However, apart from Coordicide, the objective of the IOTA Foundation is to fully optimize the IOTA mainnet pre-Coordicide and offer an enterprise-ready solution to our ecosystem. We have therefore planned for an intermediate update called Chrysalis. This plan was first announced alongside our roadmap, but the scope has since been expanded. This post provides further information on what this upgrade to the IOTA Mainnet entails.  

A chrysalis is “the form a caterpillar takes before it emerges from its cocoon as a fully-formed moth or butterfly”. In the context of IOTA, Chrysalis is the mainnet’s intermediate stage before coordicide is complete. To be clear, Chrysalis is separate to the coordicide efforts, and is aimed at improving the usability of the current IOTA mainnet prior to coordicide.  

Why is this process of adopting major protocol improvements relatively unique to IOTA among permissionless DLTs? The simple answer is the absence of miners. In most permissionless DLTs, the miners’ economic incentives conflict with those of the users of the network. Better throughput and lower latencies can disrupt the fee market miners rely on, and therefore agreeing to upgrade the network may affect their own profitability.  

In IOTA, the validators and users are one and the same. There is no stubborn clash of incentives, meaning a much smoother path to network improvements. We will demonstrate this with the upcoming incremental upgrades to the network under Chrysalis.

So what are these incremental upgrades?

  • White-flag approach for calculating balances. A simpler, conflict-ignoring approach (valid for the pre-coordicide era) that improves speed and efficiency of tip selection, eliminates certain attacks and significantly reduces the need for reattachments.
  • Support for a new signature scheme in parallel to WOTS. The network will therefore allow for both quantum-resistant one-time signatures and a more commonly used signature scheme allowing re-use of private keys. This will dramatically reduce transaction size, and consequently allow a significant increase in TPS. By introducing a new signature scheme we will also allow for reusable addresses, a very popular request from the community.
  • Atomic transactions. Move from the current Bundle construct and use simpler atomic transactions instead. This will reduce network overhead, reduce signature verification burden, improve spam protection and congestion control, and reduce the length of Merkle proofs (for future sharding). In addition, it will reduce implementation efforts and increase the maintainability of our core node software.
  • Switch to UTXO model from the current balance model. Every coin on an address is then uniquely identifiable and every spend names the exact coins that it wants to move. This allows for faster and more exact conflict handling and improves the resilience and security of the protocol. In addition, switching to UTXO will make native assets on IOTA possible. Combined with Mana (Coordicide) in the near future, this makes for a very attractive tokenization model and will further boost the adoption of the IOTA token.
  • Switch to an internal binary representation of the trinary transaction. This allows us to work on binary data, for validation, IO and other processing without the need to have many binary-ternary conversions as in the current node software. The bundle hash can still be represented as 243 trits, such that the signing scheme stays the same and no transition of funds is necessary. This should lead to further improvements in performance.

We hope that these changes will make the IOTA mainnet more performant, but also satisfy the requirements of both the human and machine economy. As always we value your input via iota.cafe, Github comments and the IOTA Discord. Every protocol change will be submitted as an RFC (Request for Comment) on our Github over the coming week to give the community the necessary technical implementation details of the proposed changes.  

The Engineering team has already prioritized the implementation timeline of these new features and is currently working on a more accurate timeline on when they will be released in our core software.

This blog post has been updated to replace a reference to "colored coins" with "native assets"

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