Chaincode GetState returns an empty reponse
func (t *ballot) initBallot(stub shim.ChaincodeStubInterface, args string) peer.Response {
if len(args) != 2 {
return shim.Error("Incorrect number of arguments. Expecting 2")
}
// ==== Input sanitation ====
fmt.Println("- start init ballot")
if len(args[0]) == 0 {
return shim.Error("1st argument must be a non-empty string")
}
if len(args[1]) == 0 {
return shim.Error("2nd argument must be a non-empty string")
}
personFirstName := args[0]
personLastName := args[1]
hash := sha256.New()
hash.Write(byte(personFirstName + personLastName)) // ballotID is created based on the person's name
ballotID := hex.EncodeToString(hash.Sum(nil))
voteInit := "VOTE INIT"
// ==== Create ballot object and marshal to JSON ====
Ballot := ballot{personFirstName, personLastName, ballotID, voteInit}
ballotJSONByte, err := json.Marshal(Ballot)
if err != nil {
return shim.Error(err.Error())
}
err = stub.PutState(string(ballotID), ballotJSONByte)
//FIXME:0-------------------------------------------------
ballotAsByte, err := stub.GetState(string(ballotID))
if err != nil {
return shim.Error(err.Error())
}
BBBallot := ballot{}
//umarshal the data to a new ballot struct
json.Unmarshal(ballotAsByte, &BBBallot)
//
fmt.Println(BBBallot)
fmt.Println(BBBallot.personFirstName)
return shim.Success(byte(ballotID))
}
Above is the code and this is the test script i am running it against
func Test_Invoke_initBallot(t *testing.T) {
scc := new(ballot)
stub := shim.NewMockStub("voting", scc)
res := stub.MockInvoke("1", byte{byte("initBallot"), byte("John"), byte("C")})
if res.Status != shim.OK {
t.Log("bad status received, expected: 200; received:" + strconv.FormatInt(int64(res.Status), 10))
t.Log("response: " + string(res.Message))
t.FailNow()
}
if res.Payload == nil {
t.Log("initBallot failed to create a ballot")
t.FailNow()
}
}
I am trying to read from the ledger after putting the transaction in. However, I have been getting empty responses from both of the Println statements.
// PutState puts the specified `key` and `value` into the transaction's
// writeset as a data-write proposal. PutState doesn't effect the ledger
// until the transaction is validated and successfully committed.
// Simple keys must not be an empty string and must not start with null
// character (0x00), in order to avoid range query collisions with
// composite keys, which internally get prefixed with 0x00 as composite
// key namespace.
PutState(key string, value byte) error
It does say on the documentation that putState does not commit transactions to the ledger until its validated, but I am just trying to test my chaincode using the MockStub without setting up the fabric network. What is the fix to this problem?
P.S the problem has been solved, here is the right way to set up a struct
type ballot struct {
PersonFirstName string
PersonLastName string
BallotID string
VoteInit string
}
go hyperledger-fabric hyperledger blockchain smartcontracts
add a comment |
func (t *ballot) initBallot(stub shim.ChaincodeStubInterface, args string) peer.Response {
if len(args) != 2 {
return shim.Error("Incorrect number of arguments. Expecting 2")
}
// ==== Input sanitation ====
fmt.Println("- start init ballot")
if len(args[0]) == 0 {
return shim.Error("1st argument must be a non-empty string")
}
if len(args[1]) == 0 {
return shim.Error("2nd argument must be a non-empty string")
}
personFirstName := args[0]
personLastName := args[1]
hash := sha256.New()
hash.Write(byte(personFirstName + personLastName)) // ballotID is created based on the person's name
ballotID := hex.EncodeToString(hash.Sum(nil))
voteInit := "VOTE INIT"
// ==== Create ballot object and marshal to JSON ====
Ballot := ballot{personFirstName, personLastName, ballotID, voteInit}
ballotJSONByte, err := json.Marshal(Ballot)
if err != nil {
return shim.Error(err.Error())
}
err = stub.PutState(string(ballotID), ballotJSONByte)
//FIXME:0-------------------------------------------------
ballotAsByte, err := stub.GetState(string(ballotID))
if err != nil {
return shim.Error(err.Error())
}
BBBallot := ballot{}
//umarshal the data to a new ballot struct
json.Unmarshal(ballotAsByte, &BBBallot)
//
fmt.Println(BBBallot)
fmt.Println(BBBallot.personFirstName)
return shim.Success(byte(ballotID))
}
Above is the code and this is the test script i am running it against
func Test_Invoke_initBallot(t *testing.T) {
scc := new(ballot)
stub := shim.NewMockStub("voting", scc)
res := stub.MockInvoke("1", byte{byte("initBallot"), byte("John"), byte("C")})
if res.Status != shim.OK {
t.Log("bad status received, expected: 200; received:" + strconv.FormatInt(int64(res.Status), 10))
t.Log("response: " + string(res.Message))
t.FailNow()
}
if res.Payload == nil {
t.Log("initBallot failed to create a ballot")
t.FailNow()
}
}
I am trying to read from the ledger after putting the transaction in. However, I have been getting empty responses from both of the Println statements.
