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xrpl-dev-portal/content/concepts/transactions/transaction-queue.md
Rome Reginelli b51bcb4ea3 Information Architecture v3 (#1934)
* Update look up escrows to remove redundant info about lookups via sender/destination. Modify cancel expired escrow for brevity.

* Cancel escrow: fix notes

* Add draft of updated cancel-escrow.js.

* Update intro to escrows.

* Add Escrow Tutorial

* Minor corrections

* Fix headings, add HTML

* Update escrow docs

This commit re-creates f205a92db2 with
some adjustments:

- Omit the accidentally-created dir full of junk
- Fix some typos and one mistake in the Escrow limitations section
- Add a table to the EscrowCreate ref to clarify valid combos of fields.

* Concept info from send-a-time-held-escrow added to escrow.md

* IA: Move "Consensus Network" files

This re-creates some work from the original commit 56fffe0b9f

* Rewrite escrows article (re-created)

This commit re-creates relevant work from the following commits:

9a4a588f2b Update escrow.md context info
e1b017dc83 Remove references to using escrow for interledger payments.

* IA: Move "XRPL servers" files

This re-creates some work from original commit 7611979abf

* IA: move "production readiness" files.

Re-creates work from the following commit:

692438693a  Move tutorials to concepts

* New intro articles

Original commit: 56fffe0b9f

* IA: Reorg account concepts

Re-creates some work from original commit 56fffe0b9f

* IA: reorg transaction concepts

Original commits:
9d4eff9940  WIP - reorg accounts
7611979abf  WIP dir. reorg

* IA: reorg consensus concepts

Original commit: 56fffe0b9f

* IA: Reorg ledger docs

Original commit: 56fffe0b9f

- Rephrased some details of the section

* IA: rename issuing/operational addresses page

Original commit: 56fffe0b9f

* Moving use cases

* Fleshing out Use Cases

Note, the dactyl-config.yml file has not been fully updated.

* Clean up checks conceptual info.

* Remove redundant checks use case section

Original commit: 3c29e9c05e

* IA: move Dex under tokens

Original commit: d08b3ba7d7

* Touch up stablecoin issuer use case (#1856)

* Consolidate stablecoin use case

* Stablecoin issuer: cleanup progress through sending

* Stablecoin issuer: reorg second half

(Note: the dactyl-config.yml is not fully reconciled yet)

* Move rippled and clio tutorials into infrastructure

* Remove link to checks amendement.

* Add note to account_objects.md about commandline interface type field.

* Merge expiration case with lifecycle section.

* Interoperability Use Cases

* Add graphics to intro

* Move escrow use cases to dedicated page.

* Update use case page intros and corresponding concept info.

* Clarify meaning of direct XRP payments.

* Intro link updates

* Payment use cases

* Remove some unnecessary links in transactions section

Original commit: e6fcf4a4dc

* Link cleanup in Tokens section

Original commit: 9588dd5e70

* Touch up 'Configure Peering' section

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* Clean up links in accounts section

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* Add NFT mkt use case

* p2p payments: edits to Wallets

* Clean up payments use cases

* Refine history description

* IA: use case cleanup

* IA: reconcile servers, ledgers sections

* IA: reconcile payment types, tx, tokens

* IA: reconcile accounts section

* IA: reconcile infra

* IA: Fix most broken links

* Full Docs Index: omit from sidebar

* IA: fix up most broken links

* fix Absolute path link to internal content

* Quick updates to Software Ecosystem

* Remove some absolute links to internal resources

* Fix remaining broken links in JA target

* Contributing: tweak formatting

* Tutorials: fix some minor issues

* remove interop use cases

* remove intro image and personal references to dennis

* alphabetize-transaction-nav

* Remove unused files

* Add QS escrow tutorials

* IA: move ledgers, consensus protocol files around

* IA: update nav for new page hierarchy

* reordering of topics under new networks and servers top-nav

* Move "Naming" to "What is XRP?"

* Update dactyl-config.yml

Remove xrp.md from the TOC.

* Update list-xrp-as-an-exchange.md

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* Update list-xrp-as-an-exchange.ja.md

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* Update currency-formats.md

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* Update currency-formats.ja.md

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* Update cancel-an-expired-escrow.md

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* Update paymentchannelfund.md

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* Update send-a-time-held-escrow.md

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* fix broken links

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* Update invariant-checking.md

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* Update invariant-checking.ja.md

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* Update transaction-cost.md

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* Update transaction-cost.ja.md

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* Update tokens.ja.md

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update text

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Try removing link altogether.

