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README.md fcbd88a006 merge archived helpdesk 2 tahun lalu

README.md

This is a step-by-step guide for setting up your full node, and getting started as a Validator on the latest Joystream Testnet.

Table of Contents

Overview

This page contains all information on how to setup your node and become a Validator on the Joystream Testnets. It will be updated for improvements, and when something changes for new testnets.

If you want to earn more tJOY tokens, but for some reason can't or won't become a Validator, you can Nominate instead.

Instructions

The instructions below cover Mac and Linux (64 bit and armv7). Windows binaries are currently not available.

Note If you are just running a node, and don't want to be a Validator, you can skip the flags --pruning archive and --validator

On Your Machine


Mac

  • Every time something is written in <brackets>, it means you have to replace this with your input, without the <>.
  • When something is written in "double_quotes", it means the number/data will vary depending on your node or the current state of the blockchain.
  • For terminal commands, $ means you must type what comes afterwards. # Means it's just a comment/explanation, and must not be typed.

    # This is just a comment, don't type or paste it in your terminal!
    $ cd ~/
    # Only type/paste the "cd ~/, not the preceding $ !
    

    Setup Node

Open the terminal (Applications->Utilities):

$ cd ~/
$ wget https://github.com/Joystream/joystream/releases/download/v9.3.0/joystream-node-5.1.0-9d9e77751-x86_64-macos.tar.gz
$ wget https://github.com/Joystream/joystream/releases/download/v9.3.0/joy-testnet-5.json
----
# If you don't have wget installed, paste the link in your browser save.
# Assuming it gets saved in your ~/Downloads folder:
$ mv ~/Downloads/joystream-node-5.1.0-9d9e77751-x86_64-macos.tar.gz ~/
---
$ tar -vxf joystream-node-5.1.0-9d9e77751-x86_64-macos.tar.gz
$ ./joystream-node --chain joy-testnet-5.json --pruning archive --validator
  • If you want your node to have a non-random identifier, add the flag:
    • --name <nodename>
  • If you want to get a more verbose log output, add the flag:
    • --log runtime,txpool,transaction-pool,trace=sync

Your node should now start syncing with the blockchain. The output should look like this:

Joystream Node
  version "Version"-"your_OS"
  by Joystream, 2019-2020
Chain specification: "Joystream Version"
Node name: "nodename"
Roles: AUTHORITY
Initializing Genesis block/state (state: "0x…", header-hash: "0x…")
Loading GRANDPA authority set from genesis on what appears to be first startup.
Loaded block-time = BabeConfiguration { slot_duration: 6000, epoch_length: 100, c: (1, 4), genesis_authorities: ...
Creating empty BABE epoch changes on what appears to be first startup.
Highest known block at #0
Local node identity is: "peer id"
Starting BABE Authorship worker
Discovered new external address for our node: /ip4/"IP"/tcp/30333/p2p/"peer id"
New epoch 0 launching at block ...
...
...
Syncing, target=#"block_height" ("n" peers), best: #"synced_height" ("hash_of_synced_tip"), finalized #0 ("hash_of_finalized_tip"), ⬇ "download_speed"kiB/s ⬆ "upload_speed"kiB/s

From the last line, notice target=#"block_height" and best: #"synced_height" When the target=#block_heightis the same as best: #"synced_height", your node is fully synced!

Keep the terminal window open.

Keys

Now you need to generate your keys. Go here to do that now.

Final Step

Now it's time to configure your keys to start validating. Go here to configure your Validator.


Linux

  • Every time something is written in <brackets>, this means you have to replace this with your input, without the <>.
  • When something is written in "double_quotes", it means the number/data will vary depending on your node or the current state of the blockchain.
  • For terminal commands:

    • $ means you must type what comes afterwards
    • # means it's just a comment/explanation for the readers convenience

      # This is just a comment, don't type or paste it in your terminal!
      $ cd ~/
      # Only type/paste the "cd ~/, not the preceding $ !
      

