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# Getting Started
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## First Tendermint App
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As a general purpose blockchain engine, Tendermint is agnostic to the
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application you want to run. So, to run a complete blockchain that does
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something useful, you must start two programs: one is Tendermint Core,
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the other is your application, which can be written in any programming
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language. Recall from [the intro to
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ABCI](./introduction.md#ABCI-Overview) that Tendermint Core handles all
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the p2p and consensus stuff, and just forwards transactions to the
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application when they need to be validated, or when they're ready to be
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committed to a block.
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In this guide, we show you some examples of how to run an application
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using Tendermint.
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### Install
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The first apps we will work with are written in Go. To install them, you
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need to [install Go](https://golang.org/doc/install) and put
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`$GOPATH/bin` in your `$PATH`; see
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[here](https://github.com/tendermint/tendermint/wiki/Setting-GOPATH) for
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more info.
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Then run
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```
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go get github.com/tendermint/tendermint
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cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/tendermint/tendermint
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make get_tools
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make get_vendor_deps
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make install_abci
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```
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Now you should have the `abci-cli` installed; you'll see a couple of
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commands (`counter` and `kvstore`) that are example applications written
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in Go. See below for an application written in JavaScript.
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Now, let's run some apps!
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## KVStore - A First Example
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The kvstore app is a [Merkle
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tree](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merkle_tree) that just stores all
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transactions. If the transaction contains an `=`, e.g. `key=value`, then
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the `value` is stored under the `key` in the Merkle tree. Otherwise, the
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full transaction bytes are stored as the key and the value.
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Let's start a kvstore application.
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```
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abci-cli kvstore
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```
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In another terminal, we can start Tendermint. If you have never run
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Tendermint before, use:
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```
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tendermint init
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tendermint node
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```
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If you have used Tendermint, you may want to reset the data for a new
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blockchain by running `tendermint unsafe_reset_all`. Then you can run
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`tendermint node` to start Tendermint, and connect to the app. For more
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details, see [the guide on using Tendermint](./using-tendermint.md).
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You should see Tendermint making blocks! We can get the status of our
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Tendermint node as follows:
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```
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curl -s localhost:26657/status
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```
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The `-s` just silences `curl`. For nicer output, pipe the result into a
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tool like [jq](https://stedolan.github.io/jq/) or `json_pp`.
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Now let's send some transactions to the kvstore.
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```
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curl -s 'localhost:26657/broadcast_tx_commit?tx="abcd"'
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```
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Note the single quote (`'`) around the url, which ensures that the
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double quotes (`"`) are not escaped by bash. This command sent a
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transaction with bytes `abcd`, so `abcd` will be stored as both the key
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and the value in the Merkle tree. The response should look something
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like:
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```
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{
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"jsonrpc": "2.0",
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"id": "",
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"result": {
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"check_tx": {
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"fee": {}
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},
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"deliver_tx": {
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"tags": [
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{
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"key": "YXBwLmNyZWF0b3I=",
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"value": "amFl"
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},
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{
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"key": "YXBwLmtleQ==",
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"value": "YWJjZA=="
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}
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],
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"fee": {}
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},
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"hash": "9DF66553F98DE3C26E3C3317A3E4CED54F714E39",
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"height": 14
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}
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}
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```
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We can confirm that our transaction worked and the value got stored by
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querying the app:
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```
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curl -s 'localhost:26657/abci_query?data="abcd"'
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```
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The result should look like:
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```
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{
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"jsonrpc": "2.0",
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"id": "",
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"result": {
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"response": {
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"log": "exists",
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"index": "-1",
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"key": "YWJjZA==",
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"value": "YWJjZA=="
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}
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}
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}
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```
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Note the `value` in the result (`YWJjZA==`); this is the base64-encoding
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of the ASCII of `abcd`. You can verify this in a python 2 shell by
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running `"YWJjZA==".decode('base64')` or in python 3 shell by running
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`import codecs; codecs.decode("YWJjZA==", 'base64').decode('ascii')`.
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Stay tuned for a future release that [makes this output more
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human-readable](https://github.com/tendermint/tendermint/issues/1794).