// PutState puts the specified `key` and `value` into the transaction's
// writeset as a data-write proposal. PutState doesn't effect the ledger
// until the transaction is validated and successfully committed.
// Simple keys must not be an empty string and must not start with null
// character (0x00), in order to avoid range query collisions with
// composite keys, which internally get prefixed with 0x00 as composite
// key namespace.
PutState(key string, value byte) error
It does say on the documentation that putState does not commit transactions to the ledger until its validated, but I am just trying to test my chaincode using the MockStub without setting up the fabric network. What is the fix to this problem?
P.S the problem has been solved, here is the right way to set up a struct
type ballot struct {
PersonFirstName string
PersonLastName string
BallotID string
VoteInit string
}
go hyperledger-fabric hyperledger blockchain smartcontracts
Can you provide the full code? It's hard to find out the problem without having the actual code.
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 1:27
Can you provide your ballot struct?
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 6:48
Also, the ballot struct has to implement the Chaincode interface. Did you implement the init and invoke methods properly?
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 6:55
add a comment |
func (t *ballot) initBallot(stub shim.ChaincodeStubInterface, args string) peer.Response {
if len(args) != 2 {
return shim.Error("Incorrect number of arguments. Expecting 2")
}
// ==== Input sanitation ====
fmt.Println("- start init ballot")
if len(args[0]) == 0 {
return shim.Error("1st argument must be a non-empty string")
}
if len(args[1]) == 0 {
return shim.Error("2nd argument must be a non-empty string")
}
personFirstName := args[0]
personLastName := args[1]
hash := sha256.New()
hash.Write(byte(personFirstName + personLastName)) // ballotID is created based on the person's name
ballotID := hex.EncodeToString(hash.Sum(nil))
voteInit := "VOTE INIT"
// ==== Create ballot object and marshal to JSON ====
Ballot := ballot{personFirstName, personLastName, ballotID, voteInit}
ballotJSONByte, err := json.Marshal(Ballot)
if err != nil {
return shim.Error(err.Error())
}
err = stub.PutState(string(ballotID), ballotJSONByte)
//FIXME:0-------------------------------------------------
ballotAsByte, err := stub.GetState(string(ballotID))
if err != nil {
return shim.Error(err.Error())
}
BBBallot := ballot{}
//umarshal the data to a new ballot struct
json.Unmarshal(ballotAsByte, &BBBallot)
//
fmt.Println(BBBallot)
fmt.Println(BBBallot.personFirstName)
return shim.Success(byte(ballotID))
}
Above is the code and this is the test script i am running it against
func Test_Invoke_initBallot(t *testing.T) {
scc := new(ballot)
stub := shim.NewMockStub("voting", scc)
res := stub.MockInvoke("1", byte{byte("initBallot"), byte("John"), byte("C")})
if res.Status != shim.OK {
t.Log("bad status received, expected: 200; received:" + strconv.FormatInt(int64(res.Status), 10))
t.Log("response: " + string(res.Message))
t.FailNow()
}
if res.Payload == nil {
t.Log("initBallot failed to create a ballot")
t.FailNow()
}
}
I am trying to read from the ledger after putting the transaction in. However, I have been getting empty responses from both of the Println statements.
// PutState puts the specified `key` and `value` into the transaction's
// writeset as a data-write proposal. PutState doesn't effect the ledger
// until the transaction is validated and successfully committed.
// Simple keys must not be an empty string and must not start with null
// character (0x00), in order to avoid range query collisions with
// composite keys, which internally get prefixed with 0x00 as composite
// key namespace.
PutState(key string, value byte) error
It does say on the documentation that putState does not commit transactions to the ledger until its validated, but I am just trying to test my chaincode using the MockStub without setting up the fabric network. What is the fix to this problem?