      Setup Node

Open the terminal:

$ cd ~/
# 64 bit debian based Linux
$ wget https://github.com/Joystream/joystream/releases/download/v9.3.0/joystream-node-5.1.0-9d9e77751-x86_64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
$ tar -vxf joystream-node-5.1.0-9d9e77751-x86_64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
# armv7 (eg. raspberry pi)
$ wget TBD
$ tar -vxf TBD
# For both
$ wget https://github.com/Joystream/joystream/releases/download/v9.3.0/joy-testnet-5.json
$ ./joystream-node --chain joy-testnet-5.json --pruning archive --validator
  • If you want your node to have a non-random identifier, add the flag:
    • --name <nodename>
  • If you want to get a more verbose log output, add the flag:
    • --log runtime,txpool,transaction-pool,trace=sync

Your node should now start syncing with the blockchain. The output should look like this:

Joystream Node
  version "Version"-"your_OS"
  by Joystream contributors, 2019-2020
Chain specification: "Joystream Version"
Node name: "nodename"
Roles: AUTHORITY
Initializing Genesis block/state (state: "0x…", header-hash: "0x…")
Loading GRANDPA authority set from genesis on what appears to be first startup.
Loaded block-time = BabeConfiguration { slot_duration: 6000, epoch_length: 100, c: (1, 4), genesis_authorities: ...
Creating empty BABE epoch changes on what appears to be first startup.
Highest known block at #0
Local node identity is: "peer id"
Starting BABE Authorship worker
Discovered new external address for our node: /ip4/"IP"/tcp/30333/p2p/"peer id"
New epoch 0 launching at block ...
...
...
Syncing, target=#"block_height" ("n" peers), best: #"synced_height" ("hash_of_synced_tip"), finalized #0 ("hash_of_finalized_tip"), ⬇ "download_speed"kiB/s ⬆ "upload_speed"kiB/s

From the last line, notice target=#"block_height" and best: #"synced_height" When the target=#block_heightis the same as best: #"synced_height", your node is fully synced!

Keep the terminal window open.

Keys

Now you need to generate your keys. Go here to do that now.

Final Step

Now it's time to configure your keys to start validating. Go here to configure your Validator.


In the Pioneer app (browser)

Validator Setup

Generate your keys

While the node is syncing, you can start the process of setting up the rest.

  1. Go to the Pioneer App, and select My Keys in the sidebar. Click the Add account button.

Names are entirely optional, but the next steps will be easier if you follow the system suggested.

  1. For ease of use, name your first keypair "stash", or at least something that contains the word.

If you want to be able to recover your keys later, write down your mnemonic seed, key pair crypto type and secret derivation path.

  1. Depending on your browser, you might have to confirm saving the json file.

  2. Repeat the process for your "controller" key.

You should now have two sets of keys, namely:

  • the "stash" key that will stake your funds
  • the "controller" key that you will use to operate your validator
  1. If you already have tokens, transfer the bulk to your "stash" account. If you don't yet have any tokens, ask in the Discord chat, and you shall receive :)

  2. Send at least 1 token to your "controller".

Configure your validator keys

In order to be a Validator, you need to stake. Note that you may have to refresh your browser if you're not seeing the options right away.

IMPORTANT: Your node needs to be fully synced, before proceeding to step 7.

  1. In a terminal window on the machine/VPS your node is running, paste the following:

    curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"id":1, "jsonrpc":"2.0", "method": "author_rotateKeys", "params":[]}' http://localhost:9933
    

    If your node is running, this should return:

    {"jsonrpc":"2.0","result":"0xa0very0long0hex0string","id":1}
    

This will save the session keys to your node. Make sure you don't close the window before copying the 0xa0very0long0hex0string somewhere.