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Now let's try setting a different key and value:
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```
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curl -s 'localhost:26657/broadcast_tx_commit?tx="name=satoshi"'
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```
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Now if we query for `name`, we should get `satoshi`, or `c2F0b3NoaQ==`
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in base64:
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```
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curl -s 'localhost:26657/abci_query?data="name"'
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```
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Try some other transactions and queries to make sure everything is
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working!
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## Counter - Another Example
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Now that we've got the hang of it, let's try another application, the
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`counter` app.
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The counter app doesn't use a Merkle tree, it just counts how many times
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we've sent a transaction, or committed the state.
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This application has two modes: `serial=off` and `serial=on`.
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When `serial=on`, transactions must be a big-endian encoded incrementing
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integer, starting at 0.
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If `serial=off`, there are no restrictions on transactions.
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In a live blockchain, transactions collect in memory before they are
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committed into blocks. To avoid wasting resources on invalid
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transactions, ABCI provides the `CheckTx` message, which application
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developers can use to accept or reject transactions, before they are
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stored in memory or gossipped to other peers.
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In this instance of the counter app, with `serial=on`, `CheckTx` only
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allows transactions whose integer is greater than the last committed
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one.
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Let's kill the previous instance of `tendermint` and the `kvstore`
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application, and start the counter app. We can enable `serial=on` with a
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flag:
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```
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abci-cli counter --serial
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```
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In another window, reset then start Tendermint:
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```
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tendermint unsafe_reset_all
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tendermint node
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```
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Once again, you can see the blocks streaming by. Let's send some
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transactions. Since we have set `serial=on`, the first transaction must
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be the number `0`:
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```
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curl localhost:26657/broadcast_tx_commit?tx=0x00
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```
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Note the empty (hence successful) response. The next transaction must be
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the number `1`. If instead, we try to send a `5`, we get an error:
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```
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> curl localhost:26657/broadcast_tx_commit?tx=0x05
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{
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"jsonrpc": "2.0",
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"id": "",
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"result": {
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"check_tx": {
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"fee": {}
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},
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"deliver_tx": {
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"code": 2,
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"log": "Invalid nonce. Expected 1, got 5",
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"fee": {}
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},
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"hash": "33B93DFF98749B0D6996A70F64071347060DC19C",
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"height": 34
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}
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}
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```
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But if we send a `1`, it works again:
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```
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> curl localhost:26657/broadcast_tx_commit?tx=0x01
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{
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"jsonrpc": "2.0",
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"id": "",
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"result": {
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"check_tx": {
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"fee": {}
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},
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"deliver_tx": {
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"fee": {}
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},
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"hash": "F17854A977F6FA7EEA1BD758E296710B86F72F3D",
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"height": 60
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}
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}
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```
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For more details on the `broadcast_tx` API, see [the guide on using
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Tendermint](./using-tendermint.md).
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## CounterJS - Example in Another Language
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We also want to run applications in another language - in this case,
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we'll run a Javascript version of the `counter`. To run it, you'll need
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to [install node](https://nodejs.org/en/download/).
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You'll also need to fetch the relevant repository, from
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[here](https://github.com/tendermint/js-abci) then install it. As go
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devs, we keep all our code under the `$GOPATH`, so run:
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```
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go get github.com/tendermint/js-abci &> /dev/null
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cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/tendermint/js-abci/example
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npm install
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cd ..
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```
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Kill the previous `counter` and `tendermint` processes. Now run the app:
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```
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node example/counter.js
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```
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In another window, reset and start `tendermint`:
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```
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tendermint unsafe_reset_all
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tendermint node
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```
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Once again, you should see blocks streaming by - but now, our
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application is written in javascript! Try sending some transactions, and
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like before - the results should be the same:
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```
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curl localhost:26657/broadcast_tx_commit?tx=0x00 # ok
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curl localhost:26657/broadcast_tx_commit?tx=0x05 # invalid nonce
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curl localhost:26657/broadcast_tx_commit?tx=0x01 # ok
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```
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Neat, eh?
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