Ava Labs Outlines Scaling Solution Vryx in Plan for Avalanche to Reach 100,000 TPS

theblock.co | January 26, 2024
By Tim Copeland

Blockchain builder Ava Labs has laid out details for its scaling solution Vryx as part of plans to get the Avalanche AVAX +9.78% blockchain to support speeds of around 100,000 transactions per second.

Ava Labs is already implementing the scaling approach, which was detailed in a research post published today. It plans to have benchmarks in the next few weeks.

The scaling approach will be enabled on the first HyperSDK testnet, which is targeted for the middle of Q2. HyperSDK is the framework for building high-performance blockchains that have virtual machines, enabling them to offer smart contracts. Vryx will be used to support such blockchains built using the HyperSDK — known as hyperchains — and the idea is that this technology will trickle down to the main blockchain platform over time.

"From the inception of the HyperSDK over a year and a half ago, Ava Labs has been obsessed with providing best-in-class scalability for anyone building their own blockchain on Avalanche. Today, we are moving one large step closer to this target with the release of Vryx," a spokesperson for Ava Labs said.

"Many have reached out asking how the Avalanche HyperSDK will achieve the lofty throughput goals set out when originally launched. Vryx is the primary mechanism that we believe will allow us to deliver on best-in-class performance," they added.

The core idea behind Vryx is the notion of splitting up parts of the transaction process and having them run in a pipelined fashion. That means a block of transactions may be getting verified while the next block is already in development. This type of strategy has already been employed by blockchain platforms such as Aptos and Sui. 

"It is expected that Vryx will perform as well as other constructions that replicate transactions prior to their full verification in benign environments and will outperform them in adversarial environments," the spokesperson said.

Greg Jones