diff --git a/docs/build/tooling/00-protobuf.md b/docs/build/tooling/00-protobuf.md index 332c39f2b7eb..69d78f331a65 100644 --- a/docs/build/tooling/00-protobuf.md +++ b/docs/build/tooling/00-protobuf.md @@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ Example of how to define `gen` files can be found [here](https://docs.buf.build/ #### `buf.lock` -This is a autogenerated file based off the dependencies required by the `.gen` files. There is no need to copy the current one. If you depend on cosmos-sdk proto definitions a new entry for the Cosmos SDK will need to be provided. The dependency you will need to use is `buf.build/cosmos/cosmos-sdk`. +This is an autogenerated file based off the dependencies required by the `.gen` files. There is no need to copy the current one. If you depend on cosmos-sdk proto definitions a new entry for the Cosmos SDK will need to be provided. The dependency you will need to use is `buf.build/cosmos/cosmos-sdk`. ```go reference https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/main/proto/buf.lock#L1-L16 diff --git a/docs/user/run-node/00-keyring.md b/docs/user/run-node/00-keyring.md index 0ed06d412bad..b4a2020068fe 100644 --- a/docs/user/run-node/00-keyring.md +++ b/docs/user/run-node/00-keyring.md @@ -108,7 +108,7 @@ The `memory` backend stores keys in memory. The keys are immediately deleted aft ### Setting backend using the env variable -You can set the keyring-backend using env variable: `BINNAME_KEYRING_BACKEND`. For example, if you binary name is `gaia-v5` then set: `export GAIA_V5_KEYRING_BACKEND=pass` +You can set the keyring-backend using env variable: `BINNAME_KEYRING_BACKEND`. For example, if your binary name is `gaia-v5` then set: `export GAIA_V5_KEYRING_BACKEND=pass` ## Adding keys to the keyring diff --git a/docs/user/run-node/01-run-node.md b/docs/user/run-node/01-run-node.md index 7bd1a9c79f17..a9ef422b6889 100644 --- a/docs/user/run-node/01-run-node.md +++ b/docs/user/run-node/01-run-node.md @@ -85,7 +85,7 @@ Now that you have created a local account, go ahead and grant it some `stake` to simd genesis add-genesis-account $MY_VALIDATOR_ADDRESS 100000000000stake ``` -Recall that `$MY_VALIDATOR_ADDRESS` is a variable that holds the address of the `my_validator` key in the [keyring](./00-keyring.md#adding-keys-to-the-keyring). Also note that the tokens in the Cosmos SDK have the `{amount}{denom}` format: `amount` is is a 18-digit-precision decimal number, and `denom` is the unique token identifier with its denomination key (e.g. `atom` or `uatom`). Here, we are granting `stake` tokens, as `stake` is the token identifier used for staking in [`simapp`](https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/tree/main/simapp). For your own chain with its own staking denom, that token identifier should be used instead. +Recall that `$MY_VALIDATOR_ADDRESS` is a variable that holds the address of the `my_validator` key in the [keyring](./00-keyring.md#adding-keys-to-the-keyring). Also note that the tokens in the Cosmos SDK have the `{amount}{denom}` format: `amount` is an 18-digit-precision decimal number, and `denom` is the unique token identifier with its denomination key (e.g. `atom` or `uatom`). Here, we are granting `stake` tokens, as `stake` is the token identifier used for staking in [`simapp`](https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/tree/main/simapp). For your own chain with its own staking denom, that token identifier should be used instead. Now that your account has some tokens, you need to add a validator to your chain. Validators are special full-nodes that participate in the consensus process (implemented in the [underlying consensus engine](../../learn/intro/02-sdk-app-architecture.md#cometbft)) in order to add new blocks to the chain. Any account can declare its intention to become a validator operator, but only those with sufficient delegation get to enter the active set (for example, only the top 125 validator candidates with the most delegation get to be validators in the Cosmos Hub). For this guide, you will add your local node (created via the `init` command above) as a validator of your chain. Validators can be declared before a chain is first started via a special transaction included in the genesis file called a `gentx`: