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# Understand the Group Module

The group (opens new window) module enables the creation and management of multisig accounts and enables voting for message execution based on configurable decision policies.

# Usage of the group module

When the group module is enabled in a chain (say the Cosmos Hub), users can create groups and submit group proposals. This means that any number of users can be part of a group and vote on the group's proposals. You can think of it as an enhanced multisig or DAO.

Before starting, review some terminology:

  • Group Admin: the account that creates the group is the group administrator. The group administrator is the account that can add, remove, or change the group members, but does not need to be a member of the group itself. Choose it wisely.
  • Group policy (opens new window): a group policy is an account associated with a group and a decision policy. In order to perform actions on this account, a proposal must be approved by a majority of the group members or as defined in the decision policy. For the avoidance of doubt, note that a group can have multiple group policies.
  • Decision policy (opens new window): a policy that defines how the group members can vote on a proposal and how the vote outcome is calculated. A decision policy is associated with a group policy. This means that a group can have different decision policies for each of its different group policies.
  • Proposal: a group proposal works the same way as a governance proposal. Group members can submit proposals to the group and vote on proposals with a Yes, No, No with Veto, and Abstain.

In this tutorial, you will learn how to create a group, manage its members, submit a group proposal, and vote on it. After that, you will be able to create your own on-chain DAO for your own use case.

# Requirements

The group module has been introduced in the v0.46.0 release (opens new window) of the Cosmos SDK. In order to follow the tutorial, you must use the binary of a chain with the group module, using a v0.46+ version of the SDK. For demonstration purposes, you will use simd, the simulation app of the Cosmos SDK.

To install simd, first clone the Cosmos SDK GitHub repository and checkout the right version:

Copy $ git clone https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk --depth=1 --branch v0.46.0

Go to the cloned directory:

Copy $ cd cosmos-sdk

Install simd:

Copy $ make install

Make sure the installation was successful:

Copy $ simd version

The version number should be greater than or equal to 0.46.0.

# Configuration

If you have used simd before, you might already have a .simapp directory in your home directory. You can skip to the next section or remove the chain directory (rm -rf ~/.simapp).

In order to configure simd, you need to set the chain ID and the keyring backend.

Copy $ simd config chain-id demo $ simd config keyring-backend test

Secondly, you need to add keys for group users. Call them Alice and Bob:

Copy $ simd keys add alice $ simd keys add bob

With simd keys list you can verify that your two users have been added.

To avoid having to copy and paste the user addresses, now is a good time to export the user keys to variables that you can access and use for this tutorial.

Copy $ export ALICE=$(simd keys show alice --address) $ export BOB=$(simd keys show bob --address)

Now you are ready to fund Alice and Bob's respective accounts and use the Alice account as validator:

Copy $ simd init test --chain-id demo $ simd add-genesis-account alice 5000000000stake --keyring-backend test $ simd add-genesis-account bob 5000000000stake --keyring-backend test $ simd gentx alice 1000000stake --chain-id demo $ simd collect-gentxs

Lastly, start the chain:

Copy $ simd start

simapp is now configured and running. You can now play with the group module.

# Create a group

To create a group, you must decide who is the admin and who are the members. All members have a voting weight that is used to calculate their voting power in the group.

Create a members.json file that contains group members of a football association. Replace aliceaddr and bobaddr with the literal addresses of Alice ($ALICE) and Bob ($BOB) respectively.

Copy { "members": [ { "address": "aliceaddr", // $ALICE "weight": "1", "metadata": "president" }, { "address": "bobaddr", // $BOB "weight": "1", "metadata": "treasurer" } ] }

For the avoidance of doubt, in the JSON above, Alice is labeled with some metadata that identifies her as the "president". The presence of this metadata does not make her the administrator of the group. It only identifies her as a member of the group, presumably one to whom the group's other members will look up.

Create the group:

Note that, according to the group documentation (opens new window), the metadata of a group must be off-chain. This means that, should you choose IPFS as your storage, you must put the IPFS CID of the group metadata in the metadata field. To learn more about IPFS, check out the IPFS tutorial (opens new window).

Here is what the metadata of Alice and Bob looks like:

group_metadata.json:

Copy { "name": "Football Association", "description": "Best football association", "group_website_url": "https://www.footbal.club", "group_forum_url": "" }

Which gives the IPFS CID of QmXNvNnHrX7weSyDLBNEv6YxnmwEUncmvG1z8HTxXEBnW1.

Copy $ simd tx group create-group $ALICE "ipfs://QmXNvNnHrX7weSyDLBNEv6YxnmwEUncmvG1z8HTxXEBnW1" members.json

It is here, by sending the create transaction, that Alice becomes the administrator of the group.

