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dfx start

Reference

Use the dfx start command to start a local canister execution environment and web server processes. This command enables you to deploy canisters to the local canister execution environment to test your dapps during development.

By default, all local dfx projects will use this single local canister execution environment, and you can run dfx start and dfx stop from any directory. See Local Server Configuration and Project-Specific Local Networks below for exceptions.

Basic usage

dfx start [option] [flag]

Flags

You can use the following optional flags with the dfx start command.

FlagDescription
--backgroundStarts the local canister execution environment and web server processes in the background and waits for a reply before returning to the shell.
--cleanStarts the local canister execution environment and web server processes in a clean state by removing checkpoints from your project cache. You can use this flag to set your project cache to a new state when troubleshooting or debugging.
--enable-bitcoinEnables bitcoin integration.
--enable-canister-httpEnables canister HTTP requests. (deprecated: now enabled by default)
--use-old-meteringEnables the old metering in the local canister execution environment. Please see the forum thread for more details or to report any issues: forum.dfinity.org/t/new-wasm-instrumentation/

Options

You can use the following option with the dfx start command.

OptionDescription
--host hostSpecifies the host interface IP address and port number to bind the frontend to. The default for the local shared network is 127.0.0.1:4943, while the default for a project-specific network is '127.0.0.1:8000'.
--bitcoin-node host:portSpecifies the address of a bitcoind node. Implies --enable-bitcoin.
--artificial-delay millisecondsSpecifies the delay that an update call should incur. Default: 600ms
--domain domainA domain that can be served. Can be specified more than once. These are used for canister resolution [default: localhost]

Examples

You can start the local canister execution environment and web server processes in the current shell by running the following command:

dfx start

If you start the local canister execution environment in the current shell, you need to open a new terminal shell to run additional commands. Alternatively, you can start the local canister execution environment in the background by running the following command:

dfx start --background

If you run the local canister execution environment in the background, however, be sure to stop the local canister execution environment before uninstalling or reinstalling the dfx execution environment by running the following command:

dfx stop

You can view the current process identifier (pid) for the local canister execution environment process started by dfx by running the following command:

more .dfx/pid

Local Server Configuration

The Shared Local Network

By default, dfx start manages a single replica that is independent of any given local project. Running dfx deploy and other commands will manage canisters on this single local network, in the same way that dfx deploy --network ic deploys separate projects to mainnet.

If run from outside any dfx project, or if dfx.json does not define the local network, then dfx start looks for the local network definition in $HOME/.config/dfx/networks.json. If this file does not exist or does not contain a definition for the local network, then dfx uses the following default definition:

{
"local": {
"bind": "127.0.0.1:4943",
"type": "ephemeral"
}
}

dfx stores data for the shared local network in one of the following locations, depending on your operating system:

  • $HOME/.local/share/dfx/network/local (Linux)
  • $HOME/Library/Application Support/org.dfinity.dfx/network/local (Macos)

Project-Specific Local Networks

If dfx.json defines the local network, then dfx start will use this definition and store network data files under <project dir>/.dfx/network/local.

Note that for projects that define the local network in dfx.json, you can only run the dfx start and dfx stop commands from within the project directory structure. For example, if your project name is hello_world, your current working directory must be the hello_world top-level project directory or one of its subdirectories.