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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
eth2 quick update no. 8 | Ethereum Foundation Blog
2020-02-04 · via Ethereum Foundation Blog

Keep it coming

tldr;

Runtime Verification audit and verification of deposit contract

Runtime Verification recently completed their audit and formal verification of the eth2 deposit contract bytecode. This is a significant milestone bringing us closer to the eth2 Phase 0 mainnet. Now that this work is complete, I ask for review and comment by the community. If there are gaps or errors in the formal specification, please post an issue on the eth2 specs repo.

The formal semantics specified in the K Framework define the precise behaviors the EVM bytecode should exibit and proves that these behaviors hold. These include input validations, updates to the iterative merkle tree, logs, and more. Take a look here for a (semi)high-level discussion of what is specified, and dig in deeper here for the full formal K specification.

I want to thank Daejun Park (Runtime Verification) for leading the effort, and Martin Lundfall and Carl Beekhuizen for much feedback and review along the way.

Again, if this stuff is your cup of tea, now is the time to provide input and feedback on the formal verification -- please take a look.

The word of the month is "optimization"

The past month has been all about optimizations.

Although a 10x optimization here and a 100x optimization there doesn't feel so tangible to the Ethereum community today, this phase of development is just as important as any other in getting us to the finish line.

Beacon chain optimizations are critical

(why can't we just max out our machines with the beacon chain)

The beacon chain -- the core of eth2 -- is a requisite component for the rest of the sharded system. To sync any shard -- whether it be a single shard or many, a client must sync the beacon chain. Thus, to be able to run the beacon chain and a handful of shards on a consumer machine, it is paramount that the beacon chain is relatively low in resource consumption even when high validator participation (~300k+ validators).

To this end, much of the effort of eth2 client teams in the past month has been dedicated to optimizations -- reducing resource requirements of phase 0, the beacon chain.

I'm pleased to report we're seeing fantastic progress. What follows is not comprehensive, but is instead just a glimpse to give you an idea of the work.

Lighthouse runs 100k validators like a breeze

Lighthouse brought down their ~16k validator testnet a couple of weeks ago after an attestation gossip relay loop caused the nodes to essentially DoS themselves. Sigma Prime quickly patched this bug and looked to bigger and better things -- i.e. a 100k validator testnet! The past two weeks have been dedicated to optimizations to make this real-world scale testnet a reality.

A goal of each progressive Lighthouse testnet is to ensure that thousands of validators can easily run on a small VPS provisioned with 2 CPUS and 8GB of RAM. Initial tests with 100k validators saw clients use a consistent 8GB of RAM, but after a few days of optimizations Paul was able to reduce this to a steady 2.5GB with some ideas to get it even lower soon. Lighthouse also made 70% gains in the hashing of state which along with BLS signature verification is proving to be the main computational bottleneck in eth2 clients.

The new Lighthouse testnet launch is imminent. Pop into their discord to follow progress

Prysmatic testnet still chugging and sync massively improved

A couple of weeks ago the current Prysm testnet celebrated their 100,000th slot with over 28k validators validating. Today, the testnet passed slot 180k and has over 35k active validators. Keeping a public testnet going while at the same time cranking out updates, optimizations, stability patches, etc is quite a feat.

There is a ton of tangible progress ongoing in Prysm. I've spoken with a number of validators over the past few months and from their perspective, the client continues to markedly improve. One especially exciting item is improved sync speeds. The Prysmatic team optimized their client sync from ~0.3 blocks/second to more than 20 blocks/second. This greatly improves validator UX, allowing them to connect and start contributing to the network much faster.

Another exciting addition to the Prysm testnet is alethio's new eth2 node monitor -- eth2stats.io. This is an opt-in service that allows nodes to aggregate stats in single place. This will allow us to better understand the state of testnets and ultimately eth2 mainnet.

Don't trust me! Pull it down and try it out for yourself.

Everyone loves proto_array

The core eth2 spec frequently (knowingly) specifies expected behavior non-optimally. The spec code is instead optimized for readability of intention rather than for performance.

A spec describes correct behavior of a system, while an algorithm is a procedure for executing a specified behavior. Many different algorithms can faithfully implement the same specification. Thus the eth2 spec allows for a wide variety of different implementations of each component as client teams take into account any number of different tradeoffs (e.g. computational complexity, memory usage, implementation complexity, etc).

One such example is the fork choice -- the spec used to find the head of the chain. The eth2 spec specifies the behavior using a naive algorithm to clearly show the moving parts and edge cases -- e.g. how to update weights when a new attestation comes in, what to do when a new block is finalized, etc. A direct implementation of the spec algorithm would never meet the production needs of eth2. Instead, client teams must think more deeply about the computational tradeoffs in the context of their client operation and implement a more sophisticated algorithm to meet those needs.

Lucky for client teams, about 12 months ago Protolambda implemented a bunch of different fork choice algorithms, documenting the benefits and tradeoffs of each. Recently, Paul from Sigma Prime observed a major bottleneck in Lighthouse's fork choice algorithm and went shopping for something new. He uncovered proto_array in proto's old list.

It took some work to port proto_array to fit the most recent spec, but once integrated, proto_array proved "to run in orders of magnitude less time and perform significantly less database reads." After the initial integration into Lighthouse, it was quickly picked up by Prysmatic as well and is available in their most recent release. With this algorithm's clear advantages over alternatives, proto_array is quickly becoming a crowd favorite, and I fully expect to see some other teams pick it up soon!

Ongoing Phase 2 research -- Quilt, eWASM, and now TXRX

Phase 2 of eth2 is the addition of state and execution into the sharded eth2 universe. Although some core principles are relatively defined (e.g. communication between shards via crosslinks and merkle proofs), the Phase 2 design landscape is still relatively wide open. Quilt (ConsenSys research team) and eWASM (EF research team) have spent much of their efforts in the past year researching and better defining this wide open design space in parallel to the ongoing work to specify and build Phases 0 and 1.

To that end, there has been a flurry of recent activity of public calls, discussions, and ethresear.ch posts. There are some great resources to help get the lay of the land. The following is just a small sample:

In addition to Quilt and eWASM, the newly formed TXRX (ConsenSys research team) are dedicating a portion of their efforts toward Phase 2 research as well, initially focusing on better understanding cross-shard transaction complexity as well as researching and prototyping possible paths for the integration of eth1 into eth2.

All of the Phase 2 R&D is a relatively green field. There is a huge opportunity here to dig deep and make an impact. Throughout this year, expect more concrete specifications as well as developer playgrounds to sink your teeth into.

Whiteblock releases libp2p gossipsub test results

This week, Whiteblock released libp2p gossipsub testing results as the culmination of a grant co-funded by ConsenSys and the Ethereum Foundation. This work aims to validate the gossipsub algorithm for the uses of eth2 and to provide insight into the boundaries of performance to aid followup tests and algorithmic enhancements.

The tl;dr is that the results of this wave of testing look solid, but further tests should be performed to better observe how message propogation scales with network size. Check out the full report detailing their methodology, topology, experiments, and results!

Stacked Spring!

This Spring is stacked with exciting conferences, hackathons, eth2 bounties, and more! There will be a group of eth2 researchers and engineers at each of these events. Please come chat! We'd love to talk to you about engineering progress, validating on testnets, what to expect this year, and anything else that might be on your mind.

Now is a great time to get involved! Many clients are in the testnet phase so there are all sorts of tools to build, experiments to run, and fun to be had.

Here is a glimpse of the many events slated to have solid eth2 representation:

🚀