Anatoly Yakovenko, the founder and CEO of Solana Labs has downplayed claims that Solana's network outages were being caused by a high volume of validator messages and its on-chain voting system clogging its consensus layer.
While the Solana Foundation confirmed in a Feb. 27 post that the “root cause” of the recent 20-hour network outage is still not clear, the CEO responded to speculation that Solana’s decision to include on-chain votes as transactions is a “massive design flaw” that has led to its many outages.
The controversial thread in question was posted by Twitter user DBCryptoX earlier on Feb. 27 days after Solana's 20-hour network outage, suggesting that the high volume of validator messages and on-chain votes were clogging the network.
1/Yesterday #Solana had another 20 hour outage Just one of about a dozen times the ⛓️ has gone down. But why? All part of a massive design flaw that I will try to break down in this So let’s get into it… pic.twitter.com/KmeUPnnlZJ
However, Yankovenko in a response Tweet some 20 minutes later called the theory as coming from “pure ignorance.”
In short, he explained that the votes — which are part of a “single giant quorum” — contribute to provide an “exceptional level of security and high throughput and low fees” simultaneously.
Why are votes transactions? Every thread that I've seen that talks about this comes form pure ignorance.Classic BFT consensus requires quadratic messaging overhead.The more nodes you have in the same quorum, the part of the network that agrees on the state, the more messages… https://t.co/8lOhICb8mn
However, Yakovenko didn’t exactly refute DBCryptoX’s claim that 90-95% of transactions on Solana comprise these validator messages and on-chain votes, which,
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