At what ID was the group created? Recall the transaction and look for the attributes of the event whose type is "cosmos.group.v1.EventCreateGroup". For instance:

Copy $ simd query tx 079D9B213DCDE99DB0E31A8AFE9B0FDC605C81C1880D08D99A493A7BC52FAC23 --output json | jq ".events" | jq '.[] | select(.type == "cosmos.group.v1.EventCreateGroup") | .attributes'

This returns something like:

Copy [ { "key": "Z3JvdXBfaWQ=", "value": "IjEi", "index": true } ]

Where Z3JvdXBfaWQ= is a Base64 encoding (opens new window) of group_id, and IjEi is a Base64 encoding of "1", including the ". Therefore your group ID is 1. Or with a one-liner:

Copy $ export GROUP_ID=$(simd query tx 079D9B213DCDE99DB0E31A8AFE9B0FDC605C81C1880D08D99A493A7BC52FAC23 --output json | jq '.events' | jq -r '.[] | select(.type == "cosmos.group.v1.EventCreateGroup") | .attributes[0].value' | base64 --decode | jq -r '.')

Query and verify the group that you just created and its ID, which you just extracted:

Copy $ simd query group groups-by-admin $ALICE

This last command outputs 1 too. This shows you that the group and its id can be recalled. Use that id for querying the group members:

Copy $ simd query group group-members $GROUP_ID

Nice! Your group has ipfs://QmXNvNnHrX7weSyDLBNEv6YxnmwEUncmvG1z8HTxXEBnW1 as metadata (which you can recall with the group-info command), Alice as group admin, and Alice and Bob as group members.

The members of your group understand that this hash is for IPFS. Without IPFS, the metadata is viewable at https://ipfs.io/ipfs/QmXNvNnHrX7weSyDLBNEv6YxnmwEUncmvG1z8HTxXEBnW1 (opens new window).

# Manage group members

To update the group's members, you send a transaction using the update-group-members command and a JSON file modeled on the previous members.json. The file only needs to contain the changes to the membership. Unchanged members do not need to be included in the members_updates.json.

To add a member to the group, you mention it in the JSON, and to remove a member from the group, you mention it and set this member's voting weight to 0.

Add Carol, Dave, and Emma as group members, and remove Bob. Create members_update.json with:

Copy { "members": [ { "address": "bobaddr", // $BOB "weight": "0" // this deletes bob // The metadata does not need to be mentioned }, { "address": "caroladdr", "weight": "1", "metadata": "treasurer" }, { "address": "daveaddr", "weight": "1", "metadata": "player" }, { "address": "emmaaddr", "weight": "1", "metadata": "player" }, ] } Copy $ simd tx group update-group-members $ALICE $GROUP_ID members_updates.json

You can verify that the group members are updated:

Copy $ simd query group group-members $GROUP_ID

As an exercise, add Bob back to the group before moving on to the next section.

# Create a group policy

Next, you need to create a group policy and its decision policy. These define how long a proposal can be voted on, and how its outcome is calculated. Here you use the ThresholdDecisionPolicy (opens new window) as decision policy. It defines the threshold that the tally of weighted yes votes must reach for a proposal to pass. Each member's vote carries a specific weight, as defined in the group.

The following is the content of the policy.json. It states that:

  • A proposal can be voted on for a maximum of 10 minutes.
  • A proposal requires only one vote to pass.
Copy { "@type": "/cosmos.group.v1.ThresholdDecisionPolicy", "threshold": "1", "windows": { "voting_period": "10m", "min_execution_period": "0s" } }

Have the group administrator create the group policy with metadata that identifies it as one with a quick turnaround:

Copy $ simd tx group create-group-policy $ALICE $GROUP_ID "{\"name\":\"quick turnaround\",\"description\":\"\"}" policy.json

Note that this time, the metadata is on-chain an escaped JSON string. This is as per the group documentation (opens new window).

Check and verify your newly created group policy, and in particular the address you just created:

Copy $ export GROUP_POLICY_ADDRESS=$(simd query tx 06DB56C25457E10CCAB5476C8BE84534EBC6E10241953C137AEC9CD6C35A5F3B --output json | jq '.events' | jq -r '.[] | select(.type == "cosmos.group.v1.EventCreateGroupPolicy") | .attributes[0].value' | base64 --decode | jq -r '.')

You can also find the group policy by querying the group:

Copy $ simd query group group-policies-by-group $GROUP_ID $ simd query group group-policies-by-group $GROUP_ID --output json | jq -r '.group_policies[0].address'

Note how the decision policy's address, at cosmos plus 59 characters, is longer than a regular account's address. This is because a group address is a derived address. You can learn more on that in ADR-28 (opens new window).

# Create a proposal

Now that you have a group with a few members and a group policy, you can submit your first group proposal. As with member management, you need to create a proposal.json file that contains the proposal.

A proposal can contain any number of messages defined on the current blockchain.