* Update currency-formats.ja.md

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* move commandline usage topic to infrastructure

* initial intro rewrite

* minor update to language

* IA.v3: rm Production Readiness

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* Add redirect for old xrp.html URL

* Small edits to 'What is XRP?' article

* Add missing imgs

* XRP - copy edit per @DennisDawson

* restructure tutorials nav and pages

* fix broken links

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* Algo trading: 1st draft

* Algo trading: notes on taxes

* Algo trading: edits per review

* algo trading: fix broken link

* Ledger structure: rewrite for accuracy and clarity

* Update links to removed 'tree format' header

* Ledger Structure: Update diagrams

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* Ledger structure: edits per review

* IA.v3: fix broken NFT links introduced by rebase

* Desktop Wallet (py): update little stuff

* Update some capacity/storage details

* contribute doc nav update

* fix image link in create diagram page

* IAv3: Fix 'Ledgers' blurb

* Update full history requirements with details from community members

* add reviewer suggestions

* Edits per @trippled review

* Apply suggestions from peer review

Co-authored-by: oeggert <117319296+oeggert@users.noreply.github.com>

* FH: reword file size limit note per review

* Update software ecosystem

* updates per review

* Minor tweaks to graphics

* fixTypos

* Update content/concepts/introduction/software-ecosystem.md

Co-authored-by: Amarantha Kulkarni <amarantha-k@users.noreply.github.com>

* Update content/concepts/introduction/software-ecosystem.md

Co-authored-by: Amarantha Kulkarni <amarantha-k@users.noreply.github.com>

* [JA] update AccountDelete cost

* custom transactors doc

* add doc to dactyl config

* [JA] fix NonFungibleTokensV1_1 amendment status

* [JA] update NFTokenOffer page

* Remove old, unused XRP article (#2039)

* add reviewer suggestions

* Add tooling to check for file/nav consistency

- From the repo top, run tool/check_file_consistency.py to look for
  Markdown files that exist in the "content/" directory but aren't used
  in the documentation.
- New "enforce_filenames" filter prints a warning to console when
  building, if a file's path and filename don't match expectations
  based on its place in the nav and top heading.

* File consistency checker: correctly handle filenames starting in _

* Remove unused old 'get started' and associated code

* Create Resources section & reorg some files

- Rename some files/folders based on their place in the nav
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  and/or docs to the new "Resources" section.
- Known issue: nav spills into a second row on page widths between
  993px-1110px. To be fixed in a later CSS update, maybe along with
  making the Resources dropdown multi-column.

* Fix #2078 code tab bug

CSS not built yet, to reduce merge conflicts. Won't have any effect
until that happens.

* fix Transaction JSON

* [JA] translate contributing contents

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* fix contribute-code blurb

* Top nav: add cols for Resources, fix broken links

* CSS: fix top nav overflows

* Fix broken link from redirect not in JA target

* Top nav: add Infra to article types

* Update contrib info & rename intro file

* [ja] Update link to suggested first page to translate

* [ja] fix contribute docs organization

* Run private network with docker tutorial (#2065)

* [NO-ISSUE] Run private network with docker tutorial

Adds a tutorial page in the Infrastructure section on how to run a private XRPL network with Docker.

Please let me know if you think this is a useful page to include for developers, whether the steps are clear or not, and if you have suggestions on what can be added to it.

* Add minor link fixes and Japanese target

* Apply suggestions from code review

Co-authored-by: Amarantha Kulkarni <amarantha-k@users.noreply.github.com>

* Add link to ripple-docker-testnet setup scripts in See Also section

* Update repo URL

---------

Co-authored-by: Amarantha Kulkarni <amarantha-k@users.noreply.github.com>

* add intro gfx (#2036)

* add intro gfx

* Move graphic up

* Update some graphics with their revised versions

* Add updated version of the custodial vs non-custodial graphic

---------

Co-authored-by: Amarantha Kulkarni <amarantha-k@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Amarantha Kulkarni <akulkarni@ripple.com>

* Update to reflect current UNL publishers

* [ja] update contributing

Co-authored-by: tequ <git@tequ.dev>

* Incorporate feedback on "What is XRP" page. (#2099)

* Add trademark info for XRP

* Revert section to previous state

* Fix broken link (#2101)

---------

Co-authored-by: Oliver Eggert <oeggert@ripple.com>
Co-authored-by: ddawson <dennis.s.dawson@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Maria Shodunke <mshodunke@ripple.com>
Co-authored-by: tequ <git@tequ.dev>
Co-authored-by: oeggert <117319296+oeggert@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Amarantha Kulkarni <amarantha-k@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: develoQ <develoQ.jp@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Maria Shodunke <maria-robobug@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Amarantha Kulkarni <akulkarni@ripple.com>
2023-09-01 12:40:18 -07:00

7.7 KiB

html, parent, blurb, labels
html parent blurb labels
transaction-queue.html transactions.html Transactions can be queued before being processed.
Transaction Sending

Transaction Queue

The rippled server uses a transaction queue to help enforce the open ledger cost. The open ledger cost sets a target number of transactions in a given ledger, and escalates the required transaction cost very quickly when the open ledger surpasses this size. Rather than discarding transactions that cannot pay the escalated transaction cost, rippled tries to put them in a transaction queue, which it uses to build the next ledger.

