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Lack of proper indexing is throttling DApp speeds — Pangea CEO

Users typically leave an application that does not respond within three seconds, and Web3 apps can have load times of up to 20 seconds.

Decentralized applications (DApps), also known as Web3 applications, tend to be slower than their Web2 counterparts because they have to organize blockchain data from multiple sources.

Maxim Legg, CEO of Pangea — a decentralized data indexing solution — told Cointelegraph that data indexing will fix the speed bottleneck for Web3 applications.

Legg said data from RPC nodes, smart contracts, and other blockchain infrastructure can be hundreds of terabytes on high-throughput chains. Indexing is the process of organizing this raw blockchain data in a way that it can be effectively recalled later. The CEO told Cointelegraph:

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Aptos hits all-time high in user transactions

The recent surge in transactional activity on Aptos is attributed to the launch of Tapos Cat, a new tap-to-earn game that has gained rapid popularity.

The layer-1 blockchain platform Aptos, developed by former Facebook employees, has achieved a new milestone in blockchain transactions. It surpassed Solana by recording 115. 4 million transactions in a single day in a single day on May 25, compared to Solana’s 31.7 million.

The surge in transaction volume set a new benchmark and surpassed the previous L1 record of over 65 million held by Sui Network by a significant margin of over 50%.

According to Aptoscan, the blockchain’s user TPS (transactions per second) also reached an all-time high of 32,000 on the same day. This signifies a substantial increase in activity within the blockchain ecosystem, underscoring the growing adoption and momentum in the industry.

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‘46 Times Faster Than Ethereum’ – Solana Races to the Top of CoinGecko’s List of Swiftest Blockchains

‘46 Times Faster Than Ethereum’ – Solana Races to the Top of CoinGecko’s List of Swiftest Blockchains

Smart contract platform Solana (SOL) is moving to the top of CoinGecko’s list of fastest blockchains. In a new publication, CoinGecko says Solana is a staggering 46 times faster than its rival Ethereum (ETH), the second-largest digital asset by market cap, making it the fastest large blockchain on the market. However, CoinGecko says that Solana […]

The post ‘46 Times Faster Than Ethereum’ – Solana Races to the Top of CoinGecko’s List of Swiftest Blockchains appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

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Sui Surpasses Solana in Daily Transactions Amidst Spam Token Frenzy

Sui Surpasses Solana in Daily Transactions Amidst Spam Token FrenzySui, a scalability-focused blockchain, has surpassed Solana, a top 10 cryptocurrency network, in activity levels, registering 41 million transactions on April 3. The activity overheating on Sui is caused by ‘spam’, a Sui native token designed to stress test the network’s capabilities, assigning tokens to users equivalent to the number of transactions issued. Sui Surpasses […]

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Degen Chain L3 now tops the TPS charts within the Ethereum ecosystem

The average value transacted on Degen Chain is rather small at $0.27, however, compared to Ethereum and Base at $1,867 and $170, respectively.

Degen Chain, a new Ethereum layer-3 network, has recorded the highest transaction per second (TPS) count in the Ethereum ecosystem over the last 24 hours.

Degen’s TPS count increased 62% over the last day to notch 35.7 TPS — beating out the blockchain it was built on, Base, at 29.7 TPS, according to L2BEAT.

Arbitrum One, Ethereum and zkSync Era rounded out the top five.

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Block size and scalability, explained

Block size and scalability trade-off involves optimizing transaction capacity while ensuring network performance amid increasing demand.

Block size is important for maximizing storage efficiency and transaction throughput in file systems and blockchain contexts. 

The amount of data processed or transferred in a single block within a computer system or storage device is referred to as the block size. It represents the basic unit of data storage and retrieval in the context of file systems and storage.

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Avalanche’s HyperSDK blockchain upgrade hits 143K TPS on testnet

Ava Labs is testing a high-throughput framework that will enable developers to build their own virtual machines.

Smart contract layer-1 blockchain network Avalanche's testnet has reportedly hit over 140,000 transactions per second during testing of its HyperSDK blockchain upgrade.

