Amendments

Introduced in: rippled 0.31.0

The Amendments system provides a means of introducing new features to the decentralized XRP Ledger network without causing disruptions. The amendments system works by utilizing the core consensus process of the network to approve any changes by showing continuous support before those changes go into effect. An amendment normally requires 80% support for two weeks before it can apply.

When an Amendment has been enabled, it applies permanently to all ledger versions after the one that included it. You cannot disable an Amendment, unless you introduce a new Amendment to do so.

For a complete list of known amendments, their statuses, and IDs, see: Known Amendments.

Background

Any changes to transaction processing could cause servers to build a different ledger with the same set of transactions. If some validators (rippled servers participating in consensus) have upgraded to a new version of the software while other validators use the old version, this could cause anything from minor inconveniences to full outages. In the minor case, a minority of servers spend more time and bandwidth fetching the actual consensus ledger because they cannot build it using the transaction processing rules they already know. In the worst case, the consensus process might be unable to validate new ledger versions because servers with different rules could not reach a consensus on the exact ledger to build.

Amendments solve this problem, so that new features can be enabled only when enough validators support those features.

Users and businesses who rely on the XRP Ledger can also use Amendments to provide advance notice of changes in transaction processing that might affect their business. However, API changes that do not impact transaction processing or the consensus process do not need Amendments.

About Amendments

An amendment is a fully-functional feature or change, waiting to be enabled by the peer-to-peer network as a part of the consensus process. A rippled server that wants to use an amendment has code for two modes: without the amendment (old behavior) and with the amendment (new behavior).

Every amendment has a unique identifying hex value and a short name. The short name is for human use, and is not used in the amendment process. Two servers can support the same amendment ID while using different names to describe it. An amendment's name is not guaranteed to be unique.

By convention, Ripple's developers use the SHA-512Half hash of the amendment name as the amendment ID.

Amendment Process

Every 256th ledger is called a "flag" ledger. The process of approving an amendment starts in the ledger version immediately before the flag ledger. When rippled validator servers send validation messages for that ledger, those servers also submit votes in favor of specific amendments. If a validator does not vote in favor of an amendment, that is the same as voting against the amendment. (Fee Voting also occurs around flag ledgers.)

The flag ledger itself has no special contents. However, during that time, the servers look at the votes of the validators they trust, and decide whether to insert an EnableAmendment pseudo-transaction into the following ledger. The flags of an EnableAmendment pseudo-transaction show what the server thinks happened:

  • The tfGotMajority flag means that support for the amendment has increased to at least 80% of trusted validators.
  • The tfLostMajority flag means that support for the amendment has decreased to less than 80% of trusted validators.
  • An EnableAmendment pseudo-transaction with no flags means that support for the amendment has been enabled. (The change in transaction processing applies to every ledger after this one.)

A server only inserts the pseudo-transaction to enable an amendment if all of the following conditions are met:

  • The amendment has not already been enabled.
  • A previous ledger includes an EnableAmendment pseudo-transaction for this amendment with the tfGotMajority flag enabled.
  • The previous ledger in question is an ancestor of the current ledger.
  • The previous ledger in question has a close time that is at least two weeks before the close time of the latest flag ledger.
  • There are no EnableAmendment pseudo-transactions for this amendment with the tfLostMajority flag enabled in the consensus ledgers between the tfGotMajority pseudo-transaction and the current ledger.

Theoretically, a tfLostMajority EnableAmendment pseudo-transaction could be included in the same ledger as the pseudo-transaction to enable an amendment. In this case, the pseudo-transaction with the tfLostMajority pseudo-transaction has no effect.

Amendment Voting

Each version of rippled is compiled with a list of known amendments and the code to implement those amendments. By default, rippled supports known amendments and opposes unknown amendments. Operators of rippled validators can configure their servers to explicitly support or oppose certain amendments, even if those amendments are not known to their rippled versions.