If your node is not running, is running on a different port, or curl is not installed, it will return something like:

curl: (7) Failed to connect to localhost port 9933: Connection refused
# or
{"jsonrpc":"2.0","error":{"code":-32601,"message":"Method not found"},"id":1}
  1. Back in Pioneer, click Validators in the sidebar, and then the Account actions tab.
  2. Click the + Stash button, and select the keys from the first two dropdowns.
  3. In the third field, enter the amount you want to stake (the maximum amount is the tokens in the account -1).
  4. In the bottom dropdown, select the payment destination. Your selection here depends on your preferences.
  5. If the transaction goes through, you should now see a Set Session Key button next to your "stash" and "controller" keys in this window. Click it, paste in your 0xa0very0long0hex0string in the field, and confirm.
  6. If the transaction goes through, you should now see a Validate button instead. IF your node is fully synced click it, and set your reward commission percentage, a number between 0 and 100. Your input here depends on your preferences. A "high" number means you are less likely to get Nominators.

Refresh your browser, and select the Waiting tab. If your account shows under intentions, wait for the next era, and you will be moved to the validators list (in the Staking Overview tab).

Stop Validating

Unless you want to risk getting slashed, you need to "gracefully" stop validating. This can be done easily in Pioneer

  1. Click Validators in the sidebar, then choose the Account actions tab.
  2. Click the "Stop" button to the right, and confirm.
  3. Once you are dropped from the Validator set (can take up to 70min), you can safely stop your node.

Advanced

Run as a service

If you are running your node on a Linux and want to run it as a service, you can set it up this way. Note that you should avoid this unless you know what you are doing, are running your node on your own VPS or a single board computer. With great (sudo) privileges, comes great responsibilities!

If you are already running as a validator, consider unstaking first, as you may experience some downtime if you make any mistakes in the setup.

Configure the service

Either as root, or a user with sudo privileges. If the latter, add sudo before commands.

$ cd /etc/systemd/system
# you can choose whatever name you like, but the name has to end with .service
$ touch joystream-node.service
# open the file with your favorite editor (I use nano below)
$ nano joystream-node.service

Example with user joystream

The example below assumes the following:

  • You have setup a user joystream to run the node
  • The path to the joystream-node binary is /home/joystream/joystream-node

    • This can be confirmed by typing pwd in the directory you downloaded the binary to

      [Unit]
      Description=Joystream Node
      After=network.target
      
      [Service]
      Type=simple
      User=joystream
      WorkingDirectory=/home/joystream/
      ExecStart=/home/joystream/joystream-node \
      --chain joy-testnet-5.json \
      --pruning archive \
      --validator \
      --name <memberId-memberHandle> \
      --log runtime,txpool,transaction-pool,trace=sync
      Restart=on-failure
      RestartSec=3
      LimitNOFILE=10000
      
      [Install]
      WantedBy=multi-user.target
      

Example as root

The example below assumes the following:

  • You have setup a user root to run the node
  • The path to the joystream-node binary is /root/joystream-node

    • This can be confirmed by typing pwd in the directory you downloaded the binary to

      [Unit]
      Description=Joystream Node
      After=network.target
      
      [Service]
      Type=simple
      User=root
      WorkingDirectory=/root/
      ExecStart=/root/joystream-node \
      --chain joy-testnet-5.json \
      --pruning archive \
      --validator \
      --name <memberId-memberHandle> \
      --log runtime,txpool,transaction-pool,trace=sync
      Restart=on-failure
      RestartSec=3
      LimitNOFILE=10000
      
      [Install]
      WantedBy=multi-user.target
      

Starting the service

You can add/remove any flags as long as you remember to include \ for every line but the last. Also note that systemd is very sensitive to syntax, so make sure there are no extra spaces before or after the \.

