The Ethereum blockchains’s biggest upgrade since early 2023 went live on the second of three test networks, bringing the much-anticipated “Dencun” project and its “proto-danksharding” feature a step closer to reality.
Proto-danksharding is designed to reduce the cost of transactions for layer-2 blockchains as well as make data availability cheaper, through the introduction of a new compartmentalized space for data known as “blobs.” The number of layer-2 chains atop Ethereum is expanding fast, so the upgrade is seen as an essential element of the ecosystem’s roadmap for supporting the growth.
The Dencun upgrade on the Sepolia testnet occurred Thursday at 22:51 UTC (5:51PM ET) and finalized at 23:10 UTC.
Sepolia is the second of three testnets to run through a simulation of Dencun. Earlier this month, Dencun went live on the Goerli testnet, but initially failed to finalize.
Next week, on Feb. 7, Dencun will go live on its final Ethereum testnet, Holesky. After that, developers will ink in a date to activate Dencun on the main blockchain.
Testnets duplicate a main blockchain, and allow developers to make any changes to the protocol or to its decentralized applications in a low-stakes environment.
Dencun, which was originally projected to happen in the final quarter of 2023, will be the biggest upgrade for Ethereum since the Shapella upgrade last March, which enabled the withdrawals of staked ether (ETH).
Read more: Ethereum’s Dencun Upgrade Goes Live, But Fails to Finalize on Testnet
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