To become enabled, an amendment must be supported by at least 80% of trusted validators continuously for two weeks. If support for an amendment goes below 80% of trusted validators, the amendment is temporarily rejected. The two week period starts over if the amendment regains support of at least 80% of trusted validators. (This can occur if validators vote differently, or if there is a change in which validators are trusted.) An amendment can gain and lose a majority any number of times before it becomes permanently enabled. An amendment cannot be permanently rejected, but it becomes very unlikely for an amendment to become enabled if new versions of rippled do not have the amendment in their known amendments list.

As with all aspects of the consensus process, amendment votes are only taken into account by servers that trust the validators sending those votes. At this time, Ripple (the company) recommends only trusting the validators on the validator list that Ripple publishes at https://vl.ripple.com . For now, trusting only those validators is enough to coordinate with Ripple on releasing new features.

For information on how to configure your server's amendment votes, see Configure Amendment Voting. Updated in: rippled 1.7.0

Amendment Blocked

When an amendment gets enabled for the network after the voting process, servers running earlier versions of rippled that do not know about the amendment become "amendment blocked" because they no longer understand the rules of the network. Servers that are amendment blocked:

  • Cannot determine the validity of a ledger
  • Cannot submit or process transactions
  • Do not participate in the consensus process
  • Do not vote on future amendments

Becoming amendment blocked is a security feature to protect applications that depend on XRP Ledger data. Rather than guessing and maybe misinterpreting a ledger after new rules have been applied, rippled reports that it does not know the state of the ledger because it does not know how the amendment works.

The amendments that a rippled server is configured to vote for or against have no impact on whether the server becomes amendment blocked. A rippled server always follows the set of amendments enabled by the rest of the network, to the extent possible. A server only becomes amendment blocked if an enabled amendment is not included in the amendment definitions compiled into the server's source code -- in other words, if the amendment is newer than the server.

If your server is amendment blocked, you must upgrade to a new version to sync with the network.

It is also possible to be amendment blocked because you connected your server to a parallel network that has different amendments enabled. For example, the XRP Ledger Devnet typically has upcoming and experimental amendments enabled. If you are using the latest production release, your server is likely to be amendment blocked when connecting to Devnet. You could resolve this issue by upgrading to an unstable pre-release or nightly build, or you could connect to a different network such as Testnet instead.

How to Tell If Your rippled Server Is Amendment Blocked

One of the first signs that your rippled server is amendment blocked is an amendmentBlocked error that is returned when you submit a transaction. Here's an example amendmentBlocked error:

{
   "result":{
      "error":"amendmentBlocked",
      "error_code":14,
      "error_message":"Amendment blocked, need upgrade.",
      "request":{
         "command":"submit",
         "tx_blob":"479H0KQ4LUUXIHL48WCVN0C9VD7HWSX0MG1UPYNXK6PI9HLGBU2U10K3HPFJSROFEG5VD749WDPHWSHXXO72BOSY2G8TWUDOJNLRTR9LTT8PSOB9NNZ485EY2RD9D80FLDFRBVMP1RKMELILD7I922D6TBCAZK30CSV6KDEDUMYABE0XB9EH8C4LE98LMU91I9ZV2APETJD4AYFEN0VNMIT1XQ122Y2OOXO45GJ737HHM5XX88RY7CXHVWJ5JJ7NYW6T1EEBW9UE0NLB2497YBP9V1XVAEK8JJYVRVW0L03ZDXFY8BBHP6UBU7ZNR0JU9GJQPNHG0DK86S4LLYDN0BTCF4KWV2J4DEB6DAX4BDLNPT87MM75G70DFE9W0R6HRNWCH0X075WHAXPSH7S3CSNXPPA6PDO6UA1RCCZOVZ99H7968Q37HACMD8EZ8SU81V4KNRXM46N520S4FVZNSJHA"
      },
      "status":"error"
   }
}

The following rippled log message also indicates that your server is amendment blocked:

2018-Feb-12 19:38:30 LedgerMaster:ERR One or more unsupported amendments activated: server blocked.

