Close Menu
Altcoin ObserverAltcoin Observer
  • Regulation
  • Bitcoin
  • Altcoins
  • Market
  • Analysis
  • DeFi
  • Security
  • Ethereum
Categories
  • Altcoins (3,640)
  • Analysis (3,746)
  • Bitcoin (4,372)
  • Blockchain (2,157)
  • DeFi (2,623)
  • Ethereum (2,762)
  • Event (119)
  • Exclusive Deep Dive (1)
  • Landscape Ads (2)
  • Market (2,714)
  • Press Releases (12)
  • Reddit (2,847)
  • Regulation (2,474)
  • Security (4,028)
  • Thought Leadership (3)
  • Videos (44)
Hand picked
  • Here’s why Uniswap is betting on execution rather than higher LP incentives
  • XRP On-Chain Data Issues Warning as Sellers Continue to Dominate
  • Castle.com Launch: RuneScape Veterans Recreate Nostalgic Dueling Arena in a Living, Gamified Casino World
  • BNB Chain’s H2 2026 Roadmap Targets AI Agents as BNB Crypto Price Lags
  • Mapping SKY crypto’s path to $0.067 – Can bulls keep the rally alive?
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»eth2 quick update #4
Ethereum

eth2 quick update #4

January 10, 2025No Comments
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
Kumiko Background.jpg
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email



Welcome to the fourth part of fast eth2 update. There are a lot of moving topics to talk about this week. Besides the heroic development of the eth2 client underway, here are the highlights:

tldr;


Differential fuzzing subsidy

Sigma Prime received a grant to lead the differential fuzzing effort for eth2 clients. This effort is critical to the successful launch of a multi-client network by helping to detect consensus issues before the mainnet.

The act of “fuzzing” involves throwing lots of random inputs at software to see how it reacts. When fuzzing a single piece of software, the goal is often to find inputs that lead to unexpected crashes. When we find such inputs, we then determine what went wrong and harden the software to that type of input.

Differential fuzzing is a little different. Instead of explicitly looking for crashes, we look for cases in which different implementations of a protocol have different output for the same input. In a blockchain context, we use differential fuzzing to find cases in which a series of blocks leads to a different resulting state on two different clients. Ideally, in production, such cases do not exist.

Thin Client Working Group

Safe/North Starrecipient of a grant from the Ethereum Foundation for eth2 light client research and development, formed the Thin Client Working Group. This group took on the responsibility of ensuring that thin clients are first class citizens in eth2. To this end, they organize a monthly call aimed at facilitating research, standards, specifications and customer education.

The need for a rich ecosystem of thin clients and thin client servers is only amplified in a fragmented protocol like eth2. Even if a client synchronizes a subset of the protocol (e.g. just a few fragments), a user will very often need to obtain information about accounts, contracts, and the general state of affairs on another fragment. A client could inefficiently sync the entire additional shard, but more often than not, casually requesting information about specific accounts on the shard with succinct evidence will be the way to go.

Connect to the next Call to the Thin Client Working Group to stay up to date with everything light related in eth2.

eth1 -> eth2

In the early days of eth2, the transfer of ether from the existing Ethereum chain (eth1) to the new beacon chain (eth2) will be one-way. In other words, ether staked on eth2 will not be transferable (to begin with) to eth1. The choice of a one-way transfer to validation aims to minimize the risk profile induced by eth2 on eth1 and to enable a faster development cycle on eth2 without having to fork eth1 in the process. There is some movement around creating a two-way bridge, but I’ll save the discussion of bridge mechanics and trade-offs for a later article. Today I would like to go deeper how this one-way transfer works and how it can be implemented securely without modifying eth1.

On the existing Ethereum PoW chain, we will deploy the eth2 validator contract. This contract has a single function called deposit which takes into account a number of parameters to initialize a new validator (e.g. public key, withdrawal credentials, ETH deposit, etc.). There is no withdrawal function on this contract. Barring a fork to add a two-way bridge, this deposited ETH now only exists in eth2 on the beacon chain.

It is then up to the beacon chain validators to reach consensus on the state of this contract so that new deposits can be processed. This is done by eth2 block nominators who embed recent eth1 data into a beacon block field called eth1_data. When a sufficient number of block nominators during a voting period agree on recent proposals eth1_datathis data is entered in the state of the beacon chain allowing the processing of new deposits.

An important note about this mechanism is that the eth1_data is deep in the eth1 PoW chain – ~1,000 blocks “following distance”. This tracking distance induces high latency in the processing of new validator deposits, but provides a high degree of security in the coupling of these two systems. The eth1 chain would need to be reorganized over 1,000 blocks to break the link, and in such a case it would require manual intervention to overcome it.

We are researching and prototyping the use of the beacon chain to finalize eth1 (i.e. the finality gadget). This would require eth1 to defer its choice of fork to the beacon chain, thereby gaining security from PoS validators and allowing much faster eth1 to eth2 deposits. The finality gadget also opens up other fun things like bidirectional bridging and exposing the eth2 to eth1 data layer. More on all this in a future article 🚀.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous Article“Most crypto projects won’t survive” – Gary Gensler
Next Article China Unveils National Blockchain Data Infrastructure

Related Posts

Ethereum

Ethereum Treasury Boom Now Has One Company Nearing 5% of Supply

July 8, 2026
Ethereum

Ethereum Loses Ownership of Crypto Payments as Base Moves $565 Billion into Stablecoins

July 7, 2026
Ethereum

Ethereum divides into three power centers and ETH treasury companies pay two of them.

July 2, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

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

Dutch Blockchain Week 2026 strengthens position as Europe’s leading B2B blockchain event week

April 14, 2026

Amsterdam, April 2026 – Dutch Blockchain Week 2026 is rapidly evolving into one of Europe’s…

Event

Global Games Show Riyadh: The Ultimate Creator & Influencer Hub

March 31, 2026

The fast-evolving gaming ecosystem of Riyadh is powered by solid national investment, a flourishing esports…

1 2 3 … 82 Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube

Here’s why Uniswap is betting on execution rather than higher LP incentives

July 10, 2026

Mapping SKY crypto’s path to $0.067 – Can bulls keep the rally alive?

July 10, 2026

Decoding EigenCloud’s Market-Defying Rebound – 2 Factors Powering EIGEN

July 9, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
  • About us
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms of service
  • Privacy policy
  • Contact us
© 2026 Altcoin Observer. all rights reserved by Tech Team.

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

bitcoin
Bitcoin (BTC) $ 64,019.00
ethereum
Ethereum (ETH) $ 1,773.58
tether
Tether (USDT) $ 0.999189
bnb
BNB (BNB) $ 576.10
usd-coin
USDC (USDC) $ 0.99973
xrp
XRP (XRP) $ 1.11
solana
Solana (SOL) $ 78.94
tron
TRON (TRX) $ 0.331319
figure-heloc
Figure Heloc (FIGR_HELOC) $ 1.00
staked-ether
Lido Staked Ether (STETH) $ 2,265.05