After you are happy with your configuration:

$ systemctl daemon-reload
# this is only strictly necessary after you changed the .service file after running, but chances are you will need to use it once or twice.
# if your node is still running, now is the time to kill it.
$ systemctl start joystream-node
# if everything is correctly configured, this command will not return anything.
# To verify it's running:
$ systemctl status joystream-node
# this will only show the last few lines. To see the latest 100 entries (and follow as new are added)
$ journalctl -n 100 -f -u joystream-node

# To make the service start automatically at boot:
$ systemctl enable joystream-node

You can restart the service with:

  • systemctl restart joystream-node

If you want to change something (or just stop), run:

  • systemctl stop joystream-node

Before you make the changes. After changing:

$ systemctl daemon-reload
$ systemctl start joystream-node

Errors

If you make a mistake somewhere, systemctl start joystream-node will prompt:

Failed to start joystream-node.service: Unit joystream-node.service is not loaded properly: Invalid argument.
See system logs and 'systemctl status joystream-node.service' for details.

Follow the instructions, and see if anything looks wrong. Correct it, then:

$ systemctl daemon-reload
$ systemctl start joystream-node

Settings

If you don't want to use the default settings, here are some of the options you can configure.

Bonding preferences

The bonding preferences decide on how your (tJOY) staking rewards are distributed. There are three alternatives:

  1. Stash account (increase the amount at stake) (default).

This automatically sends all rewards the stash address, where it gets bonded as additional stake. This will increase your probability of staying in the validator set.

  1. Stash account (do no increase the amount at stake)

As for 1. this automatically sends all rewards the stash address, but does not get bonded as stake, meaning it will not help "guard" your spot in the validator set.

  1. Controller account

This sends all rewards to the controller, at your disposal.

Validating preferences

The reward commission determines how the (tJOY) staking rewards are split between yourself and any potential nominators. The default - 0(%) - means that the reward is split based on the number of bonded stake the validator and nominators have put up. Example:

  • Let v be the bonded tokens by the validators stash key
  • Let c be the reward commission decided by the validator
  • Let n1 be the bonded tokens by the nominator1 stash
  • Let n2 be the bonded tokens by the nominator2 stash
  • Let r be the reward for the individual validators that era

    # payout for the validator
    c*r + r*(1 - c)*v/(v + n1 + n2)
    # payout for the nominator1
    r(1 - c) * n1/(v + n1 + n2)
    

Example

  • assume there are 10 active validators in this era
  • validator 1 bonds 100,000 tJOY
  • validators 2-10 all bond 300,000tJOY
  • validator 1 has reward commission set to 10%
  • nominator A bonds 100,000 tJOY, and nominates validator 1
  • nominator B bonds 50,000 tJOY, and nominates validator 1
  • thus, validator A has an effective stake of 250,000 tJOY
  • after the end of the era, the total rewards are 25,000 tJOY

    # All validators get an equal share, before sharing with nominators:
    R_v = 25,000tJOY / 10 = 2,500tJOY
    
    # payout for validator 1
    R_v.1 = 0.1 * 2,500tJOY + 2,500tJOY *(1 - 0.1) * (100,000tJOY / 250,000tJOY) = 1,150tJOY
    
    # payout for nominator A
    R_n.A = 2,500tJOY *(1 - 0.1) * (100,000tJOY / 250,000tJOY) = 900tJOY
    
    # payout for nominator B
    R_n.B = 2,500tJOY *(1 - 0.1) * (50,000tJOY / 250,000tJOY) = 450tJOY
    

As the Validator carries the cost of operating and maintaining their nodes, it makes sense for them to take a slice of the pie before sharing.

Nominating

If you want to get some return on your tokens without running a node yourself, you can nominate another validator and get a share of their rewards.

This might also come in handy if there are too many validators and you don't have enough tokens get a spot, or if you have to shut down your own node for a while.

Generate your keys

  1. Go to the Pioneer App, and select My keys in the sidebar. Click the Add account button.

Names are entirely optional, but the next steps will be easier if you follow the system suggested.

  1. For ease of use, name your first keypair "stash", or at least something that contains the word.

If you want to be able to recover your keys later, write down your mnemonic seed, key pair crypto type and secret derivation path.

