Close Menu
Altcoin ObserverAltcoin Observer
  • Regulation
  • Bitcoin
  • Altcoins
  • Market
  • Analysis
  • DeFi
  • Security
  • Ethereum
Categories
  • Altcoins (2,352)
  • Analysis (2,506)
  • Bitcoin (3,109)
  • Blockchain (1,904)
  • DeFi (2,270)
  • Ethereum (2,195)
  • Event (83)
  • Exclusive Deep Dive (1)
  • Landscape Ads (2)
  • Market (2,321)
  • Press Releases (10)
  • Reddit (1,773)
  • Regulation (2,171)
  • Security (2,987)
  • Thought Leadership (3)
  • Videos (43)
Hand picked
  • I’m tired, boss
  • Say goodbye to your bank: make Krak your everything account
  • Dogecoin ETF (DOGE) Raises $2 Million: Two Key Levels Emerge
  • Bitcoin Faces Further Downward Pressure as Traders Increase Exchange Deposits: CryptoQuant
  • The Future of Crypto: How Proving the Decentralized Theorem Shapes Compliance and Security
We are social
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About us
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms of service
  • Privacy policy
  • Contact us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
Altcoin ObserverAltcoin Observer
  • Regulation
  • Bitcoin
  • Altcoins
  • Market
  • Analysis
  • DeFi
  • Security
  • Ethereum
Events
Altcoin ObserverAltcoin Observer
Home»Ethereum»Amphora: a major milestone in fusion
Ethereum

Amphora: a major milestone in fusion

November 2, 2024No Comments
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
Upload E930da14c684ed98ea0c81eb83d6e5b7.jpg
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Earlier this year, the Rayonism Hackathon started to prototype the architecture for Ethereum’s transition to proof-of-stake. The transition, often called The Merge, will retain the existing beacon chain (eth2) and execution layer clients (eth1), and “merge” the two chains by having the beacon chain drive the consensus of the execution layer. This approach is the latest in a series of iterations of the Ethereum roadmap (more on that). here).

Although Rayonism had proven itself to be a solid architecture, there were still several things that needed to be designed, implemented, and tested, including the actual transition from Proof of Work (PoW) to Proof of Stake (PoS). To do this, the customer teams met face to face last week (like the Eth2 interoperability from 2019) for a workshop called Amphora 🏺.

Here’s a look at the main things that were accomplished during the workshop and the journey to The Merge.

Amphora Milestones

The goal of the event was to get customer teams from the execution and consensus layers to resolve outstanding issues in the specification and achieve a set of development milestones. Each step brought customers closer to a fully functioning fusion devnet that moved from PoW to PoS. Representatives from Besu, Erigon, EthereumJS, Geth, Nethermind, Nimbus, Lighthouse, Lodestar, Quilt and Teku attended the workshop in person. The Prysm team, as well as several members of the aforementioned teams, participated remotely.

THE Amphora Milestones aimed to first get clients to conform to specifications, then gradually add more complexity, and finally increase the number of other clients with whom they could interact.

The first stage, M1, only required customers to implement the merge specification. It was completed by most of the teams before the workshop even started! To help customers validate their implementation, several – essay – sequels were provided.

Then, stages M2, M3 and M4 led the client teams to set up devnets with increasing technical complexity and diversity of nodes. M2 asked the execution layer (EL) and consensus layer (CL) teams to team up one by one and launch a post-merge devnet. This ensured that both layers could communicate successfully through the Engine API in a PoS context.

M3 is where the Amphora workshop took a step beyond Rayonism: customers set up ephemeral development networks that spanned the PoW to PoS transition.

The transition is based on PoW difficulty: once a block’s difficulty is equal to or greater than a specific value, called TERMINAL_TOTAL_DIFFICULTYOr TTDit is considered the last PoW block. The execution layer then starts listening to the PoS consensus layer to detect new blocks. To ensure each team’s implementation was robust, EL teams had to connect to two CL clients and vice-versa to successfully complete M3.

