Solana: The Full Story Behind the ‘2nd Straight Day’ of Transaction Failures

Solana: Here’s the full story behind its ‘2nd straight day’ of txn ‘failures’

The Recent Challenges Faced by Solana Network

Recent concerns have arisen regarding the Solana network’s performance, particularly due to the consistent high failure rates of non-vote transactions, which have persisted for two consecutive days.

On April 5th, approximately 75.7% of transactions involving the transfer of native SOLs between smart contracts failed, an increase from 75.5% the day prior, as highlighted by analyses from CryptoCrypto using a Dune dashboard. At one point, the failure rate even surpassed 77%, as noted by a user.

A deeper inspection revealed a significant rise in failure rates over the past month, coinciding with a surge in on-chain activity within the Solana ecosystem.

Response and Efforts to Address the Issue

Amid growing concerns, Anza, a development group focused on Solana comprised of former core engineers from Solana Labs, announced ongoing testing of a patch to alleviate network congestion. They reported making “substantial” progress, with potential fixes anticipated for implementation in the upcoming week.

The discourse surrounding the highlighted graph has become a point of contention between impartial observers and certain developers within the Solana community, with some discrediting it as an accurate representation of the network’s performance.

Mert Mumtaz, CEO of Helius, a platform for Solana-based developers, suggested that the majority of failed transactions were a result of bot activity.

Decline in User Activity

As a consequence, there has been a gradual decrease in Solana’s daily active user count, reflected in the analysis of Token Terminal data by CryptoCrypto. The reduced user engagement has also led to a decline in fee generation on the network.

Despite these challenges, SOL remained relatively stable in the past 24 hours, showcasing a 2.45% increase. However, on the weekly chart, the altcoin displayed significant losses.

Notably, Fantom blockchain’s co-founder, Andre Cronje, expressed support for the Solana ecosystem, characterizing the current congestion as an engineering obstacle rather than a critical failure.

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