Glitch in upgrade of Ethereum Goerli testnet won’t delay Dencun rollout

The EIP-4844 upgrade is alive and well on the Goerli testnet after a rough first few hours

article-image

Akif CUBUK/Shutterstock modified by Blockworks

share

Blobs are live on Goerli.

Ethereum’s Goerli testnet successfully forked to “Dencun,” featuring the “Proto-Danksharding”  EIP-4844 innovation.

That paves the way for two more major testnet forks, keeping on schedule, for now, a further move to Ethereum mainnet by the end of March.

The consensus coming out of Thursday’s All Core Devs meeting was to prepare a new software version by mid-next week. This could be used for both the Sepolia and Holesky testnets, slated for Jan. 30 and Feb. 7, respectively.

Dencun’s concept of “blobs” is a key component of the upgrade, and refers to a large piece of data that is not directly included in an Ethereum block but is instead referenced by the block.

By including extra data for transactions, Ethereum will better serve rollups that use mainnet for data availability. Rollups are expected to see around a 90% cost savings, which they will pass on to users in the form of cheaper transactions.

Read more: Dencun and Pralectra: Ethereum core devs chart an ambitious 2024

Even though the data in blobs is stored off-chain, the integrity and availability of this data are still maintained. Blobs are designed to be cryptographically secure, ensuring that the data they reference is immutable and verifiable.

Client diversity wins the day…again

A minor consensus issue in the popular Prysm client caused the forked chain to encounter difficulty finalizing blocks.

Terence Tsao, protocol developer at Offchain Labs, which develops the Prysm client, estimated the resulting delay at about four hours while the team patched the problem.

Loading Tweet..

“When Prysm upgraded from Capella to Deneb state, we kept the historical route empty instead of carrying it over, so this issue was fairly easy to find,” Tsao told colleagues on the ACD call.

The bug didn’t show up in the many Devnets (developer networks) run over the past few months because these are forked from testnets and contain insufficient history to trigger the issue.

“This is one of those very rare edge cases,” Tsao said. “I’m thankful for Goerli, because otherwise we probably wouldn’t have caught it until later.”

Prysm now operates on less than 40% of Ethereum network nodes, so the resulting drop in validating participation rates, if it happened on mainnet, would be bad, but not catastrophic.

In fact, a similar incident occurred in May, showcasing the benefit of client diversity.

Read more: Ethereum devs issue final report on finality SNAFU

Goerli itself is scheduled to be retired following this month. The Ethereum Foundation and other developers have been encouraging users to transition to the newer Sepolia testnet, which will serve as the primary testnet for dapp developers in preparation for Goerli to be shut down.

Another testnet, Holesky, launched in September 2023 and is intended more for infrastructure and protocol development.

Read more: Ethereum’s Holešky testnet launch hits a speed bump

The Prysm bug was the only major client issue observed in the wake of the fork, and one which can be easily avoided in the future according to Danny Ryan, a researcher at the Ethereum Foundation, who nevertheless called it “a failure” that “should be caught way upstream.”

Ryan said he intends to spend some time “making sure there’s nothing else funky on the fork boundary test.”

Client teams expressed no reservations about sticking to the previously outlined release and testnet schedule, pending the results of the next fork in less than two weeks’ time.


Start your day with top crypto insights from David Canellis and Katherine Ross. Subscribe to the Empire newsletter.

Tags

Upcoming Events

Salt Lake City, UT

WED - FRI, OCTOBER 9 - 11, 2024

Pack your bags, anon — we’re heading west! Join us in the beautiful Salt Lake City for the third installment of Permissionless. Come for the alpha, stay for the fresh air. Permissionless III promises unforgettable panels, killer networking opportunities, and mountains […]

recent research

Screen Shot 2024-05-16 at 14.53.45.png

Research

Loss-versus-rebalancing (LVR) is arguably Ethereum DeFi’s biggest problem, and thus reducing LVR is fundamental to the success of Ethereum. This report dives into the world of LVR. We uncover its importance for AMM designers, discuss the two major mechanism design categories and various projects developing solutions, and offer a higher level perspective on the importance of AMMs in general.

article-image

The courts adjourned the trials against Binance and Tigran Gambaryan until May 22 and May 23

article-image

Industry players have started realizing high-performance computing-related revenues as they buy Nvidia GPUs and secure customer deals

article-image

Yesterday saw Congress’ upper chamber side with the House on a measure aimed at overturning SAB 121

article-image

Oklahoma’s new crypto bill will go into effect in November of this year

article-image

The deposits hit a $20 million cap in just 45 minutes

article-image

Twelve Democratic Senators voted in favor to pass the resolution Thursday