Avalanche is currently testing a framework for building high-performance Virtual Machines (VMs) from scratch on the network.

According to Ava Labs, HyperSDK is structured so that developers can “plug into a lightning-fast execution environment without writing massive amounts of code from scratch.”

This enables the simplification and acceleration of custom VM development, making it easier for developers to launch optimized blockchains.

HyperSDK reached a whopping 143,322 transactions per second in a controlled testing environment, according to a screenshot shared on GitHub.

In comparison, Avalanche claims to currently process up to 4,500 TPS, Solana claims between 2,000 and 3,000 TPS, and Ethereum does just 15-20, according to data from Coincodex.

Speaking to Cointelegraph’s Andrew Fenton at the Korea Blockchain Week 2023, the head of product at Ava Labs, Nick Mussallem, said he expects real-world throughput to eventually settle around 50,000 TPS.

“They've clocked at it at 141,000. But that's in a very controlled environment. So I think if you were to cut that in half, it would still be very generous and probably will do more than that.”

Referring to the blockchain trilemma, which is the delicate balance between decentralization, scalability, and security, he said nothing was sacrificed, adding that the Avalanche developers wrote it from scratch to better handle state management:

“Basically took out a lot of the stuff that was in the EVM (Ethereum Virtual Machine) that they felt was unnecessary on the networking layer, or at the storage layer, and then put our consensus algorithm underneath it. And it just goes fast. Now it's optimized.”

Blockchains built with HyperSDK will operate as subnets called HyperChains and can be adapted for any function the developer wishes.

There will be a user interface (GUI) that doesn’t require additional coding and developers will also have a choice of VM. “You can literally launch it in five minutes,” said Mussallem.

Related: Marketing company wants 90% of Japanese population on Web3: KBW 2023

Mussallem said HyperSDK was open source and available right now, “but it's very much in the early beta stages.”

It hasn't been launched and is not production ready yet as the target for that is by the end of the year, he added.

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Solana records 1 outage in first half of 2023, 100% uptime in Q2

The Solana network is seeing steady improvements in performance and reliability as outages become more infrequent.

Layer-1 blockchain network Solana has shown an improvement in reliability and uptime so far this year only having one outage in 2023, according to a report from the Solana Foundation.

On July 20, the Solana Foundation released its latest performance report stating it has improved the network through the first half of 2023, as measured by uptime and the ratio of non-voting-to-voting transactions.

In previous years, Solana has been plagued with reliability and uptime issues which its co-founder, Anatoly Yakovenko, has previously called a “curse” but said the network’s low-cost transactions were the cause of the outages.

The latest report noted Solana has experienced 100% uptime since Feb. 25, marking a whole quarter without an outage. The single February outage saw the network knocked offline for almost 19 hours.

Solana achieved a 100% uptime in Q2, 2023. Source: Solana

The report added there have been improvements in the ratio of voting to non-voting transactions. Voting transactions occur when a validator votes to confirm one or more proposed blocks of information and non-voting transactions are triggered by user behavior on the blockchain.

“Over time, we would expect to see the ratio of voting to non-voting transactions go down because the overall percentage of voting transactions should drop as the network gets more efficient.”

Blocktimes, which measure how quickly new blocks are added to the chain, have also become more consistent aside from the spike during the outage.

Transactions per second (TPS) are also used to measure the network’s performance and throughput. Solana’s maximum daily TPS has been climbing since January with significant increases that correlate with new network upgrades, it noted. Dune Analytics reports the current figure on the network at 3,777 transactions per second.

Related: Solana price hits a 2023 high, but do strong fundamentals back the SOL rally?

The Artemis dashboard reports a daily transaction count of 19.2 million for Solana which has been the leader for this metric until it was recently usurped by the Sui Network due to the popularity of a Web3 game.

The price of the blockchain's native token, Solana (SOL),was down 4.5% on the day — around $25.50 at the time of writing, according to Cointelegraph data.

The token has been performing well over the past month with gains of 50% but remains down 90% from its November 2021 all-time high of $260.

