Developers of the Solana blockchain network are planning to implement a fix for an “implementation bug” on April 15. The bug recently led to a significant increase in transaction failures. On April 4, over 75% of non-vote transactions on Solana experienced failures, mainly due to the recent surge in memecoin trading on the network. However, that figure has since dropped to 64.8%.
Mert, CEO of Helius Labs, emphasized that the current issue with Solana is not a design flaw but an implementation bug. Mert clarified on X that implementation errors are typically less serious compared to fundamental design errors. He explained that the issue revolves around the implementation of “QUIC,” a data transfer protocol developed by Google, which ensures that all network nodes are aware of the current state.
Mert also stated that “this is not the only issue on Solana, there are also economic factors you need to consider for the long term, but this is the biggest fire rn — once this is fixed, tweaking local fee markets and economic incentives can be reasoned about more clearly.” Solana’s implementation of QUIC has specific deficiencies and bugs that need to be addressed, but it does not indicate a design flaw in Solana itself.
Solana’s fix, scheduled for April 15, is intended to resolve the current implementation issues, provided no additional problems arise during testing. SOL is down 2.95% over the past 7 days, dipping back below the $200 level after an explosive surge driven by increased memecoin activity on the network.
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