P.S the problem has been solved, here is the right way to set up a struct
type ballot struct {
PersonFirstName string
PersonLastName string
BallotID string
VoteInit string
}
go hyperledger-fabric hyperledger blockchain smartcontracts
func (t *ballot) initBallot(stub shim.ChaincodeStubInterface, args string) peer.Response {
if len(args) != 2 {
return shim.Error("Incorrect number of arguments. Expecting 2")
}
// ==== Input sanitation ====
fmt.Println("- start init ballot")
if len(args[0]) == 0 {
return shim.Error("1st argument must be a non-empty string")
}
if len(args[1]) == 0 {
return shim.Error("2nd argument must be a non-empty string")
}
personFirstName := args[0]
personLastName := args[1]
hash := sha256.New()
hash.Write(byte(personFirstName + personLastName)) // ballotID is created based on the person's name
ballotID := hex.EncodeToString(hash.Sum(nil))
voteInit := "VOTE INIT"
// ==== Create ballot object and marshal to JSON ====
Ballot := ballot{personFirstName, personLastName, ballotID, voteInit}
ballotJSONByte, err := json.Marshal(Ballot)
if err != nil {
return shim.Error(err.Error())
}
err = stub.PutState(string(ballotID), ballotJSONByte)
//FIXME:0-------------------------------------------------
ballotAsByte, err := stub.GetState(string(ballotID))
if err != nil {
return shim.Error(err.Error())
}
BBBallot := ballot{}
//umarshal the data to a new ballot struct
json.Unmarshal(ballotAsByte, &BBBallot)
//
fmt.Println(BBBallot)
fmt.Println(BBBallot.personFirstName)
return shim.Success(byte(ballotID))
}
Above is the code and this is the test script i am running it against
func Test_Invoke_initBallot(t *testing.T) {
scc := new(ballot)
stub := shim.NewMockStub("voting", scc)
res := stub.MockInvoke("1", byte{byte("initBallot"), byte("John"), byte("C")})
if res.Status != shim.OK {
t.Log("bad status received, expected: 200; received:" + strconv.FormatInt(int64(res.Status), 10))
t.Log("response: " + string(res.Message))
t.FailNow()
}
if res.Payload == nil {
t.Log("initBallot failed to create a ballot")
t.FailNow()
}
}
I am trying to read from the ledger after putting the transaction in. However, I have been getting empty responses from both of the Println statements.
// PutState puts the specified `key` and `value` into the transaction's
// writeset as a data-write proposal. PutState doesn't effect the ledger
// until the transaction is validated and successfully committed.
// Simple keys must not be an empty string and must not start with null
// character (0x00), in order to avoid range query collisions with
// composite keys, which internally get prefixed with 0x00 as composite
// key namespace.
PutState(key string, value byte) error
It does say on the documentation that putState does not commit transactions to the ledger until its validated, but I am just trying to test my chaincode using the MockStub without setting up the fabric network. What is the fix to this problem?
P.S the problem has been solved, here is the right way to set up a struct
type ballot struct {
PersonFirstName string
PersonLastName string
BallotID string
VoteInit string
}
go hyperledger-fabric hyperledger blockchain smartcontracts
go hyperledger-fabric hyperledger blockchain smartcontracts
edited Nov 26 '18 at 11:45
Vadim Kotov
4,50863347
4,50863347
asked Nov 22 '18 at 20:35
Chris_ZChris_Z
224
224
Can you provide the full code? It's hard to find out the problem without having the actual code.
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 1:27
Can you provide your ballot struct?
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 6:48
Also, the ballot struct has to implement the Chaincode interface. Did you implement the init and invoke methods properly?
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 6:55
add a comment |
Can you provide the full code? It's hard to find out the problem without having the actual code.
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 1:27
Can you provide your ballot struct?
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 6:48
Also, the ballot struct has to implement the Chaincode interface. Did you implement the init and invoke methods properly?
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 6:55
Can you provide the full code? It's hard to find out the problem without having the actual code.
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 1:27
Can you provide the full code? It's hard to find out the problem without having the actual code.
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 1:27
Can you provide your ballot struct?
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 6:48
Can you provide your ballot struct?
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 6:48
Also, the ballot struct has to implement the Chaincode interface. Did you implement the init and invoke methods properly?
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 6:55
Also, the ballot struct has to implement the Chaincode interface. Did you implement the init and invoke methods properly?
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 6:55
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
You haven't provided the code for the ballot struct yet. But from what you provided, I have a guess what might be going on. I think you probably haven't exported the fields and your struct looks like this:
type ballot struct {
personFirstName string
personLastName string
ballotID string
voteInit string
}
But when you tried to convert this object to JSON using json.Marshal(Ballot)
, none of the fields are added to the JSON object because they were not exported. All that you have to do in this case is exporting the necessary fields (using Uppercase letter at the beginning of field names). Your updated struct should look something like the following:
type ballot struct {
PersonFirstName string
PersonLastName string
BallotID string
VoteInit string
}
This is a very common mistake many newcomers make. Wish you all the best in your journey forward!!!
