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rpc-proxy

This tool implements proxyd, an RPC request router and proxy. It does the following things:

  1. Whitelists RPC methods.
  2. Routes RPC methods to groups of backend services.
  3. Automatically retries failed backend requests.
  4. Track backend consensus (latest, safe, finalized blocks), peer count and sync state.
  5. Re-write requests and responses to enforce consensus.
  6. Load balance requests across backend services.
  7. Cache immutable responses from backends.
  8. Provides metrics the measure request latency, error rates, and the like.

Usage

Run make proxyd to build the binary. No additional dependencies are necessary.

To configure proxyd for use, you'll need to create a configuration file to define your proxy backends and routing rules. Check out example.config.toml for how to do this alongside a full list of all options with commentary.

Once you have a config file, start the daemon via proxyd <path-to-config>.toml.

Consensus awareness

Starting on v4.0.0, proxyd is aware of the consensus state of its backends. This helps minimize chain reorgs experienced by clients.

To enable this behavior, you must set consensus_aware value to true in the backend group.

When consensus awareness is enabled, proxyd will poll the backends for their states and resolve a consensus group based on:

  • the common ancestor latest block, i.e. if a backend is experiencing a fork, the fork won't be visible to the clients
  • the lowest safe block
  • the lowest finalized block
  • peer count
  • sync state

The backend group then acts as a round-robin load balancer distributing traffic equally across healthy backends in the consensus group, increasing the availability of the proxy.

A backend is considered healthy if it meets the following criteria:

  • not banned
  • avg 1-min moving window error rate ≤ configurable threshold
  • avg 1-min moving window latency ≤ configurable threshold
  • peer count ≥ configurable threshold
  • latest block lag ≤ configurable threshold
  • last state update ≤ configurable threshold
  • not currently syncing

When a backend is experiencing inconsistent consensus, high error rates or high latency, the backend will be banned for a configurable amount of time (default 5 minutes) and won't receive any traffic during this period.

Tag rewrite

When consensus awareness is enabled, proxyd will enforce the consensus state transparently for all the clients.

For example, if a client requests the eth_getBlockByNumber method with the latest tag, proxyd will rewrite the request to use the resolved latest block from the consensus group and forward it to the backend.

The following request methods are rewritten:

  • eth_getLogs
  • eth_newFilter
  • eth_getBalance
  • eth_getCode
  • eth_getTransactionCount
  • eth_call
  • eth_getStorageAt
  • eth_getBlockTransactionCountByNumber
  • eth_getUncleCountByBlockNumber
  • eth_getBlockByNumber
  • eth_getTransactionByBlockNumberAndIndex
  • eth_getUncleByBlockNumberAndIndex
  • debug_getRawReceipts

And eth_blockNumber response is overridden with current block consensus.

Cacheable methods

Cache use Redis and can be enabled for the following immutable methods:

  • eth_chainId
  • net_version
  • eth_getBlockTransactionCountByHash
  • eth_getUncleCountByBlockHash
  • eth_getBlockByHash
  • eth_getTransactionByBlockHashAndIndex
  • eth_getUncleByBlockHashAndIndex
  • debug_getRawReceipts (block hash only)

Metrics

See metrics.go for a list of all available metrics.

The metrics port is configurable via the metrics.port and metrics.host keys in the config.

Adding Backend SSL Certificates in Docker

The Docker image runs on Alpine Linux. If you get SSL errors when connecting to a backend within Docker, you may need to add additional certificates to Alpine's certificate store. To do this, bind mount the certificate bundle into a file in /usr/local/share/ca-certificates. The entrypoint.sh script will then update the store with whatever is in the ca-certificates directory prior to starting proxyd.