  1. Depending on your browser, you might have to confirm saving the json file.

  2. Repeat the process for your "controller" key.

You should now have two sets of keys, namely:

  • the "stash" key that will stake your funds
  • the "controller" key that you will use to operate your validator
  1. If you already have tokens, transfer the bulk to your "stash" account. If you don't yet have any tokens, ask in the Discord chat, and you shall receive :)

  2. Send at least 1 token to your "controller".

Configure your keys

In order to be a Nominator, you need to stake. Note that you may have to refresh your browser if you're not seeing the options right away.

  1. In Pioneer, click Validators in the sidebar, and then the Account actions tab.
  2. Click the + Stash button, and select the keys from the first two dropdowns.
  3. In the third field, enter the amount you want to stake (the maximum amount is the tokens in the account -1).
  4. In the bottom dropdown, select the payment destination. Your selection here depends on your preferences.
  5. If the transaction goes through, you should now see a Nominate button next to your "stash" and "controller" keys in this window. Click it, and select the "stash" account(s) of the Validator(s) you want to Nominate for.
  6. Once submitted, you will start earning a share of the rewards.

Rewards

Rewards are the most critical part of any blockchain infrastructure, block production, whether it's from Proof of Work (using miners, e.g. Bitcoin) or Proof of Stake (using validators, like Joystream). Validators are rewarded for producing, propagating and securing the network.

Claiming Rewards

Rewards are no longer paid out automatically to the validators, and it must be done manually. We have made it so you have ~2 weeks to claim your rewards, but after that, they can no longer be claimed.

This was not a voluntary decision from Jsgenesis, but part of the new staking module from Substrate. The reason is simply that if your validator set is very large and with a lot of nominators (which will be the case for many Substrate based chains), every payout would require a lot of transactions. By instead making it manual, this will be spaced out.

Note: Claiming rewards for a specific Validator can be done by anyone, not just the Validator themselves. However, only the Validator (and Nominator) can batch up multiple claims in one bulk.

Claiming in Bulk

This can only be done if you have the keys for the Validator or Nominator you want to claim for: In the UI, Validators can claim rewards in "bulks" of 40 eras at the time:

  1. In Pioneer, click Validators in the sidebar, and then the Payouts tab
  2. Make sure the Max, x eras are selected
  3. At the bottom of the page, you will see an overview of:
    • which eras you can claim rewards for
    • the total amount available you are "owed"
    • the time remaining to claim (your "oldest") reward
  4. Click the Payout button at the right end of the row, and confirm to claim the "oldest" 40 era rewards for you, and any potential Nominators that has claim to some of your rewards
  5. If you have more than 40 eras, you can repeat this after the first transaction is complete

Note:

  • If a Validator had any Nominator(s) in the eras for which they claim rewards, the Nominator(s) will automatically get their rewards for said eras
  • A Nominator that claims rewards for multiple eras, the Validator(s) they nominated in said eras will automatically also get their rewards.

Claiming one era at the Time

This can be done by any account:

  1. Go to the extrinsics tab
  2. Select staking.payoutStakers(validator_stash, era)
  3. Select/paste the address of the stash account you want to claim on behalf of/for
  4. Type in the era you want to claim for, and submit

Check claims made

To find out if a "stash" claimed reward(s) from era(s):

  • chain state query of ledger(AccountId): Option<StakingLedger> with the any current, or "historic" controller. Output:

    {
    stash: 5YourStashAddress,
    total: <tot_bonded> JOY,
    active: <act_bonded> JOY,
    unlocking: [],
    claimedRewards: [
    <era_a>,
    <era_b>,
    ...
    <era_i>,
    ]
    }
    

    Note: To understand what unlocking means, go here.

Rewards on Joystream

For Substrate based blockchains, the validator rewards depend on some dynamic parameters, that will change continuously, and some fixed parameters in the chain spec.