For this tutorial, continue with your example of an association. The treasurer, Bob, wants to send money to a third party to pay the bills, and so creates a proposal.json and a proposal_metadata.json (as proposal metadata should be off-chain):

Copy { "group_policy_address": "cosmos1..." , // the $GROUP_POLICY_ADDRESS // array of proto-JSON-encoded sdk.Msgs "messages": [ { "@type": "/cosmos.bank.v1beta1.MsgSend", "from_address": "cosmos1...", // the $GROUP_POLICY_ADDRESS "to_address": "cosmos1zyzu35rmctfd2fqnnytthheugqs96qxsne67ad", // a third-party "amount": [ { "denom": "stake", "amount": "100" } ] } ], "metadata": "ipfs://QmearrgtJxKHu37HnNjU1AQMnvWoXqwh6cWR8mytBJoFVv", "proposers": [ "bobaddr" ] // $BOB }

You are meant to upload the proposal_metadata.json to IPFS (opens new window) and set its CID in the metadata field of the proposal.json.

Copy { "title": "Pay the utilities bill", "authors": "Bob Smith", "summary": "Pay the energy bill of the association", "details": "", "proposal_forum_url": "https://football.club/proposal/nov-utility-bills", "vote_option_context": "Yes means pay the energy bill. No means to not pay the energy bill and have no more warm water.", }

This proposal, if passed, will send 100 stake to cosmos1zyzu35rmctfd2fqnnytthheugqs96qxsne67ad to pay the bills. The tokens will be sent from the decision policy address.

The decision policy has no funds yet. You can fund it by sending a transaction with simd tx bank send alice $GROUP_POLICY_ADDRESS 100stake.

Submit the proposal:

Copy $ simd tx group submit-proposal proposal.json --from bob

Once more, extract the proposal ID - remember to use the transaction hash you got from the previous command:

Copy $ export PROPOSAL_ID=$(simd query tx E3CBE6932254088D5A80CD5CB18BB0F4D35396A542BD20731E1B6B997E1B0847 --output json | jq '.events' | jq -r '.[] | select(.type == "cosmos.group.v1.EventSubmitProposal") | .attributes[0].value' | base64 --decode | jq -r '.')

You can also find the proposal ID via your group policy:

Copy $ simd query group proposals-by-group-policy $GROUP_POLICY_ADDRESS --output json | jq '.proposals[0]'

# View and vote on proposals

You can see that your proposal has been submitted and that it contains a lot of information. For instance, confirm that its final tally is empty:

Copy $ simd query group proposal $PROPOSAL_ID --output json | jq '.proposal.final_tally_result'

Which returns:

Copy { "yes_count": "0", "abstain_count": "0", "no_count": "0", "no_with_veto_count": "0" }

Also, confirm that it is in the PROPOSAL_STATUS_SUBMITTED status:

Copy $ simd query group proposals-by-group-policy $GROUP_POLICY_ADDRESS --output json | jq -r '.proposals[0].status'

Next, have Alice and Bob vote Yes on the proposal and verify that both their votes are tallied using the proper query command:

Copy $ simd tx group vote $PROPOSAL_ID $ALICE VOTE_OPTION_YES "agree" $ simd tx group vote $PROPOSAL_ID $BOB VOTE_OPTION_YES "aye" $ simd query group tally-result $PROPOSAL_ID

While you wait for the policy-prescribed 10 minutes, you can confirm that the final tally is still empty. After the 10 minutes have gone by your proposal should have passed, because the weighted tally of Yes votes is above the decision policy threshold. Confirm this by looking at its status. It should be PROPOSAL_STATUS_ACCEPTED:

Copy $ simd query group proposal $PROPOSAL_ID

By default, proposals are not executed immediately. You can confirm this by looking at the proposal: it contains executor_result: PROPOSAL_EXECUTOR_RESULT_NOT_RUN.

Proposals are not immediately executed to account for the possibility that not everything may be in place to successfully execute the proposal's messages. As you recall, you already funded the group policy. If you did not fund it ahead of time, now is the time to do it.

Next time, if you wish to try to execute a proposal immediately after its submission, you can do so by using the --exec 1 flag. It will count the proposers' signatures as Yes votes.

Execute the proposal now:

Copy $ simd tx group exec $PROPOSAL_ID --from alice

If there were any errors when executing the proposal messages, none of the messages will be executed and the proposal will be marked as Failed.

Verify that the proposal has been executed:

Copy $ simd query group proposal $PROPOSAL_ID

It should return an error: Error: rpc error: code = Unknown desc = load proposal: not found: unknown request. That is because it has been entirely removed.

Confirm that the tokens have been received by the intended recipient:

Copy $ simd query bank balances cosmos1zyzu35rmctfd2fqnnytthheugqs96qxsne67ad

# 🎉 Congratulations 🎉

By completing this tutorial, you have learned how to use the group module!

synopsis

To summarize, this tutorial has explained:

  • How to create a group.
  • How to manage its members.
  • How to add a group policy.
  • How to submit a group proposal.
  • How to vote on a proposal.
  • How to execute an accepted proposal.

For more information about what else you can do with the CLI, please refer to its help.

Copy $ simd tx group --help $ simd query group --help

To learn more about the group module specs, check out the group (opens new window) module developer documentation.