Synchronisation heuristic

When a new node joins the network, it must bootstrap: fetch and validate the chain before starting to bake or attest new blocks. A bootstrapping node cannot bake or attest new blocks, so for efficiency it should not bother to track a mempool: a pool of active operations.

Knowing whether a node is bootstrapped is challenging because a node cannot trust (in general) its neighbours. We tackle this problem using a synchronisation heuristic.

Synchronisation heuristic status

A synchronisation heuristic is used to determine whether the node is synchronised with respect to its peers.

The current synchronisation heuristic uses a synchronisation status as follows:

  • Unsynced: not synchronised

  • Synced: synchronised and the chain is not stuck

  • Stuck: synchronised and the chain is stuck

Bootstrapped

We consider a node bootstrapped if the heuristic’s status has been Synced or Stuck at least once.

Once the node is bootstrapped, the synchronisation status is still updated (at least after each change of head) and is accessible via the RPC /chains/<chain>/is_bootstrapped. This RPC returns a pair where the first component indicates if the node is bootstrapped and the second component is the current status.

Basic description of the heuristic

The synchronisation heuristic relies on a notion of candidate: a pair of a block’s timestamp and a peer. The block from which the timestamp is taken must have been validated locally and it must be the most-recent such block advertised by the peer.

The heuristic is parameterised by two values (see node configuration):

  • a threshold (configuration parameter synchronisation_threshold): the number of candidates kept by the heuristic;

  • a latency (configuration parameter latency): a delay in seconds to control possible forks and the latency of the network (see Acceptable values for parameters).

The heuristic maintains the most recent threshold candidates it is aware of, with the constraint that there is at most one candidate per peer.

The heuristic status is Synced if the threshold kept candidates are all recent enough: their age is less than latency seconds (the age is counted with respect to the current local time). Otherwise, the heuristic status is Stuck if the threshold kept candidates all have the same timestamp. Otherwise, the status is Unsynced.

Acceptable values for parameters

The heuristic accepts any value for the threshold, but values of 1 or less are mainly used for testing and debugging:

  • If threshold is negative, then the status is always Unsynced.

  • If threshold is 0, then the status is always Synced.

  • If threshold is 1, then the status cannot be Stuck.

Other values are acceptable for threshold, but a small threshold (between 2 and 10; the default being 4) is probably best: performances and accuracy may degrade for values much higher than 10.

The default value for latency is 75 seconds. Whatever you change it to, it should be at least long enough to include a few blocks’ worth of the protocol’s baking rate plus some network latency, but not so long that the node considers itself bootstrapped even though it is many blocks away from the chain’s head.

A good value for latency is 2 to 5 times the time between blocks, plus a small delta for network delays. At the time of writing, the time between two consecutive blocks is 15 seconds when the chain is healthy (see the consensus algorithm).

A shorter latency might give false negatives: delays from a few neighbours might result in the node considering itself not synchronised yet, whilst a longer latency might give false positives: the node considers itself synchronised whilst it still has several blocks to catch-up on.

Formal description of the heuristic

In the normal case of the synchronisation heuristic, when the threshold parameter is greater than 1, the status is computed as follows:

  • The status is Synced if there are more than threshold candidates that are more recent than latency.

  • The status is Stuck if the threshold most recent candidates have the same timestamp that is older than latency.

  • The status is Unsynced otherwise.

If the heuristic fails

The heuristic may fail and declare a node not synchronised, thus not bootstrapped, when actually it should be. The administrator of the node can use the RPC patch /chains/main {"bootstrapped": true} to force the node bootstrapped state, but this should be used carefully. If you see an issue with the current heuristic, please report it.