Solana Blockchain Network Congestion Set to Under Patches. How Fast Will it be?
Anza, one of Solana (SOL) blockchain’s inspector clients, uploaded a significant patch to the devnet. He suggests the network may be recovering from its severe congestion. The suggested patch, according to the Solana client inspector, was made available in version 1.18.11. They encourage ecosystem developers to update so they can begin testing the fixes.
Anza issued an update that included several major changes, such as the repair of FailedVerification, BankingStage Forwarding Filter, default staked client in LocalCluster, and staked vs. nonstaked sessions sent across. These specific fixes are currently not live on the mainnet but undergoing testing on the testnet.
Anza technicians will now leverage the comments from developers who examine the functions and provide input to refine the solution before releasing it on the mainnet. It is important to note that this constitutes one of the main updates Solana protocol gets, suggesting the current outage threat may finally work out.
Technological advancements in Solana Blockchain
Developers at Solana claim the company is a victim of its success. Although the system was initially designed to be a high-performance blockchain, the volume of traffic it encountered last year was significant. Thus results in obstruction and sporadic network failures. Co-creator Anatoly Yakovenko reports that finding a long-term solution will be time-consuming.
Could Solana take a cue from Ethereum? Due to its continuous modifications to improve its functionality, Ethereum earns the distinction of being one of the most functional blockchains available. To improve network security and stability, Ethereum issued the Shanghai and Dencun upgrades last year. Currently, it is considering launching the Electra upgrade.
Before the patch goes live, each of them goes through several testing stages to increase its robustness. This kind of testing and ensuring that the fixes function as planned is necessary if Solana is to receive a long-term solution to its problem.
Rex St John, a software developer, works at some of the biggest silicon companies in the world to create global ecosystems. His writings on AI Blockchain, Solana blockchain patch, Web3 platform, Large Language Models (LLM), and “Orchard Not Apples” are substantial. Rex has a wealth of expertise organising, curating, inspiring, and mobilising thousands of partners and individual developers to accomplish shared goals, having worked at Intel, Arm, and NVIDIA.