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Starknet’s Quantum Leap hits testnet with TPS reaching ‘triple figures’

Starknet's latest upgrade will scale the ZK rollup's throughput by 50X or more. But capacity is very different to real world usage.

Starknet’s Quantum Leap upgrade has been deployed on testnet, with the Ethereum layer-2 scaling protocol claiming it's capable of processing "hundreds of transactions per second."

If achieved, it would be at least a 50X improvement from its current throughput, thanks to the Version 12 upgrade harmonizing how the sequencer's code interacts with the Cairo programming language.

A Starknet fact sheet states that the "time to inclusion" after the upgrade goes live on mainnet "will be under 15 seconds" meaning DApps will be able to confirm transactions on-chain within seconds.

Co-founder Uri Kolodny was a little more circumspect in an interview with Cointelegraph, stating that the upgrade has hit "triple figures" during testing so far.

If this throughput is mirrored in real-world usage — and high TPS is as much a function of demand from users as technical capability — the upgrade would be a huge leap for Israeli firm StarkWare's decentralized scaling network.

According to L2Beat, Starknet is currently processing just 1.79 TPS, meaning the upgrade could improve transaction speed by 56X or more. It would also easily outshine other Ethereum L2s including the OP mainnet (6 TPS), zkSync Era (8.63 TPS) and Arbitrum One (9.69 TPS), not to mention Ethereum itself (12.29 TPS).

Ethereum layer 2 TPS. Source: L2beat

But to put those TPS figures in perspective, it's still a lot less than Solana's 4127 TPS or Visa's 1700 TPS.

"Scaling has been the primary challenge that this ecosystem has been fighting with over the past several years," Kolodny said.

"We believe that Version 12 brings with it this Quantum Leap — in fact there are a whole series of leaps that will roll out through the summer we'll go through. But we are already in the triple digits for transactions per second."

Capacity is very different to usage however, and even after the upgrade if there are not enough users on Starknet that actually make 100 transactions per second, then the protocol will not run at 100 TPS.

Kolodny added that raw TPS is not the best metric of performance, given that complicated transactions are harder to perform than simple ones. But he said the upgrade also enables complicated transactions to make multiple calls "each performing separate logic from a separate contract."

"In terms of Cairo steps per second, we're observing an increase of at least something on the order of 50X compared to what we have today."

Zero Barriers podcast series: Crypto adoption fueled by ZK-rollups

The Quantum Leap upgrade does not solve the data availability problem faced by all ZK rollups. The issue is that there is not enough room on Ethereum to write back all of the required data for the transactions on L2s, which pushes up costs.

Kolodny said this would be addressed by the Version 13 Volition upgrade , which is due before the end of this quarter. It will give users granular control that enables them to store crucial or high value data on Ethereum, and less important data elsewhere. This is projected to cut fees by 85% and could pave the way for low fee micropayments or a boom in affordable and fast blockchain gaming.

One of the key components of the upgrade is Cairo-rs, which is a faster implementation of the Cairo virtual machine using Rust instead of Python from venture studio LambdaClass.

Founder Federico Carrone said Quantum Leap was a "historic moment" for blockchains in general.

"This release shows that it's possible to scale blockchains in a safe way thanks to STARKs and enables the creation of new applications that were impossible to think of a few years ago on top of a blockchain."

StarkWare previously announced on June 29 that its validity proof ZK scaling technology had now facilitated more than $1 trillion in transactions.

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Blockchains like Solana brag about TPS — but it’s misleading

Developers love to tout the number of transactions that blockchains can process per second. Unfortunately, that fixation often distracts from other important issues — such as network security.

The throughput of blockchains — namely, their ability to process X number of transactions per second (TPS) — is often touted in such a way as to downplay other considerations, such as decentralization and security. The blockchain trilemma, of course, acknowledges that succeeding in all three areas is challenging, though not impossible.

There is no denying that throughput and scalability are important, indeed vital if blockchains are eventually to become the rails on which the financial system is run. However, there is a major misconception surrounding the metric used to assess the scalability of layer-1s and 2s.