Dynamic Parameters

  1. Active validators (V_a) - the number of validators currently running. This can be found:
    • in the Validators tab -> validator (V_a / V_i)
    • or through a chain state query of session.validators() (and count them)
  2. Max/Ideal validators V_i - the max number of active validators. This number can be changed through proposals, but was initially set to 20. Current value can be found:
    • in the Validators tab -> validator (V_a / V_i)
    • or through a chain state query of staking.validatorCount()
  3. Issuance I - total tJOY tokens in circulation. This can be found:
  4. Validator stake (S_v) - i.e. the total stake of the validators set, corresponding to the sum of the stakes of each validator, plus the stake of their nominators if any. This can be found:
    • in the staking tab (alongside I, and the percentage of S_v / I - also known as the Active staking ratio, S_v,ar, see 5.)
    • or through a chain state query of staking.erasTotalStake(<EraIndex>)
    • the <EraIndex> can be found by staking.activeEra()
  5. Active staking ratio, S_v,ar - the current ratio of tokens staked by active validators (and their nominators) and the issuance. So S_v,ar = S_v / I

Fixed Parameters

  1. Minimum inflation, I_min - the min yearly inflation distributed to validators.
    • This number is currently set to 5%.
  2. Maximum inflation, I_max - the max yearly inflation distributed to validators.
    • This number is currently set to 75%.
  3. Ideal staking ratio, S_v,ir - the ideal ratio of effective stake over issuance for maximum validator rewards.
    • This number is currently set to 30%.
  4. Falloff, F_v - how quickly the validator rewards drop when the actual staking rate S_v,ar exceeds the ideal staking rate S_v,ir.
    • This number is currently set to 5%.
  5. Sessions, session_l - each session (or epoch) should last ~10 minutes / 100 blocks *
  6. Era length, era_l - each era lasts 60 minutes should last 6 sessions -> ~60 minutes / 600 blocks *
  • * For a variety of reasons (such as latency, validators going down, etc.) an era can be as little as 1 session and a session can be a lot fewer blocks than 100.

Validator set and block production

At the end of each era, a new set of active validators V_a is determined by sorting all those that have declared their intention (e.g. both the active and next up) by their stake, and selecting up to V_i in a descending order.

Those selected are treated as equals, and will have the same chance of being selected to produce blocks and thus get an equal share of the rewards. Slashes however, are applied as a percentage of stake, so a validator with more stake risks getting slashed more despite earning the same.

Total rewards calculation

As shown, the maximum total validator reward per year is 75% for S_v,ar = S_v,ir = 0.3. With an era length of 600 blocks, each era, the maximum total, R_vm,te and individual, R_vm,ie reward for the validators are:

Note For all calculations, we assume there are (365.2425×24×60×60s)/year.

R_vm,te = I * I_max * era_l / year
= I * 0.75 * 3600s / (31556952s)
= 0.0000855596*I

R_vm,ie = R_vm,te / V_a
= 0.0000342238*I/V_a

For S_v,ar<S_v,ir, the total rewards drop linearly down to the minimum inflation rate I_min for S_v,ar = 0 For S_v,ar>S_v,ir, the total rewards drop exponentially down to the minimum inflation rate for I_min S_v,ar = 1 .

The exact formula:

R_v,te = I * (I_min + (I_max - I_min) * 2^((S_v,ir − S_v,ar) / F_v)) * era_l / year

Examples

The tJOY rewards for the validators can be calculated using this spreadsheet. The examples below should assist in using it:

Example A

In addition to the fixed parameters above (except S_v,ir = 25%), suppose:

V_a = 20
I = 100,000,000tJOY
S_v = 25,000,000tJOY

As S_v / I = 0.3, meaning S_v,ar = S_v,ir the maximum yearly inflation rate I_max = 75% will be shared among the validators. Each era, the total, R_v,te and individual, R_v,ie reward for the validators are:


R_v,te = I * I_max * era / year
= 100,000,000tJOY * 0.75 * 3600s / (31556952s)
= 8,556tJOY

