Core Protocol

Supermajority

A threshold of more than 2/3 (66.7%) of total active stake agreeing on a particular fork. Supermajority is required for optimistic confirmation and, through sustained voting, for finality (rooting). If supermajority is lost (e.g., too many validators offline), the cluster halts until it recovers.

IDsupermajority

Plain meaning

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A threshold of more than 2/3 (66.7%) of total active stake agreeing on a particular fork. Supermajority is required for optimistic confirmation and, through sustained voting, for finality (rooting). If supermajority is lost (e.g., too many validators offline), the cluster halts until it recovers.

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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Supermajority (supermajority)
Category: Core Protocol
Definition: A threshold of more than 2/3 (66.7%) of total active stake agreeing on a particular fork. Supermajority is required for optimistic confirmation and, through sustained voting, for finality (rooting). If supermajority is lost (e.g., too many validators offline), the cluster halts until it recovers.
Related: Finality, Stake
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Concept graph

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Branch

Finality

The guarantee that a transaction cannot be reversed. Solana offers two levels: optimistic confirmation (~400ms, 66.7%+ stake voted) and full finality (~12-13 seconds, 31+ confirmations rooted). Once a slot is rooted, its transactions are irreversible under the assumption that no more than 1/3 of stake is malicious.

Branch

Stake

SOL tokens that are delegated to a validator to increase its voting weight and earn staking rewards. Staking is non-custodial—stakers retain ownership of their SOL. Stake activates/deactivates at epoch boundaries with a warmup/cooldown period. Validators with more stake are assigned more leader slots and have proportionally more influence in consensus.

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Core Protocol

Finality

The guarantee that a transaction cannot be reversed. Solana offers two levels: optimistic confirmation (~400ms, 66.7%+ stake voted) and full finality (~12-13 seconds, 31+ confirmations rooted). Once a slot is rooted, its transactions are irreversible under the assumption that no more than 1/3 of stake is malicious.

Core Protocol

Stake

SOL tokens that are delegated to a validator to increase its voting weight and earn staking rewards. Staking is non-custodial—stakers retain ownership of their SOL. Stake activates/deactivates at epoch boundaries with a warmup/cooldown period. Validators with more stake are assigned more leader slots and have proportionally more influence in consensus.

Core Protocol

Tendermint Consensus

BFT consensus protocol using two-phase voting (prevote + precommit) with a 2/3 supermajority threshold. Unlike Tower BFT which votes on a continuously growing PoH chain, Tendermint uses round-based block proposals. Tower BFT achieves lower latency by avoiding per-round communication overhead, leveraging PoH as a shared clock instead.

Core Protocol

Stake Account

A dedicated on-chain account that holds delegated SOL for staking. Each stake account has a staker authority (can redelegate) and a withdrawer authority (can withdraw). A stake account can only delegate to one validator at a time, so users create multiple stake accounts to split across validators.

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Core Protocolsealevel

Sealevel

Solana's parallel transaction execution engine. Sealevel can process thousands of transactions simultaneously by analyzing each transaction's declared account inputs—transactions that don't touch the same writable accounts run in parallel across available CPU cores. This account-level parallelism is what enables Solana's high throughput.

AliasSVM Runtime
Core Protocolshred

Shred

The smallest unit of block data propagated through the network via Turbine. Blocks are split into shreds of up to 1,228 bytes each (fitting in a single UDP packet). Shreds are Reed-Solomon erasure coded—typically 32 data shreds produce 32 recovery shreds—so blocks can be reconstructed even if up to half the shreds are lost.

Core Protocolslot

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.

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Core Protocolfinality

Finality

The guarantee that a transaction cannot be reversed. Solana offers two levels: optimistic confirmation (~400ms, 66.7%+ stake voted) and full finality (~12-13 seconds, 31+ confirmations rooted). Once a slot is rooted, its transactions are irreversible under the assumption that no more than 1/3 of stake is malicious.

Core Protocolstake

Stake

SOL tokens that are delegated to a validator to increase its voting weight and earn staking rewards. Staking is non-custodial—stakers retain ownership of their SOL. Stake activates/deactivates at epoch boundaries with a warmup/cooldown period. Validators with more stake are assigned more leader slots and have proportionally more influence in consensus.

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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.