Solana devs target April 15 for failed TX fix — it’s ‘not a design flaw’ — TradingView News

Solana developers are targeting April 15 to implement a fix for an “implementation bug” that recently caused the transaction failure rate on Solana to skyrocket.

“Solana’s current issue is not a design flaw, it’s an implementation bug,” stressed Mert Mumtaz, the CEO of Helius Labs, a blockchain infrastructure firm that provides back-end support exclusively to the Solana network.

“It is important to make this distinction because implementation errors are usually trivial [while] design errors are generally serious and more fundamental,” Mumtaz explained to his 108,000 X followers on April 8.

Cointelegraph

Data showed that over 75% of non-vote Solana transactions failed on April 4 amid a recent memecoin mania on the network but that figure has since fallen to 64.8%.

Mumtaz said the issue concerns the way in which Solana developers implemented “QUIC” — a Google-developed data transfer protocol that loops all nodes in on the current state of the network.

But this implementation issue shouldn’t be seen as an overall design flaw, according to Mumtaz, using car design as an example to explain the situation.

All cars have four tires and an engine, but “there are many implementations of the car design,” like BMW, Mercedes, Toyota, F1 and Tesla, he explained. 


If one BMW model is poor at steering, then “we don’t say that all cars are flawed” — instead, we say that specific model is broken and needs a fix, he added.

Similarly, Solana’s implementation of QUIC has certain deficiencies and bugs in its current state, Mumtaz explained.

“However, that doesn’t mean ‘Solana’ has a design flaw — it means it chose a buggy implementation for this part of its design.”

In other words, Solana needs to change a tire rather than recreate an entirely new model, or network, in blockchain terms.