惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

S
Schneier on Security
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
月光博客
月光博客
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
博客园 - 司徒正美
罗磊的独立博客
U
Unit 42
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
Y
Y Combinator Blog
博客园_首页
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
J
Java Code Geeks
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
C
Check Point Blog
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
博客园 - 叶小钗
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
Latest news
Latest news
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
A
About on SuperTechFans
L
LangChain Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
S
Securelist
A
Arctic Wolf
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
T
Threatpost
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
博客园 - 聂微东
博客园 - 【当耐特】
T
Tenable Blog
I
Intezer
D
DataBreaches.Net
B
Blog RSS Feed
Security Latest
Security Latest
C
Cisco Blogs
T
Tor Project blog
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium

Ethereum Foundation Blog

Checkpoint #9: Apr 2026 | Ethereum Foundation Blog How L1 and L2s can build the strongest possible Ethereum | Ethereum Foundation Blog The Promise of Ethereum: Introducing the EF Mandate | Ethereum Foundation Blog This Is Fine (Until the Grant Runs Out) | Ethereum Foundation Blog Treasury Staking Initiative | Ethereum Foundation Blog The Ethereum Foundation's Commitment to DeFi | Ethereum Foundation Blog Protocol Priorities Update for 2026 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Announcing the Platform Team at EF | Ethereum Foundation Blog Ethereum Protocol Studies 2026 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Executive Leadership Update | Ethereum Foundation Blog An update from Tomasz | Ethereum Foundation Blog Introducing the EF Academic Secretariat 2026 PhD Fellowship | Ethereum Foundation Blog Trillion Dollar Security Day at Devconnect | Ethereum Foundation Blog Allocation Update - Q4 2025 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Checkpoint #8: Jan 2026 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Devcon 8 is coming to Mumbai, India in November 2026 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Hegota Upgrade EIP Proposal Timelines | Ethereum Foundation Blog Shipping an L1 zkEVM #2: The Security Foundations | Ethereum Foundation Blog The Future of Ethereum’s State | Ethereum Foundation Blog Devconnect Argentina Recap | Ethereum Foundation Blog Allocation Update - Q3 2025 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Making Ethereum Feel Like One Chain Again | Ethereum Foundation Blog Checkpoint #7: Nov 2025 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Fusaka Mainnet Announcement | Ethereum Foundation Blog 2 weeks to Devconnect: Everything you need to know | Ethereum Foundation Blog Unveiling ESP's New Grants Program | Ethereum Foundation Blog Fusaka Update – Transaction Gas Limit Cap arrives with EIP-7825 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Fusaka Update - Information for Blob users | Ethereum Foundation Blog Announcing the 2026 EF Internship | Ethereum Foundation Blog Supporting privacy with new funding mechanisms | Ethereum Foundation Blog The Ethereum Foundation’s Commitment to Privacy | Ethereum Foundation Blog Checkpoint #6: Oct 2025 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Privacy Cluster Leadership Announcement | Ethereum Foundation Blog Fusaka Testnet Announcement | Ethereum Foundation Blog Announcing the districts of the Ethereum World’s Fair | Ethereum Foundation Blog Fusaka $2,000,000 Audit Contest! | Ethereum Foundation Blog Holešky Testnet Shutdown Announcement | Ethereum Foundation Blog The Ecosystem Support Program's Next Chapter | Ethereum Foundation Blog Protocol Update 003 — Improve UX | Ethereum Foundation Blog Protocol Update 002 - Scale Blobs | Ethereum Foundation Blog Trillion Dollar Security - Phase 2 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Join Us: EF Protocol Reddit AMA - August 29th, 2025 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Protocol Update 001 – Scale L1 | Ethereum Foundation Blog lean Ethereum | Ethereum Foundation Blog Celebrating 10 Years of Ethereum | Ethereum Foundation Blog Checkpoint #5: July 2025 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Allocation Update - Q2 2025 | Ethereum Foundation Blog The Future of Ecosystem Development at the EF | Ethereum Foundation Blog Shipping an L1 zkEVM #1: Realtime Proving | Ethereum Foundation Blog Partial history expiry announcement | Ethereum Foundation Blog Checkpoint #4: Berlinterop | Ethereum Foundation Blog World Experience: Updates from the Next Billion Fellowship | Ethereum Foundation Blog Now accepting interns - Join the Ethereum Season of Internships | Ethereum Foundation Blog Tickets are live for the Ethereum World’s Fair! And we're launching the Supporter Program | Ethereum Foundation Blog Ethereum Foundation Treasury Policy | Ethereum Foundation Blog Checkpoint #3: June 2025 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Announcing the Devconnect ARG Scholars Program | Ethereum Foundation Blog Announcing Protocol | Ethereum Foundation Blog Nyota Interop Recap ✨ | Ethereum Foundation Blog Allocation Update - Q1 2024 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Announcing the Ethereum Protocol Fellowship Cohort 5 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Ethereum Protocol Fellowship Cohort 4 Recap | Ethereum Foundation Blog Sepolia Incident | Ethereum Foundation Blog Announcing the Devcon SEA venue! | Ethereum Foundation Blog Devconnect Scholars Program - Ethereum Stories from Istanbul and Beyond | Ethereum Foundation Blog Dencun Mainnet Announcement | Ethereum Foundation Blog ZK Grants Round | Ethereum Foundation Blog Eth2 at ETHWaterloo: Prizes for Eth2 education, tooling, and research | Ethereum Foundation Blog eth2 quick update no. 2 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Devcon4 Ticket Sales | Ethereum Foundation Blog Announcing Swarm Proof-of-Concept Release 3 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Devcon4 Announcement | Ethereum Foundation Blog Announcing May 2018 Cohort of EF Grants | Ethereum Foundation Blog Announcing World Trade Francs: The Official Ethereum Stablecoin | Ethereum Foundation Blog Announcing Beneficiaries of the Ethereum Foundation Grants | Ethereum Foundation Blog Geth 1.8 - Iceberg¹ | Ethereum Foundation Blog Farewell and Welcome | Ethereum Foundation Blog Security Alert - Solidity - Variables can be overwritten in storage | Ethereum Foundation Blog Uncle Rate and Transaction Fee Analysis | Ethereum Foundation Blog Announcement of imminent hard fork for EIP150 gas cost changes | Ethereum Foundation Blog Dev Update: Formal Methods | Ethereum Foundation Blog On Inflation, Transaction Fees and Cryptocurrency Monetary Policy | Ethereum Foundation Blog Onward from the Hard Fork | Ethereum Foundation Blog C++ DEV Update - July edition | Ethereum Foundation Blog The Devcon2 site is now live! | Ethereum Foundation Blog Security Alert - DoS Vulnerability in the Soft Fork | Ethereum Foundation Blog DAO Wars: Your voice on the soft-fork dilemma | Ethereum Foundation Blog Smart Contract Security | Ethereum Foundation Blog Security Alert – Geth suffers from a very low probable DoS attack vector - Update immediately | Ethereum Foundation Blog On Settlement Finality | Ethereum Foundation Blog Ethereum Foundation and Wanxiang Blockchain Labs announce a blockbuster event combining Devcon2 and the 2nd Global Blockchain Summit in Shanghai, September 19–24, 2016 | Ethereum Foundation Blog Ethereum Partners with R3CEV on Lizardcoin, Bringing Together the Best of Centralized Finance and Blockchain Technology | Ethereum Foundation Blog From Smart Contracts to Courts with not so Smart Judges | Ethereum Foundation Blog BTC Relay included in Ethereum Bounty Program | Ethereum Foundation Blog Ethereum DEV Update: C++ Roadmap | Ethereum Foundation Blog Cut and try: building a dream | Ethereum Foundation Blog Ambients Applied to Ethereum | Ethereum Foundation Blog Mihai’s Ethereum Project Update. The First Year. | Ethereum Foundation Blog Getting to the Frontier | Ethereum Foundation Blog The Ethereum Development Process | Ethereum Foundation Blog
Final Steps | Ethereum Foundation Blog
2015-07-27 · via Ethereum Foundation Blog