Although super-fast blockchains love nothing more than to trumpet their TPS numbers, it is a rather inadequate method for assessing throughput and fails to accurately represent legitimate blockchain transactions. What’s more, numbers are often reported in inconsistent or haphazard ways, making it tricky to compare projects and obscuring what matters most in practice.

So, when networks brag about five-figure TPS speeds, take their audacious claims with a healthy pinch of salt.

A missold metric

If blockchain technology is ever going to be adopted at scale, it must be capable of handling huge volumes of data at high speed. That way, people can access the network when they need it, without contending with logjams or having to pay eye-watering transaction fees. This is clear.

However, a high TPS doesn’t necessarily assure this, as the figure is usually measured by dispatching a protocol token from one wallet to another, as expeditiously as possible. This is the most basic transaction that can be made on a blockchain. Transferring protocol tokens is not a very computationally intensive transaction, which is why it is cheaper to send Ether (ETH) than, say, transfer an ERC-20 — the latter contract contains much more complex data.

Related: Programming languages prevent mainstream DeFi

Indeed, the majority of transactions are more complex than simple transfers. DeFi transactions, for instance, are resource-intensive, which explains why token swaps cost more in gas than simple transfers. Moreover, some chains include transactional data that isn’t usually calculated as transactions on other networks.

In the case of Solana, around 80% of transactions are made up of its own consensus messages, which are needed to coordinate validators. Despite being processed separately from on-chain transactions, they are confusingly batched with user transactions on Solana’s blockchain, giving an inaccurate measure of its true TPS.

Throughput isn’t the only gauge of blockchain performance, of course: Latency refers to how quickly a transaction can get confirmed after it is submitted. This, too, has its own unit of measurement — namely, block time (the time between blocks being added to the chain) and time to finality (when a block passes the threshold beyond the risk of reversion).

Although throughput is seen as the big-ticket number, users actually care more about latency — how quickly their transactions execute — and how much they have to pay in transaction fees. Like throughput, latency is complex, as it varies according to numerous factors, including transaction fees (on some chains, you can pay more to get a higher priority of inclusion), system demand and batching rules.

Swaps per second > TPS

Given the frenzied activity we have witnessed in decentralized finance over recent years — swapping, lending and collateralizing — such transactions are more reflective of how blockchains are actually being used to transfer value. Unlike a simple A-to-B transfer that doesn’t require much computation or data reading, swaps are highly complex.

In such a transaction:

  • The balance of the liquidity pool must be measured/read to determine the swap rate
  • Token A is sent from the end-user to the swap pool
  • Token B is sent from the swap pool to the end-user
  • The pool must then be rebalanced
  • A fee is typically taken out, and the yield is transferred to yet another account

If it isn’t already obvious, this process calls for an entirely new method of measurement — one that does not account for non-transactional data a la Solana: swaps per second (SPS). As evidenced by research compiled by consumer insights agency Dragonfly, a perfect benchmark to assess throughput is to fill an entire block with Uniswap v2-style trades and assess how many trades actually clear per second. The effect is to produce a simple apples-to-apples comparison of Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) blockchains, more so than any TPS measurement could attain.

Related: The world could be facing a dark future thanks to CBDCs

Dragonfly’s research found that Solana’s mainnet can likely perform around 273 swaps/second on an automated market maker — a far cry from its advertised 3,000 TPS. BNB Smart Chain, meanwhile, managed 194.6 TPS (claimed: 300 TPS) and Avalanche a maximum of 175.68 (claimed: 4,500 TPS).

Better benchmarking is required

For the avoidance of doubt, no metric is perfect. Any comparison of blockchains must necessarily account for different elements, such as decentralization, usability, security, tooling, etc. But it’s quite clear that swaps per second are a better gauge of performance and throughput than transactions per second.

Based on the findings of Dragonfly, not to mention the EOS Network Foundation’s similar benchmarking for the EOS EVM, blockchains have a long way to go before they’re ready for mainstream adoption.

Zack Gall is the co-founder and chief communications officer of the EOS Network Foundation. He previously co-founded Dappiness Development Studio and worked as the head of community and developer relations for LiquidApps. He graduated from Muskingum University in 2009 with a BA in communication and media studies.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

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