P.S. Please edit your question and add the code of you ballot struct here even if this solution solves your problem as that might help others in the future. Also, please add proper indentation to the code and add the last } symbol in the code block.
Thank you Tanmoy!
– Chris_Z
Nov 23 '18 at 14:57
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You haven't provided the code for the ballot struct yet. But from what you provided, I have a guess what might be going on. I think you probably haven't exported the fields and your struct looks like this:
type ballot struct {
personFirstName string
personLastName string
ballotID string
voteInit string
}
But when you tried to convert this object to JSON using json.Marshal(Ballot)
, none of the fields are added to the JSON object because they were not exported. All that you have to do in this case is exporting the necessary fields (using Uppercase letter at the beginning of field names). Your updated struct should look something like the following:
type ballot struct {
PersonFirstName string
PersonLastName string
BallotID string
VoteInit string
}
This is a very common mistake many newcomers make. Wish you all the best in your journey forward!!!
P.S. Please edit your question and add the code of you ballot struct here even if this solution solves your problem as that might help others in the future. Also, please add proper indentation to the code and add the last } symbol in the code block.
Thank you Tanmoy!
– Chris_Z
Nov 23 '18 at 14:57
add a comment |
You haven't provided the code for the ballot struct yet. But from what you provided, I have a guess what might be going on. I think you probably haven't exported the fields and your struct looks like this:
type ballot struct {
personFirstName string
personLastName string
ballotID string
voteInit string
}
But when you tried to convert this object to JSON using json.Marshal(Ballot)
, none of the fields are added to the JSON object because they were not exported. All that you have to do in this case is exporting the necessary fields (using Uppercase letter at the beginning of field names). Your updated struct should look something like the following:
type ballot struct {
PersonFirstName string
PersonLastName string
BallotID string
VoteInit string
}
This is a very common mistake many newcomers make. Wish you all the best in your journey forward!!!
P.S. Please edit your question and add the code of you ballot struct here even if this solution solves your problem as that might help others in the future. Also, please add proper indentation to the code and add the last } symbol in the code block.
Thank you Tanmoy!
– Chris_Z
Nov 23 '18 at 14:57
add a comment |
You haven't provided the code for the ballot struct yet. But from what you provided, I have a guess what might be going on. I think you probably haven't exported the fields and your struct looks like this:
type ballot struct {
personFirstName string
personLastName string
ballotID string
voteInit string
}
But when you tried to convert this object to JSON using json.Marshal(Ballot)
, none of the fields are added to the JSON object because they were not exported. All that you have to do in this case is exporting the necessary fields (using Uppercase letter at the beginning of field names). Your updated struct should look something like the following:
type ballot struct {
PersonFirstName string
PersonLastName string
BallotID string
VoteInit string
}
This is a very common mistake many newcomers make. Wish you all the best in your journey forward!!!
P.S. Please edit your question and add the code of you ballot struct here even if this solution solves your problem as that might help others in the future. Also, please add proper indentation to the code and add the last } symbol in the code block.
You haven't provided the code for the ballot struct yet. But from what you provided, I have a guess what might be going on. I think you probably haven't exported the fields and your struct looks like this:
type ballot struct {
personFirstName string
personLastName string
ballotID string
voteInit string
}
But when you tried to convert this object to JSON using json.Marshal(Ballot)
, none of the fields are added to the JSON object because they were not exported. All that you have to do in this case is exporting the necessary fields (using Uppercase letter at the beginning of field names). Your updated struct should look something like the following:
type ballot struct {
PersonFirstName string
PersonLastName string
BallotID string
VoteInit string
}
This is a very common mistake many newcomers make. Wish you all the best in your journey forward!!!
P.S. Please edit your question and add the code of you ballot struct here even if this solution solves your problem as that might help others in the future. Also, please add proper indentation to the code and add the last } symbol in the code block.
answered Nov 23 '18 at 7:47
Tanmoy Krishna DasTanmoy Krishna Das
625414
625414
Thank you Tanmoy!
– Chris_Z
Nov 23 '18 at 14:57
add a comment |
Thank you Tanmoy!
– Chris_Z
Nov 23 '18 at 14:57
Thank you Tanmoy!
– Chris_Z
Nov 23 '18 at 14:57
Thank you Tanmoy!
– Chris_Z
Nov 23 '18 at 14:57
add a comment |
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Can you provide the full code? It's hard to find out the problem without having the actual code.
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 1:27
Can you provide your ballot struct?
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 6:48
Also, the ballot struct has to implement the Chaincode interface. Did you implement the init and invoke methods properly?
– Tanmoy Krishna Das
Nov 23 '18 at 6:55