M4 was the real target of the event: getting multiple EL&CL clients on a devnet that went through the entire PoW to PoS transition. In other words, while M3 was about one-to-one devnets, M4 was about many-to-many.

We reached this goal for a subset of teams before the end of the workshop, so we then reached our stretch goal: M5.

Sustainable artifacts

This important step aimed to transform Amphora from a short-lived event into a longer-lasting infrastructure that the community could use. M5 required customer teams to start a devnet that would not only work throughout the transition with all customer combinations, but would persist beyond the Amphora event.

On the last day of the workshop, a few minutes before the final dinner, M5 was hit: a network of 10,000 validators spread across 100 nodes and several client implementations launched as part of PoW reached the TERMINAL_TOTAL_DIFFICULTYI switched to PoS and successfully finalized the channel 🎉!

The M5 devnet successfully finalizes the post-merge, a few minutes before the workshop closing dinner. Photo by Ben Edgington.

Beyond the amphora

The success of Amphora gives tremendous momentum to The Merge. Customer teams now have a clear list of tasks they need to work on them, and enough progress has been made to start reaching a broader segment of the Ethereum community.

Yesterday, a more stable version of the M5 Amphora devnet, Pithoswas launched. Now that this network is active (explorer here), expect public calls exploring how developer tools and other Ethereum core infrastructure can best prepare for the PoW to PoS transition.

Customer teams and researchers will continue to iterate on The Merge specification to resolve issues identified during Amphora and respond to community feedback. Within a few weeks, the specification should be finalized and, shortly after, a new stable testnet will be available.

THANKS

The work accomplished during Amphora exceeded all our expectations. For this, we would like to thank the client teams and researchers, without whom no specifications would have been written or implemented.

Furthermore, thanks to ConsenSys, Chain safe And Ben Edgington for their excellent coverage of the workshop.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleArgentina’s central bank exposes Bitcoin mining: here’s why
Next Article Bitcoin.com NewsRabbitCoin Brings Next Level of Play-to-Earn with Latest Blockchain NetworkRocky Rabbit has quickly become a key player in the Play-to-Earn (P2E) gaming sector, combining exciting gameplay with the tangible….1 day ago

Related Posts

Ethereum

Ethereum Trading Volume Hits $375 Billion in November as ETF Activity Increases – Details

November 29, 2025
Ethereum

Here’s why Ethereum is emerging as the world’s capital embraces on-chain finance

November 29, 2025
Ethereum

Bitmine resumes Ethereum accumulation: 14,618 ETH purchased in last move

November 29, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Single Page Post
Share
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
Featured Content
Event

Dutch Blockchain Week 2026 Announces Its Biggest Edition Yet!

November 28, 2025

Dutch Blockchain Week returns in 2026 with its most ambitious edition to date. From June…

Event

Istanbul Blockchain Week Returns in June 2026 Amid Surging Crypto Adoption in Türkiye

November 24, 2025

Istanbul, Türkiye – November 2025 — Istanbul Blockchain Week (IBW), produced by leading Web3 marketing…

1 2 3 … 63 Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube

Dogecoin ETF (DOGE) Raises $2 Million: Two Key Levels Emerge

November 29, 2025

Ethereum Holds $3,000 with Neutral MVRV – Can Fusaka Trigger a Breakout?

November 29, 2025

Balancer offers $8M payback plan after $128M DeFi exploit

November 29, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
  • About us
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms of service
  • Privacy policy
  • Contact us
© 2025 Altcoin Observer. all rights reserved by Tech Team.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

bitcoin
Bitcoin (BTC) $ 90,699.30
ethereum
Ethereum (ETH) $ 2,992.19
tether
Tether (USDT) $ 1.00
xrp
XRP (XRP) $ 2.21
bnb
BNB (BNB) $ 877.00
usd-coin
USDC (USDC) $ 0.999987
solana
Wrapped SOL (SOL) $ 136.71
tron
TRON (TRX) $ 0.281425
staked-ether
Lido Staked Ether (STETH) $ 2,993.70
dogecoin
Dogecoin (DOGE) $ 0.148625