Connect to a testnet
Run Teku as a consensus client with any execution client on a testnet (for example Goerli or Sepolia.
If you're using Hyperledger Besu as an execution client, you can follow the Besu and Teku testnet tutorial.
Sepolia is a permissioned network and you can't run a validator client on it without requesting to become a validator first. You can connect your consensus client using the beacon node only, without any validator duties.
Prerequisites
- Teku installed.
- An execution client installed. For example, Besu.
1. Generate the shared secret
Run the following command:
openssl rand -hex 32 | tr -d "\n" > jwtsecret.hex
You will specify jwtsecret.hex
when starting Teku and the execution client. This is a shared JWT secret the clients use to authenticate each other when using the Engine API.
2. Generate validator keys
If you're running a beacon node only, skip to the next step.
If you're also running a validator client, create a test Ethereum address (you can do this in MetaMask). Fund this address with testnet ETH (32 ETH and gas fees for each validator) using a faucet. See the list of Goerli faucets or Sepolia faucets.
If you're unable to get ETH using the faucet, you can ask for help on the EthStaker Discord.
Generate validator keys for one or more validators using the Goerli Staking Launchpad.
Remember the passwords that you use to create the validator keys, because you need them to create the validator password files.
Create a password file for each validator key
For each validator key, create a text file containing the password to decrypt the key.
Teku allows you to specify individual keys and passwords in the command line, or you can specify directories from which to load keys and passwords. If specifying directories, password files must have the same name as the keys, but use the .txt
extension.
-
If the Launchpad creates a key named
keystore-m_12381_3600_0_0_0-1596485378.json
, then the password file must be namedkeystore-m_12381_3600_0_0_0-1596485378.txt
. -
The password file format follows
EIP-2335
requirements (UTF-8 encoded file, unicode normalization, and control code removal).
3. Start the execution client
Refer to your execution client documentation to configure and start the execution client. Make sure you specify the shared secret generated in step 1.
If you're using Besu, you can follow the Besu and Teku testnet tutorial.
4. Start Teku
Open a new terminal window.
Beacon node only
To run Teku as a beacon node only (without validator duties), run the following command or specify the options in a configuration file:
- Goerli
- Sepolia
teku \
--network=goerli \
--ee-endpoint=http://localhost:8551 \
--ee-jwt-secret-file=<path to jwtsecret.hex> \
--metrics-enabled=true \
--rest-api-enabled=true
teku \
--network=sepolia \
--ee-endpoint=http://localhost:8551 \
--ee-jwt-secret-file=<path to jwtsecret.hex> \
--metrics-enabled=true \
--rest-api-enabled=true
Specify the path to the jwtsecret.hex
file generated in step 1 using the --ee-jwt-secret-file
option.
You can modify the option values and add other command line options as needed.
Beacon node and validator client
You can run the Teku beacon node and validator client as a single process or as separate processes.
You can check your validator status by searching your Ethereum address on the Goerli Beacon Chain explorer. It may take up to multiple days for your validator to be activated and start proposing blocks.
You can also use Prometheus and Grafana to monitor your nodes.
Single process
To run the Teku beacon node and validator client in a single process, run the following command or specify the options in the configuration file:
- Goerli
- Sepolia
teku \
--network=goerli \
--ee-endpoint=http://localhost:8551 \
--ee-jwt-secret-file=<path to jwtsecret.hex> \
--metrics-enabled=true \
--rest-api-enabled=true \
--validators-proposer-default-fee-recipient=<ETH address> \
--validator-keys=<path to key file>:<path to password file>[,<path to key file>:<path to password file>,...]
Sepolia is a permissioned network and you can't run a validator client on it without requesting to become a validator first.
Specify:
- The path to the
jwtsecret.hex
file generated in step 1 using the--ee-jwt-secret-file
option. - An Ethereum address you own as the default fee recipient using the
--validators-proposer-default-fee-recipient
option. - The paths to the keystore
.json
file and password.txt
file created in step 2 for each validator using the--validator-keys
option. Separate the.json
and.txt
files with a colon, and separate entries for multiple validators with commas. Alternatively, specify paths to directories to load multiple keys and passwords from.
You can modify the option values and add other command line options as needed.
Separate processes
To run the Teku beacon node and validator client as separate processes, first start Teku as a beacon node only.
On a separate machine, run Teku using the validator-client
subcommand:
- Goerli
- Sepolia
teku validator-client \
--network=goerli \
--beacon-node-api-endpoint=<endpoint> \
--validator-keys=<path to key file>:<path to password file>[,<path to key file>:<path to password file>,...]
Sepolia is a permissioned network and you can't run a validator client on it without requesting to become a validator first.
Specify:
- The location of one or more beacon node API endpoints using the
--beacon-node-api-endpoint
option. - The paths to the keystore
.json
file and password.txt
file created in step 2 for each validator using the--validator-keys
option. Separate the.json
and.txt
files with a colon, and separate entries for multiple validators with commas. Alternatively, specify paths to directories to load multiple keys and passwords from.
5. Wait for the clients to sync
After starting the execution client and Teku, your node starts syncing and connecting to peers.
If you're running Teku as a beacon node only, you're all set. If you're also running Teku as a validator client, ensure your clients are fully synced before submitting your staking deposit in the next step. Syncing the execution client can take several days.
6. Stake ETH
Stake your testnet ETH for one or more validators using the Goerli Staking Launchpad.
You can check your validator status by searching your Ethereum address on the Goerli Beacon Chain explorer. It may take up to multiple days for your validator to be activated and start proposing blocks.