replica alongside your project by cloning https://github.com/dfinity/internet-identity. From the internet-identity directory, run the following command:

II_ENV=development dfx deploy --no-wallet --argument '(null)'

There are more notes at https://github.com/dfinity/internet-identity#running-locally that may be helpful.

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