XRP Ledger ā€˜Self-Healedā€™ After Brief Downtime

by Pelican Press
1 minutes read

XRP Ledger ā€˜Self-Healedā€™ After Brief Downtime

The XRP Ledger (XRPL) was briefly unavailable early Wednesday as a consensus mechanism design led to a temporary halt in network operations.

The incident began when the networkā€™s consensus process appeared to function, but validations were not being published, causing the networkā€™s ledgers to ā€œdrift apart.ā€

In the XRP Ledger, consensus among validators is crucial for updating the ledger with new transactions. If validators cannot agree on which transactions to include in the next ledger version, the network canā€™t move forward.

A ā€œdriftā€ in this context means that while the consensus protocol was technically running, validations (or confirmations of transaction sets) werenā€™t being published.

At least one validator operator manually intervened to reset the networkā€™s consensus to a previously validated ledger state, although the network seemed to have rectified the problem independently, Ripple CTO David Schwarz said in a X post after the incident.

ā€œItā€™s likely that servers refused to send validations precisely because they knew something was wrong,ā€ Schwarz said. ā€œAnd wanted to make sure no server accepted a ledger as fully validated when they couldnā€™t be sure the network would retain and eventually agree on that ledger.

ā€œOne possible failure mode for XRPL is if all the validators think somethingā€™s wrong with the network, all refuse to send any validations, and then thereā€™s no chatter to let the network reconverge. This is the ā€˜silent networkā€™ failure,ā€ Schwarz added.

No assets were at risk during the downtime, with XRP prices largely in line with broader bitcoin and altcoin movements.



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