An update as promised: all systems are now ‘Go’ on the technical side (pun intended) and we intend to release Frontier this week.

Thank you to everyone who provided feedback on my previous blog post. What became apparent is that prior to the big day, many of you wanted to know more about what the sequence of events would exactly be, and how to prepare your machine for the release.

A transparent and open release

Frontier users will need to first generate, then load the Genesis block into their Ethereum client. The Genesis block is pretty much a database file: it contains all the transactions from the Ether sale, and when a user inputs it into the client, it represents their decision to join the network under its terms: it is the first step to consensus.

Because the ether pre-sale took place entirely on the bitcoin blockchain, its contents are public, and anyone can generate and verify the Genesis block. In the interest of decentralization and transparency, Ethereum will not provide the Genesis block as a download, but instead has created an open source script that anyone can use to generate the file, a link to which can be found later on in this article.

Since the script is already available and the release needs to be coordinated, an argument to the script has to be provided in order to 'kick off' Frontier in unison. But how can we do this and stay decentralized?

The argument needs to be a random parameter that no one, not even us, can predict. As you can imagine, there aren’t too many parameters in the world that match this criteria, but a good one is the hash of a future block on the Ethereum testnet. We had to pick a block number, but which one? 1,028,201 turns out to be both prime and palindromic, just the way we like it. So #1028201 is it.

