Deploy

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Moving a project from a test network into production requires a clear view of your infrastructure and network operations. The topics in this section are intended to provide some guidance on how to deploy a parachain and how to prepare for network maintenance after you deploy. Before diving into specific deployments options and operations, however, there are a few important considerations that should act as the foundation for your deployment process. At a high level, you should apply the following general principles throughout all phases of your network deployment:

  • Infrastructure operations should be code-driven and kept under version control.
  • Security should be a central concern in all of your infrastructure decisions.
  • Securing on-chain operations is critical to a successful deployment.

Build a code-driven infrastructure

As a general rule, you should take an infrastructure-as-code approach to your deployment planning and preparation. All of the infrastructure components used to deploy the network should be written in code and managed through a version control system.

Following an infrastructure-as-code process helps to ensure that:

  • Your infrastructure components are always in a known state.
  • You can track changes, enforce reviews, and audit activity through version control.
  • You can easily roll back to a known state, if needed.
  • You can automate operations and won't need to perform manual tasks to redeploy.
Infrastructure as code

Build security into the infrastructure

Security is one of the most important properties of a blockchain, so making your infrastructure secure by default should be a top priority when you plan to deploy a new network.

Having strict access control rules and blocking any non-required communication is a good starting point, but you should also consider how you can enhance security through the following:

  • Log monitoring
  • Bastion hosts for access
  • Two-factor authentication for secure shell (ssh) access

Build security into chain operations

In addition to the infrastructure that your network relies on, it's important to keep on-chain operations as secure as possible. For example, by setting up your chain to use cold, warm, and hot keys, you can limit the damage that the compromise of a session key could do. The following diagram illustrates using keys for different operations to help prevent funds from being stolen.

Keeping session keys separate from account keys

You can also use multi-signature accounts on offline devices to improve security and to provide an on-chain audit trail of all actions. The record of on-chain activity could then be used to send alert notification for specific on-chain actions.

Proxy accounts also let you limit the permission that an account or multi-signature account has on a particular target account. For example, you might use a proxy account to specify that a multi-signature staking controller account can only execute staking transactions and the transaction can only be executed if three of the five people that make up the multi-signature account approve.