Learn about the improved enterprise functionality and performance in the latest release of Hyperledger’s first and only public chain-compatible Ethereum client.
Hyperledger Besu was contributed to the Hyperledger organization in August of 2019 as the sole Ethereum blockchain client. Since then several notable improvements have been made that have continued to bridge the gap between permissioned and public chains.
The v1.3 release of Besu released in October 2019 included state pruning, allowing organizations to save money on storage costs by reducing storage size in a node. It also offers relational database support allowing customers with local storage requirements to choose from a selection of DB storage options through transaction manager, Orion. Besu v1.3 was also upgraded to be compatible with the “Istanbul Hard Fork Upgrade,” which took place earlier this year.
The Besu team is pleased to announce the next major release, Hyperledger Besu v1.4, which launched February 26, 2020, and includes a number of much-anticipated features focusing on performance and enterprise-driven functionality such as:
Click here to download Hyperledger Besu 1.4.
Hyperledger Besu v1.4 also exposes a plugin API, allowing anyone to write custom plugins for Besu and enabling users to take data from any Besu network, public or permissioned, and feed it into the rest of their applications and systems easily. The API exposes data about the following components:
In the future, along with more data being exposed via the API, users can expect Besu to compartmentalize key supporting services, eventually allowing them to be swapped via a plugin.
As part of its 1.4 release, Besu will now support a new tracing API: trace_replayBlockTransaction. The addition of this API is a step towards Besu being fully compatible with all Ethereum clients on the network. For example, it enables the use of Parity-style traces, which are a more concise alternative to the current debug_* APIs in Besu.
Specifically, the vmTrace option provides an operation-by-operation trace of EVM execution, the stateDiff option highlights the differences in account and storage state before and after the transaction and the trace option details every type and result of calls to account and contracts.
More Parity-style traces will soon be added to Besu as well. The two next ones scheduled are trace_block and trace_transaction.
Hyperledger Besu v1.4 will be able to run in a “Multi-tenant environment,” allowing a number of users to use the same Ethereum node to connect to the network. The Hyperledger Besu multi-tenancy support enables a much wider user base to make use of the blockchain technology, reducing the barriers to entry associated with learning, upskilling, and additional costs associated with deploying blockchain.
Support for authenticated API access will also be given, allowing hosts custom control on who to grant access to, depending on the user’s need. This coupled with Orion, the open-sourced, Apache 2.0 licensed private transaction manager, enables private transactions to take place all while ensuring only the correct recipient can access the data. Through the use of JWT tokens, a user identity is tied to a privacy identity, validating every API call to ensure the user is part of the privacy group before any data is revealed.
The release of Hyperledger Besu v1.4 also includes additional key management functionality through EthSigner. By design, Hyperledger Besu does not allow keys to be stored in the client or node. You have to use an external key manager. In this release, multi-Key support has been added. This support allows for a number of private keys to be securely stored in vaults accessible only when needed to be used for signing a transaction.
This advanced option adds the capability to select the correct key based on the details of transactions, regardless of where those keys are stored, allowing for rotation of keys and further security.
While blockchain delivers significant security benefits, encryption is still critical across the transaction lifecycle. Hyperledger Besu v1.4 will offer end to-end encryption with TLS, meaning all communication from the generation of the private transaction to its signature using private keys stored in secure vaults (e.g., Hashicorp Keyvault), transmission through private transaction managers, and arriving at another node is encrypted.
The next quarterly release, v1.5, is scheduled for mid 2020 and will include our most ambitious features to date. In the meantime, Hyperledger Besu is happy to sit at the intersection of the Hyperledger and Ethereum communities and continue to grow its contributor network.
Those looking to interact one-on-one with Besu developers and contributors can join the conversation on Rocketchat at #besu, or join our regular contributor calls.
Interested in learning more, or curious on how to get started with Besu? Check out the Besu docs, view the tutorials, visit the wiki, or take a look at some open issues in JIRA.
For those attending Hyperledger Global Forum, several project maintainers and contributors will also be present and speaking at the event and would love to chat with you.
This blog was written by PegaSys Digital Marketing Specialist, Gina Rubino, with contributions from PegaSys Product Managers Tim Beiko and Arash Mahboubi.