The Waku Network
The Waku Network is a shared p2p messaging network that is open-access, useful for generalized messaging, privacy-preserving, scalable and accessible even to resource-restricted devices. Some of the most prominent features include:
- DoS/spam protection with privacy-preserving Rate-Limiting Nullifiers.
- Scalability by sharding traffic into 8 pubsub topics.
- Automatic shard selection based on content topic.
- Services for resource-restricted nodes, including historical message storage and retrieval, filtering, etc.
If you want to learn more about the Waku Network, The Waku Network: Technical Overview article provides an in-depth look under the hood.
Why join the Waku network?
- Applications or projects can build decentralized communication components on this network, gaining from the fault-tolerance of shared infrastructure, the out-of-the-box censorship resistance of a p2p network and the privacy-preservation of Waku protocols.
- Supporters of public goods and decentralized infrastructure can run their nodes to support the network.
- We are also working on incentivisation vectors to encourage more node operators to provide services to the network.
Prerequisites
- Ethereum Sepolia HTTPS endpoint, which can be yours or from a third party. Have a look at the Access a Sepolia Node Using Infura guide for a free Infura option. This node is used to interact with the on-chain RLN membership contract.
- Wallet with Sepolia Ethereum (less than 0.1 Sepolia ETH). Have a look at the Create a Sepolia Ethereum Wallet and Obtain Sepolia Ethereum from Faucet guides to get a Sepolia wallet and fund it with some Sepolia Ethereum. This wallet is required to register RLN membership, which is essential for publishing on the network.
Running a Waku network node
Have a look at the Run Nwaku with Docker Compose guide for instructions on running a nwaku node in the Waku Network. Use the Sepolia node and wallet you obtained above.
The public Waku Network replaces the previous experimental shared routing layer based on a default pubsub topic (/waku/2/default-waku/proto
). If your project currently uses this or any other shared pubsub topics, we encourage you to migrate to the public Waku Network with built-in DoS protection, scalability, and reasonable bandwidth usage.