Writing a CorDapp

When writing a CorDapp, you are writing a set of files in a JVM language that defines one or more of the following Corda components:

  • States (i.e. classes implementing ContractState)
  • Contracts (i.e. classes implementing Contract)
  • Flows (i.e. classes extending FlowLogic)
  • Web APIs
  • Services

CorDapp structure

Your CorDapp project’s structure should be based on the structure of the Java Template CorDapp or the Kotlin Template CorDapp, depending on which language you intend to use.

The src directory of the Template CorDapp, where we define our CorDapp’s source-code, has the following structure:

src
├── main
│   ├── java
│   │   └── com
│   │       └── template
│   │           ├── Main.java
│   │           ├── api
│   │           │   └── TemplateApi.java
│   │           ├── client
│   │           │   └── TemplateClientRPC.java
│   │           ├── contract
│   │           │   └── TemplateContract.java
│   │           ├── flow
│   │           │   └── TemplateFlow.java
│   │           ├── plugin
│   │           │   └── TemplatePlugin.java
│   │           ├── service
│   │           │   └── TemplateService.java
│   │           └── state
│   │               └── TemplateState.java
│   └── resources
│       ├── META-INF
│       │   └── services
│       │       ├── net.corda.core.node.CordaPluginRegistry
│       │       └── net.corda.webserver.services.WebServerPluginRegistry
│       ├── certificates
│       │   ├── sslkeystore.jks
│       │   └── truststore.jks
│       └──templateWeb
│           ├── index.html
│           └── js
│               └── template-js.js
└── test
    └── java
        └── com
            └── template
                └── contract
                    └── TemplateTests.java

Defining plugins

Your CorDapp may need to define two types of plugins:

  • CordaPluginRegistry subclasses, which define additional serializable classes and vault schemas
  • WebServerPluginRegistry subclasses, which define the APIs and static web content served by your CorDapp

The fully-qualified class path of each CordaPluginRegistry subclass must then be added to the net.corda.core.node.CordaPluginRegistry file in the CorDapp’s resources/META-INF/services folder. Meanwhile, the fully-qualified class path of each WebServerPluginRegistry subclass must be added to the net.corda.webserver.services.WebServerPluginRegistry file, again in the CorDapp’s resources/META-INF/services folder.

The CordaPluginRegistry class defines the following:

  • customizeSerialization, which can be overridden to provide a list of the classes to be whitelisted for object serialisation, over and above those tagged with the @CordaSerializable annotation. See Object serialization
  • requiredSchemas, which can be overridden to return a set of the MappedSchemas to use for persistence and vault queries

The WebServerPluginRegistry class defines the following:

  • webApis, which can be overridden to return a list of JAX-RS annotated REST access classes. These classes will be constructed by the bundled web server and must have a single argument constructor taking a CordaRPCOps object. This will allow the API to communicate with the node process via the RPC interface. These web APIs will not be available if the bundled web server is not started
  • staticServeDirs, which can be overridden to map static web content to virtual paths and allow simple web demos to be distributed within the CorDapp jars. This static content will not be available if the bundled web server is not started
    • The static web content itself should be placed inside the src/main/resources directory

To learn about how to use gradle to build your cordapp against Corda and generate an artifact please read Cordapp Build Systems.