If you are on rippled version 0.80.0+, you can verify that your rippled server is amendment blocked using the server_info command. In the response, look for result.info.amendment_blocked. If amendment_blocked is set to true, your server is amendment blocked.

Example JSON-RPC Response:

{
    "result": {
        "info": {
            "amendment_blocked": true,
            "build_version": "0.80.1",
            "complete_ledgers": "6658438-6658596",
            "hostid": "ip-10-30-96-212.us-west-2.compute.internal",
            "io_latency_ms": 1,
            "last_close": {
                "converge_time_s": 2,
                "proposers": 10
            },
...
        },
        "status": "success"
    }
}

If your server is not amendment blocked, the amendment_blocked field is not returned in the response.

Caution: rippled versions older than 0.80.0 do not include the amendment_blocked field, even if your server is amendment blocked.

How to Unblock an Amendment-Blocked rippled Server

Upgrade to the rippled version that supports the amendments that are causing your server to be amendment blocked. Ripple recommends that you upgrade to the newest rippled version to unblock your server and enable it to sync with the network again.

Depending on the scenario, you may be able to (and want to) unblock your server by upgrading to a rippled version that is older than the newest version. This is possible if the older version supports the amendments that are blocking your rippled server.

Warning: If the newest rippled version provides security or other urgent fixes, you should upgrade to the newest version as soon as possible.

To determine if you can unblock your rippled server by upgrading to a version older than the newest version, find out which features are blocking your server and then look up the rippled version that supports the blocking features.

To find out which features are blocking your rippled server, use the feature admin command. Look for features that have "enabled" : true and "supported" : false. These values for a feature mean that the amendment is currently enabled (required) in the latest ledger, but your server does not know how to support, or apply, the amendment.

Example JSON-RPC Response:

{
    "result": {
        "features": {
            "07D43DCE529B15A10827E5E04943B496762F9A88E3268269D69C44BE49E21104": {
                "enabled": true,
                "name": "Escrow",
                "supported": true,
                "vetoed": false
            },
            "08DE7D96082187F6E6578530258C77FAABABE4C20474BDB82F04B021F1A68647": {
                "enabled": true,
                "name": "PayChan",
                "supported": true,
                "vetoed": false
            },
            "1562511F573A19AE9BD103B5D6B9E01B3B46805AEC5D3C4805C902B514399146": {
                "enabled": false,
                "name": "CryptoConditions",
                "supported": true,
                "vetoed": false
            },
            "157D2D480E006395B76F948E3E07A45A05FE10230D88A7993C71F97AE4B1F2D1": {
                "enabled": true,
                "supported": false,
                "vetoed": false
            },
...
            "67A34F2CF55BFC0F93AACD5B281413176FEE195269FA6D95219A2DF738671172": {
                "enabled": true,
                "supported": false,
                "vetoed": false
            },
...
            "F64E1EABBE79D55B3BB82020516CEC2C582A98A6BFE20FBE9BB6A0D233418064": {
                "enabled": true,
                "supported": false,
                "vetoed": false
            }
        },
        "status": "success"
    }
}

In this example, conflicts with the following features are causing your rippled server to be amendment blocked:

  • 157D2D480E006395B76F948E3E07A45A05FE10230D88A7993C71F97AE4B1F2D1

  • 67A34F2CF55BFC0F93AACD5B281413176FEE195269FA6D95219A2DF738671172

  • F64E1EABBE79D55B3BB82020516CEC2C582A98A6BFE20FBE9BB6A0D233418064

To look up which rippled version supports these features, see Known Amendments.

Testing Amendments

If you want to see how rippled behaves with an amendment enabled, before that amendment gets enabled on the production network, you can run use rippled's config file to forcibly enable a feature. This is intended for development purposes only.

Because other members of the consensus network probably do not have the feature enabled, you should not use this feature while connecting to the production network. While testing with features forcibly enabled, you should run rippled in stand-alone mode.

To forcibly enable a feature, add a [features] stanza to your rippled.cfg file. In this stanza, add the short names of the features to enable, one per line. For example:

[features]
MultiSign
TrustSetAuth

See Also