Ethereum
Big changes coming to Ethereum’s account abstraction to save on gas
Ethereum smart accounts are getting tweaked in an upgrade to reduce gas usage on layer-2 networks.
Source: Cointelegraph
The Ethereum Foundation is set to push through major changes to the account abstraction standard in Ethereum to reduce gas consumption — particularly for layer 2s.
On Jan. 10, the Ethereum Foundation shared a preview of the drastic changes to the ERC-4337 standard specification, which deals with account abstraction, also known as smart accounts.
The new version 0.7 applies learnings from nine months of ERC-4337 being used, according to developer John Rising in an update shared with Cointelegraph.
The biggest change is in the structure of account abstraction transactions, which are more complex than regular Ether ETH $2,579 transactions. These now require specifying five gas values instead of just one.
“The user has to specify more than one gas value to account for the fact that an account can do computation while its signature is being checked,” explained Rising.
Speaking to Cointelegraph, Rising elaborated on why more gas values were required.
“With smart accounts, users can have many different types of signatures and pay for gas in many ways. This means that the amount of gas required varies, and the transaction has to specify how much it is willing to spend for this validation.”
This makes gas estimation more accurate and reduces gas costs, especially on layer-2 networks, since these changes reduce the amount of data that needs to be published.
“The major benefits of v0.7 for users will be reduced gas fees,” explained Rising, who added, “It uses some tricks to use transaction data more efficiently, which is particularly helpful on layer-2 blockchains.”
The new specification will also penalize users 10% for all unused gas in execution, “which prevents apps from putting transactions with unnecessarily high gas limits.”
How account abstraction works. Source: Cointelegraph
Account abstraction, also known as smart accounts, builds upon basic Ethereum accounts by allowing accounts to have programmable logic and rules, opening up many new use cases that are impossible with simple accounts today.
Ethereum accounts today are somewhat passive and static, but account abstraction allows them to become active and programmable. It was proposed in September 2021 by Vitalik Buterin and other developers in EIP-4337.
The Ethereum Foundation has not announced an expected date for version v0.7 but said that the security audit is beginning now.
“My guess is that everything will be finalized by ETHDenver at the end of February,” said Rising.