Sequence of steps to the release:

  • Final steps to the release revealed: You are reading this now.
  • Block #1028201 is formed on the Ethereum tesnet, and is given a hash.
  • The hash is used by users around the world as a unique parameter to the Genesis block generation script.

What you can do today

First, you’ll need the client installed, I’ll use Geth as an example, but the same can be achieved with Eth (the C++ implementation of Ethereum). Geth installation instructions for Windows, Linux and OSX can be found on our wiki.

Once you have installed a client, you need to download the python script that generates the Genesis file. It’s called 'mk_genesis_block.py', and can be downloaded here.

Depending on your platform, you can also download it from the console by installing curl and running;

curl -O https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ethereum/genesis_block_generator/master/mk_genesis_block.py

This will create the file in the same folder where you invoked the command. You now need to install the pybitcointools created by our very own Vitalik Buterin. You can obtain this through the python package manager pip, so we’ll install pip first, then the tools right afterwards.

The following instructions should work on OSX and Linux. Windows users, good news, pip ships with the standard Python installer.

curl -O https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py
sudo python get-pip.py
sudo pip install bitcoin

or (if you had it installed already),

sudo pip install --upgrade bitcoin

One last step, if you are using Eth, we recently to support the new Genesis block parameter, so you'll need to pick up the correct release of the software to be ready for the big day:

cd ~/go-ethereum/
git checkout release/1.0.0
git pull
make geth

Those who would like to be ‘as ready as possible’ can follow instructions up to this point, that said, a git pull just before the fateful block is probably recommended to operate the newest version of any software.

If you have been running the clients before:

  • Back up your keys (maybe some of them are eligible for Olympic rewards) - they are located in ./ethereum/keystore
  • Delete your old chain please (it's located in ./ethereum, delete the following 3 folders only: ./extra, ./state, ./blockchain)
  • You can safely leave your ./ethereum/nodes, ./ethereum/history and ./ethereum/nodekey in place
  • Having DAGs pregenerated in ./ethash will not hurt, but feel free to delete them if you need the space

For a complete breakdown as to where the config files are located, please check out this page on our forums.

Then, it's a matter of waiting for block #1028201, which at the current block resolution time, should be formed approximately Thursday evening GMT+0.

Once 1028201 has formed, its hash will be accessible by querying a node running the testnet using web3.eth.getBlock(1028201).hash, however we will also make that value available on this blog as well as all our social media channels.

You will then be able to generate the Genesis block by running:

python mk_genesis_block.py --extradata hash_for_#1028201_goes_here > genesis_block.json

By default, the script uses Blockr and Blockchain.info to fetch the Genesis pre-sale results. You can also add the --insight switch if you’d instead prefer to use the private Ethereum server to obtain this information. If you are facing issues with the script, please raise an issue on its github.

While we will not provide the Genesis block as a file, we will still provide the Genesis block hash (shortly after we generate it ourselves) in order to insure that third party invalid or malicious files are easily discarded by the community.

Once you are satisfied with the generation of the Genesis block, you can load it into the clients using this command:

./build/bin/geth --genesis genesis_block.json

or:

./build/eth/eth --genesis genesis_block.json

From there, instructions on creating an account, importing your pre-sale wallet, transacting, etc., can be found on the ‘Getting Started’ Frontier guide at http://guide.ethereum.org/

Note that if you've used Ethereum before, you should generate new keys using a recent (RC) client, and not reuse testnet keys.

A couple more things…

We also would like to give you a bit of heads up on the ‘thawing’ phase -- the period during which the gas limit per block will be set very low to allow the network to grow slowly before transactions can take place. You should expect network instability at the very beginning of the release, including forks, potential abnormal display of information on our http://stats.ethdev.com page, and various Peer to Peer connectivity issues. Just like during the Olympic phase, we expect this instability to settle after a few hours/days.

We would also like to remind everyone that while we intend to provide a safe platform in the long term, Frontier is a technical release directed at a developer audience, and not a general public release. Please keep in mind that early software is often affected by bugs, issues with instability and complex user interfaces. If you would prefer a more user friendly experience, we encourage you to wait for the future Homestead or Metropolis Ethereum releases.

Please be especially wary of third party websites and software of unknown origin -- Ethereum will only ever publish software through its github platform at https://github.com/ethereum/.

Finally, for clarity, it’s important to note that the Olympic program ended at block 1M this morning, however, the bug bounty is still on --- and will continue until further notice. Security vulnerabilities, if found, should continue to be reported to https://bounty.ethdev.com/.

--

Updates

27/07/15: added instructions for users upgrading from previous installations 28/07/15: minor edits, added link to script github 29/07/15: added recommendation to create new keys and not reuse testnet ones