R_v,ie = R_v,te / V_a
= 8,556tJOY / 20
= 428tJOY

Example B

In addition to the fixed parameters above, suppose:

V_a = 20
I = 100,000,000tJOY
S_v = 20,000,000tJOY

With S_v / I = 0.2. Each era, the total, R_v,te and individual, R_v,ie reward for the validators are:

R_v,te = I * (I_min + (I_max - I_min) * S_v,ar / S_v,ir) * era_i / year
= 6,959tJOY

R_v,ie = R_v,te / V_a
= 6,959tJOY / 20
= 348tJOY

Example C

In addition to the fixed parameters above, suppose:

V_a = 20
I = 100,000,000tJOY
S_v = 30,000,000tJOY

With S_v,t=S_v,eff/I=0.3. Each era, the total, R_v,te and individual, R_v,ie reward for the validators are:

R_v,te = I * (I_min + (I_max - I_min) * 2^((S_v,ir − S_v,ar) / F_v)) * era_l / year
= 4,563tJOY

R_v,ie = R_v,te / V_a
= 4,563tJOY / 20
= 228tJOY

Example conclusion

As seen above, the difference from staking 5% more or less than the ideal, is quite substantial.

  • By staking 5% less, the "loss" is only 18% (6,959tJOY vs 8,556tJOY)
  • By staking 5% more, the "loss" is instead 47% (4,563tJOY vs 8,556tJOY)

More information on the staking, rewards and slashing mechanics can be found on the Web3 Foundation's research papers here.

Slashing

Just as the Validators are rewarded for producing, propagating and securing the network, they are punished for misbehaving. The slashing mechanics are more complex, so it will not be covered as detailed as the rewards.

Although there are other reasons for getting slashed as a Validator, the reasons that stem from intentional malicious behavior will not be covered here. If you want to learn more about the details of slashing, visit this guide from the Polkadot wiki guide on slashing (and staking).

Offline

The most likely reason a Validator will get slashed is for going offline without first stopping gracefully.

If n Validators go offline, there will be two "events" at the end of that session:

  1. imOnline:SomeOffline
  2. offences.Offence

Offline Example

Suppose we have two Validators offline, - v_0 and v_1. v_1 has one nominator n_1 (all accountId/address of their "stash"). When selecting the block the event occurred in from the explorer, it will appear like so:

1 imOnline:SomeOffline:

At the end of the session, at least one validator was found to be offline.
  Vec<IdentificationTuple>

    0: IdentificationTuple: IdentificationTuple
    [
      <v_0>,
      {
        total: <v_0 stake> JOY,
        own: <v_0 stake> JOY,
        others: []
      }
    ]

    1: IdentificationTuple: IdentificationTuple
    [
      <v_1>,
      {
        total: <v_1+n_1 stake> JOY,
        own: <v_1> JOY,
        others: [
          {
            who: <n_1>,
            value: <n_1 stake> JOY,
          }
        ]
      }
    ]

This identifies which valididators are reported "offline".

2 offences.Offence:

There is an offence reported of the given `kind` happened at the `session_index` and (kind-specific) time slot. This event is not deposited for duplicate slashes. Last element indicates of the offence was applied (true) or queued (false).

  Kind
  im-online:offlin

  OpaqueTimeSlot
  0xsomething

  bool
  <Yes> or <No>

The key here is whether bool is Yes (true) or No (false).

  • If Yes/true, this means a slash will be applied.
  • If No/false, this means no slash will be applied.

Offline Slashing Size

The magnitude of the slash (and whether one will be applied at all), depends on the max number of Validator slots allowed (V_max), and the number of Validators reported offline V_off.

  • If V_off / V_max < 1/10
    • No slash will be applied
  • If V_off / V_max > 1/3
    • A max slash of 7% is initiated *

The exact formula, from the comment in the codebase, is presented below (with variables changed for clarity):

		// the formula is min((3 * (V_off - (V_max / 10 + 1))) / V_max, 1) * 0.07
		// basically, 10% can be offline with no slash, but after that, it linearly climbs up to 7%
		// when 13/30 are offline (around 5% when 1/3 are offline).

