Alpenglow cuts finality time 100x, bringing Solana’s speed on par with centralized systems.
The new model splits faults into two categories, namely, full Byzantine and down or unavailable.
The Rotor and Votor components set the stage for scalability with multiple concurrent leaders.
Anza, a Solana-focused research and development firm, has introduced a new consensus protocol called Alpenglow, which aims to make the network faster, more deterministic, and safer. Described as the biggest consensus redesign since Solana’s launch, Alpenglow is set to replace the existing TowerBFT (Byzantine Fault Tolerance) mechanism and Proof of History with a more intuitive and efficient system.
Alpenglow Targets Performance Gains Without Compromising Network Safety
In his X post, Anatoly Yakovenko, co-founder of Solana, stated that he got nearly everything wrong about consensus, except the important parts. Drawing attention to the design of Alpenglow, he emphasized two critical requirements such as consensus should not interfere with block producers using 100% of the available bandwidth at all times, and users must experience deterministic finality within a single round…
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