Transaction Queue and Consensus

The transaction queue plays an important role in selecting the transactions that are included or excluded from a given ledger version in the consensus process. The following steps describe how the transaction queue relates to the consensus process.

{{ include_svg("img/consensus-with-queue.svg", "Transaction queue and consensus diagram") }}

  1. Consensus Round 1 - Each validator proposes a set of transactions to be included in the next ledger version. Each also keeps a queue of candidate transactions not currently proposed.

  2. Consensus Round 2 - If a validator removes a transaction from its proposal in later rounds, it adds that transaction to its queue.

  3. Consensus Round N - The consensus process continues until enough servers agree on a transaction set.

  4. Validation - Servers confirm that they built the same resulting ledger and declare it validated.

  5. Building the Next Proposal - Each validator prepares its proposal for the next ledger version, starting with queued transactions.

  6. Adding to the Queue - If the next proposed ledger is already full, incoming transactions are queued for a later ledger version. (Transactions that pay the open ledger cost can still get into the next proposed ledger even if it's "full", but the open ledger cost grows exponentially with each transaction added this way.)

    After this step, the process repeats from the beginning.

Note: Technically, several of the steps described in the above process occur in parallel, because each server is always listening for new transactions, and starts preparing its next ledger proposal while the consensus process for the previous ledger version is ongoing.

Queuing Restrictions

The rippled server uses a variety of heuristics to estimate which transactions are "likely to be included in a ledger." The current implementation uses the following rules to decide which transactions to queue:

  • Transactions must be properly-formed and authorized with valid signatures.
  • Transactions with an AccountTxnID field cannot be queued.
  • A single sending address can have at most 10 transactions queued at the same time.
  • To queue a transaction, the sender must have enough XRP for all of the following:
    • Destroying the XRP transaction cost as specified in the Fee fields of all the sender's queued transactions. The total amount among queued transactions cannot be more than the base account reserve (currently 10 XRP). (Transactions paying significantly more than the minimum transaction cost of 0.00001 XRP typically skip the queue and go straight into the open ledger.)
    • Sending the maximum sum of XRP that all the sender's queued transactions could send.
    • Keeping enough XRP to meet the account's reserve requirements.
  • If a transaction affects how the sending address authorizes transactions, no other transactions from the same address can be queued behind it.
  • If a transaction includes a LastLedgerSequence field, the value of that field must be at least the current ledger index + 2.

Fee Averaging

If a sending address has one or more transactions queued, that sender can "push" the existing queued transactions into the open ledger by submitting a new transaction with a high enough transaction cost to pay for all of them. Specifically, the new transaction must pay a high enough transaction cost to cover the open ledger cost of itself and each other transaction from the same sender before it in the queue. (Keep in mind that the open ledger cost increases exponentially each time a transaction pays it.) The transactions must still follow the other queuing restrictions and the sending address must have enough XRP to pay the transaction costs of all the queued transactions.

This feature helps you work around a particular situation. If you submitted one or more transactions with a low cost that were queued, you cannot send new transactions from the same address unless you do one of the following:

  • Wait for the queued transactions to be included in a validated ledger, or
  • Wait for the queued transactions to be permanently invalidated if the transactions have the LastLedgerSequence field set, or
  • Cancel the queued transactions by submitting a new transaction with the same sequence number and a higher transaction cost.

If none of the above occur, transactions can stay in the queue for a theoretically unlimited amount of time, while other senders can "cut in line" by submitting transactions with higher transaction costs. Since signed transactions are immutable, you cannot increase the transaction cost of the queued transactions to increase their priority. If you do not want to invalidate the previously submitted transactions, fee averaging provides a workaround. If you increase the transaction cost of your new transaction to compensate, you can ensure the queued transactions are included in an open ledger right away.

Order Within the Queue

Within the transaction queue, transactions are ranked so that transactions paying a higher transaction cost come first. This ranking is not by the transactions' absolute XRP cost, but by costs relative to the minimum cost for that type of transaction. Transactions that pay the same transaction cost are ranked in the order the server received them. Other factors may also affect the order of transactions in the queue; for example, transactions from the same sender are sorted by their Sequence numbers so that they are submitted in order.

The precise order of transactions in the queue decides which transactions get added to the next in-progress ledger version in cases where there are more transactions in the queue than the expected size of the next ledger version. The order of the transactions does not affect the order the transactions are executed within a validated ledger. In each validated ledger version, the transaction set for that version executes in canonical order.

Note: When rippled queues a transaction, the provisional transaction response code is terQUEUED. This means that the transaction is likely to succeed in a future ledger version. As with all provisional response codes, the outcome of the transaction is not final until the transaction is either included in a validated ledger, or rendered permanently invalid.

See Also

  • Transaction Cost for information on why the transaction cost exists and how the XRP Ledger enforces it.
  • Consensus for a detailed description of how the consensus process approves transactions.

{% include '_snippets/rippled-api-links.md' %} {% include '_snippets/tx-type-links.md' %} {% include '_snippets/rippled_versions.md' %}