Remove references to the FeeEscalation amendment:

* FeeEscalation was enabled in 2016, and retired in 2018. There is no
  longer any need to point out the old or changed behavior.
This commit is contained in:
Ed Hennis
2022-10-14 16:26:57 -04:00
parent cccaa268b9
commit 4ea9d85994

View File

@@ -38,9 +38,9 @@ The transaction cost is not paid to any party: the XRP is irrevocably destroyed.
## Load Cost and Open Ledger Cost
When the [FeeEscalation amendment][] is enabled, there are two thresholds for the transaction cost:
There are two thresholds for the transaction cost:
* If the transaction cost does not meet a `rippled` server's [load-based transaction cost threshold](#local-load-cost), the server ignores the transaction completely. (This logic is essentially unchanged with or without the amendment.)
* If the transaction cost does not meet a `rippled` server's [load-based transaction cost threshold](#local-load-cost), the server ignores the transaction completely.
* If the transaction cost does not meet a `rippled` server's [open ledger cost threshold](#open-ledger-cost), the server queues the transaction for a later ledger.
This divides transactions into roughly three categories:
@@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ _Fee levels_ represent the proportional difference between the minimum cost and
The `rippled` APIs have two ways to query the local load-based transaction cost: the `server_info` command (intended for humans) and the `server_state` command (intended for machines).
If the [FeeEscalation amendment][] is enabled, you can use the [fee method][] to check the open ledger cost.
You can use the [fee method][] to check the open ledger cost.
### server_info
@@ -151,7 +151,7 @@ This feature is designed to allow you to recover an account if the regular key i
The [`lsfPasswordSpent` flag](accountroot.html) starts out disabled. It gets enabled when you send a SetRegularKey transaction signed by the master key pair. It gets disabled again when the account receives a [Payment](payment.html) of XRP.
When the [FeeEscalation amendment][] is enabled, `rippled` prioritizes key reset transactions above other transactions even though the nominal transaction cost of a key reset transaction is zero.
`rippled` prioritizes key reset transactions above other transactions even though the nominal transaction cost of a key reset transaction is zero.
## Changing the Transaction Cost