randao
truffle
randao | truffle | |
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7 | 72 | |
826 | 14,014 | |
0.0% | - | |
0.0 | 9.4 | |
about 1 year ago | 6 months ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
randao
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Gas is the cheapest it's been in a long time. Imagine that this will be the norm a year or so from now
There's really no "forcing", in sharding validators are randomly assigned to a shard, similarly to how they're currently randomly split up into committees that attest to the validity of blocks. There's no centralizing force: the randomness into the process is provided in a decentralized fashion by the validators themselves, through a mechanism called RANDAO.
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Explaining Ethereum's consensus mechanism after The Merge
Article author here.
Great questions, should have explored the randomness beacon more. Ethereum uses [RANDAO](https://github.com/randao/randao), which is a distributed commit-reveal scheme where participants in the generation post a hash of their data on the commit portion and then at a later timestamp reveal the data preimage, and get slashed if they do not reveal a correct preimage. Then all participant data is aggregated together. This means if there is at least one honest participant the generation will be random.
A supermajority (2/3rds) of validators is required to finalize a block, in case of a 50-50 network partition blocks would stop being finalized and attestation rewards would stop. Non-participating validators would slowly leak stake through the inactivity leak until online validators once again had a supermajority. This is the "self-healing" mechanism that allows both safety and liveness.
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How does Eth 2.0 PoS choose block proposer randomly?
https://github.com/randao/randao Is this what you’re referring to? It says it’s a DAO.
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Proposals on random
So according to this generating randoms for the eth chain is like validating but with shorter cycle and more profitable. Now I have even more questions like: How can I participate Is there software like prysm for using random contracts What is the minimum stake for random contracts Is anyone doing this, is it wort it
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Suggestion for multiple-user seed
Thank you Eric, I discussed it too in the PoolTogether discord and got this reponse from one of the founders: " What you're describing is a version of "RANDAO". See here: https://github.com/randao/randao Really, the VRF is an unnecessary step if a seed is being selected by all participants If you look through the above project, you'll see they try to handle a few corner cases like if a user refuses to reveal their seed, or preventing a seed from being used twice The trouble with Randao is the amount of coordination and expense that it incurs. " I understand ETH 2.0 will be doing some implementation of RANDAO along VDFs for the Beacon chain. Algorand implements this too. I found this talk from Justin Drake talking about this algorithm: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqL_cMlPjOI
truffle
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Projects to contribute to
Truffle (13700 GitHub Stars) https://github.com/trufflesuite/truffle
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SKALE Ecosystem Update. Explore the Thriving Ecosystem that is Driving Innovation on SKALE
Truffle
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Write a Smart Contract with ChatGPT MetaMask Infura, and Truffle
You’ve probably heard that Generative AI has demonstrated the potential to disrupt a huge number of industries and jobs — and web3 is no exception. But how well can ChatGPT create smart contracts? Can using ChatGPT to code smart contracts make you a 10x developer? In this article, we’ll try it out and see. We’ll walk through writing and deploying an Ethereum smart contract using MetaMask, Infura, and Truffle … and we will ask ChatGPT for instructions on how to do everything from the code to the deployment.
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Solidity digest fortnightly / 17-30 apr 2023
truffle v5.8.3 and v5.8.4 — update Ganache to the most recent version which supports Shanghai and small fixes
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Learn To Become a Web3 Developer by Exploring the Web3 Stack
For example, I used the Truffle Suite to write, compile, and deploy my first smart contracts, which includes Ganache to create a local blockchain and Drizzle to create a front-end dapp interface.
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Solidity digest / mar 2023
truffle v5.8.0 - Truffle introduces the Truffle Dashboard Hardhat plugin, which allows developers to see decoded transaction information when using Truffle Dashboard with their Hardhat projects.
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How to Build on Linea - a zk-rollup on Ethereum
In this article, we’ll explore what makes Linea so exciting. Then, we’ll walk through a tutorial on how to build a dapp on the Linea testnet. Finally, we’ll create our own cryptocurrency on Linea using Solidity, MetaMask, and Truffle: all mature ecosystem tools that are used by blockchain developers to build dapps.
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The 4 Best dApp Frameworks for First-Time Ethereum Developers
Truffle is a popular development and testing framework for dApps, both for first time and experienced Ethereum developers. As well as containing a web3.js library, Truffle is simple, user friendly and, with over 56K GitHub users, trusted. To install Truffle you need to have Node, NPM and Python. You can install Truffle via NPM with the command ‘npm install -g truffle.’
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Advancing dApp development with Hardhat Indexing: A Game-Changer for Ethereum Devs
The inspiration for the article came from a project I had built a little over a month earlier, for which I wrote a different article. In this initial project, I was actually using a Hardhat local node for my smart contract development. I decided to switch to Truffle for the final article, because it had a more intuitive demo contract, and because the command line tool made it easier to create manual transactions.
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The power of zero-knowledge proofs - exploring the new ConsenSys zkEVM
Easy for devs — The zkEVM supports most popular tools out of the box. You can build, test, debug, and deploy your smart contracts with Hardhat, Infura, Truffle, etc. All the tools you use now, you can keep using. And there is already a bridge to move tokens onto and off the network.
What are some alternatives?
ethereumbook - Mastering Ethereum, by Andreas M. Antonopoulos, Gavin Wood
Kemono - The original paywall archiver/leaker. Deprecated in favor of Kemono 2.
openzeppelin-solidity - OpenZeppelin Contracts is a library for secure smart contract development. [Moved to: https://github.com/OpenZeppelin/openzeppelin-contracts]
hardhat - Hardhat is a development environment to compile, deploy, test, and debug your Ethereum software.
openzeppelin-contracts - OpenZeppelin Contracts is a library for secure smart contract development.
remix-ide - Documentation for Remix IDE
teku - Open-source Ethereum consensus client written in Java
foundry - Foundry is a blazing fast, portable and modular toolkit for Ethereum application development written in Rust.
annotated-spec - Vitalik's annotated eth2 spec. Not intended to be "the" annotated spec; other documents like Ben Edgington's https://benjaminion.xyz/eth2-annotated-spec/ also exist. This one is intended to focus more on design rationale.
embark-framework - Framework for serverless Decentralized Applications using Ethereum, IPFS and other platforms
prysm - Go implementation of Ethereum proof of stake