Core Protocol

Bootstrap Validator

The first validator in a Solana cluster that produces the genesis block and bootstraps the initial ledger. The bootstrap validator generates the genesis configuration, creates the initial accounts (mint, vote, stake), and begins producing PoH entries and blocks. Other validators then join the cluster by connecting to the bootstrap validator via gossip and downloading a snapshot.

IDbootstrap-validator

Plain meaning

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The first validator in a Solana cluster that produces the genesis block and bootstraps the initial ledger. The bootstrap validator generates the genesis configuration, creates the initial accounts (mint, vote, stake), and begins producing PoH entries and blocks. Other validators then join the cluster by connecting to the bootstrap validator via gossip and downloading a snapshot.

Mental model

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Think of it as part of the chain machinery that keeps ordering, execution, or consensus moving.

Technical context

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Consensus, leader rotation, slots, epochs, and the runtime.

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Bootstrap Validator (bootstrap-validator)
Category: Core Protocol
Definition: The first validator in a Solana cluster that produces the genesis block and bootstraps the initial ledger. The bootstrap validator generates the genesis configuration, creates the initial accounts (mint, vote, stake), and begins producing PoH entries and blocks. Other validators then join the cluster by connecting to the bootstrap validator via gossip and downloading a snapshot.
Related: Validator, Genesis Block, Cluster
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Concept graph

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These branches show which concepts this term touches directly and what sits one layer beyond them.

Branch

Validator

A node that participates in the Solana network by validating transactions, voting on blocks, and (when selected as leader) producing new blocks. Validators run the Agave, Firedancer, or Jito client software, require significant hardware (128+ GB RAM, high-core CPU, NVMe SSD), and earn rewards from inflation and transaction fees.

Branch

Genesis Block

The first block (slot 0) of a Solana cluster that defines initial configuration: the mint account, initial token supply, built-in program deployments, and cluster parameters. The genesis config is generated by the `solana-genesis` tool and shared among all validators to bootstrap a new cluster.

Branch

Cluster

A set of validators working together to maintain a single Solana ledger. Solana operates three main clusters: mainnet-beta (production), devnet (development), and testnet (stress testing). Each cluster has its own genesis block, token supply, and independent validator set. Validators in a cluster discover each other via the gossip protocol.

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Core Protocol

Validator

A node that participates in the Solana network by validating transactions, voting on blocks, and (when selected as leader) producing new blocks. Validators run the Agave, Firedancer, or Jito client software, require significant hardware (128+ GB RAM, high-core CPU, NVMe SSD), and earn rewards from inflation and transaction fees.

Core Protocol

Genesis Block

The first block (slot 0) of a Solana cluster that defines initial configuration: the mint account, initial token supply, built-in program deployments, and cluster parameters. The genesis config is generated by the `solana-genesis` tool and shared among all validators to bootstrap a new cluster.

Core Protocol

Cluster

A set of validators working together to maintain a single Solana ledger. Solana operates three main clusters: mainnet-beta (production), devnet (development), and testnet (stress testing). Each cluster has its own genesis block, token supply, and independent validator set. Validators in a cluster discover each other via the gossip protocol.

Core Protocol

BPF (Berkeley Packet Filter)

Berkeley Packet Filter—the original bytecode format used for Solana programs, inherited from Linux's eBPF. Programs written in Rust or C are compiled to BPF bytecode and executed in a sandboxed VM. BPF has been superseded by SBF on Solana but the tooling names (BPF Loader, cargo build-bpf) persist for historical reasons.

Commonly confused with

Terms nearby in vocabulary, acronym, or conceptual neighborhood.

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Core Protocolvalidator

Validator

A node that participates in the Solana network by validating transactions, voting on blocks, and (when selected as leader) producing new blocks. Validators run the Agave, Firedancer, or Jito client software, require significant hardware (128+ GB RAM, high-core CPU, NVMe SSD), and earn rewards from inflation and transaction fees.

Core Protocoljito-validator

Jito Validator Client

A modified fork of the Agave validator client maintained by Jito Labs that adds an out-of-protocol block space auction. Jito's modifications include a block engine that accepts transaction bundles with tips, enabling MEV extraction while returning value to stakers. The majority of mainnet-beta stake runs the Jito client.

AliasJito-Solana
Related terms

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Core Protocolvalidator

Validator

A node that participates in the Solana network by validating transactions, voting on blocks, and (when selected as leader) producing new blocks. Validators run the Agave, Firedancer, or Jito client software, require significant hardware (128+ GB RAM, high-core CPU, NVMe SSD), and earn rewards from inflation and transaction fees.

Core Protocolgenesis-block

Genesis Block

The first block (slot 0) of a Solana cluster that defines initial configuration: the mint account, initial token supply, built-in program deployments, and cluster parameters. The genesis config is generated by the `solana-genesis` tool and shared among all validators to bootstrap a new cluster.

Core Protocolcluster

Cluster

A set of validators working together to maintain a single Solana ledger. Solana operates three main clusters: mainnet-beta (production), devnet (development), and testnet (stress testing). Each cluster has its own genesis block, token supply, and independent validator set. Validators in a cluster discover each other via the gossip protocol.

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Core Protocol

Proof of History (PoH)

A clock mechanism that cryptographically proves the passage of time between events. PoH uses a sequential SHA-256 hash chain where each output becomes the next input, creating a verifiable ordering of events without requiring consensus. The leader produces ~400,000 hashes per slot (~400ms), and any validator can verify the sequence in parallel, enabling Solana's high throughput by removing the need for validators to agree on time.

Core Protocol

Tower BFT

Solana's custom BFT consensus algorithm built on top of Proof of History. Tower BFT uses PoH as a clock to reduce communication overhead in traditional PBFT from O(n²) to O(n). Validators vote on forks with exponentially increasing lockout periods—each consecutive vote doubles the lockout, making rollbacks progressively more expensive. A fork is finalized when it reaches supermajority (66.7%+ of stake).

Core Protocol

Slot

A time window during which a designated leader validator can produce a block. Each slot lasts approximately 400 milliseconds. Slots are numbered sequentially from genesis and grouped into epochs of 432,000 slots (~2-3 days). Not every slot produces a block—a skipped slot means the leader was offline or too slow.

Core Protocol

Block

A set of entries produced by a leader during a single slot. A block contains transactions bundled into entries, each with a PoH hash proving ordering. Blocks are broken into shreds for network propagation via Turbine. Maximum block size is limited by compute units (48M CU cap per block) rather than byte size.