* A single Offence adds an entry to the Validators slash span. The actual slashing (burning) of tokens will happen ~24h hours later. For more info, we again refer to the Polkadot Wiki


Troubleshooting

If you had any issues setting it up, you may find your answer here!

Unstaking

Due to an unfortunate error in Pioneer which we are working to fix, unstaking requires either lots of patience, or using the chain state/extrinsics tab for certain tasks.

In Pioneer

If you stop validating by killing your node before unstaking, you will get slashed and kicked from the Validator set. If you know in advance (it can take up to 70min) you can do the following steps instead:

  1. In Validator -> Account Actions, click Stop.

If you are just pausing the validator and intend to start it up later, you can stop here. When you are ready to start again, fire up your node, go to Validator Staking, and click Validate.

If you want to stop being a validator and move your tokens to other/better use, continue.


  1. Next you must unbond. In the same window (Validator -> Account Actions), next to your keypair, click the rightmost triple dotted "settings" button, select Unbond funds, and choose the amount you wish to unbond.

After the transaction has gone through, you will see a new line appearing in the bonded column, showing the amount and a "clock" icon. Hovering over this with your cursor will tell you when your unbonding is complete (starts at <24h / <14,400 blocks), and you can go to the third and final step.

  1. Within 24h, the tokens should be unbonded, and you will see a new line appearing in the bonded column, showing the amount you can claim and a blue "lock" button. Click the button to finalize the unbonding, and your tokens will be "free" to spend from your "stash".

Notes:

  • If you have performed multiple unbondings, in different eras:
    • hovering over the "clock" will show multiple entries, e.g. <amount>, <time_left>, <block_left>
    • you may also have both the "clock" and "lock" button, if some of your unbondings are completed
    • if you have any pending slashes, these will be deducted when you perform step 3.

Using Extrinsics

First, make sure you have set Fully Featured interface in the Settings sidebar.

Definitions

  • <tot_bonded> Is the total amount you have staked/bonded
  • <act_bonded> Is the number of tokens that is not being unlocked
  • <unbonding_n> Is the number of tokens that is in the process of being freed from your nth Unbond funds request
    • sum <unbonding_n> + <act_bonded> = <tot_bonded>
  • <era_unbonded_n> Is the era when your nth Unbond funds request tokens will be "free" to transfer/bond/vote

To find out if you have started/completed your n unbonding(s):

  1. chain state query of ledger(AccountId): Option<StakingLedger> with the controller. Output:

    # If you have successfully initiated unbonding, but the tokens are not unlocked:
    {
    stash: 5YourStashAddress,
    total: <tot_bonded> JOY,
    active: <act_bonded> JOY,
    unlocking: [
    {
      value: <unbonding_0> JOY,
      era: <era_unbonded_0>
    },
    {
      value: <unbonding_1> JOY,
      era: <era_unbonded_1>
    },
    ...
    {
      value: <unbonding_n> JOY,
      era: <era_unbonded_n>
    }
    ],
    claimedRewards: [
    <era_a>,
    <era_b>,
    ...
    <era_i>,
    ]
    }
    

    Note: To understand what claimedRewards means, go here.

  2. The era should only change every 600 blocks, but certain events may trigger a new era. To calculate when your funds are "free" In Chain State -> staking.currentEra(). Let output be <era_current>

If <era_unbonded_n> >= <era_current_n>, you can claim the unbonded funds in step 3.

  1. Once the unbonding is complete, go to extrinsics, with the controller, select staking.withdrawUnbonded(num_slashing_spans)

Note: If you have any "pending" slashes, this will require some more chain state queries, to find the input num_slashing_spans.

Your tokens will be "free" to spend from your "stash".