- Ethereum’s team has completed an AllCoreDev meeting with key areas of interest covered.
- The call covered the shadow forks on Goerli and how to handle EL clients and difficulty bombs amongst others.
- Ethereum is edging closer towards a transition to proof of stake in the near future.
Ethereum has inched towards the transition to the Proof-of-Stake Consensus Layer with the conclusion of another ‘AllCoreDevs’ session. The details were shared by top Ethereum programmer Tim Beiko and touched on several key areas.
The AllCoreDevs Call
Tim Beiko, a leading Ethereum developer hosted a meeting of core Ethereum devs that began with an update on the testing of the Merge hard fork. As part of the testing process, the developers “shadow forked” Goerli, allowing “client teams to experience issues with block production logic and differing timeout expectations.”
The shadow merge will allow devs to spot issues that might crop up easily and after two shadow forks, a third is being planned for the next week. In the coming weeks, a mainnet shadow fork will be carried out to record data in mainnet conditions, according to Tim Beiko.
Beiko noted that “there are some issues in setting explicit timeouts, as it opens attack vectors to try and create blocks” and while a solution has not been reached, the team will work hard to reach a conclusion.
Talks were carried out over timelines and difficulty bombs with the devs trying to opine when the next increment would take place. Beiko argued that while bombs increase every 100,000 blocks, hashrates coming and leaving the network often have the unintended consequence of affecting the outcome of the bomb. Beiko believes that when miners begin to sell their GPUs following the Merge, it is expected that hash rates will drop and will affect the predictions.
 
 
“So, with all these caveats, if we make some rough estimations, we can expect block times to hit 15s in early July and 17s in late July. Again, large error bars here!” said Beiko.
When Should The Merge Be Expected
While an exact date has not been put forward, it is believed that the switch to Proof-of-Stake is bound to happen sometime in 2022. Tim Beiko predicts that the Merge could take place over the summer while others have narrowed their prediction to May or June.
“We think four months is a generous timeframe from having the code done to seeing the merge on mainnet,” Beiko said. With the merge test running smoothly and the Kiln testnet done, pundits cannot see any major stumbling blocks against Ethereum’s proposed switch.
Ahead of the switch, ETH has become the second most staked asset with a staked value of $37 billion according to StakingRewards. Only Solana’s SOL ranks higher than it with a stake value of $52.02 billion.