According to a report from The Block, developers from the Ethereum Foundation confirmed during a developer meeting held on Thursday that a new testnet named “Hoodi” will be launched on March 17, aimed at testing the deployment of the Pectra upgrade prior to its official release on the mainnet.
Previously, the deployment of the Pectra upgrade on Holesky and Sepolia (two of Ethereum’s primary testnets) encountered issues, with Holesky losing “finality” due to misconfiguration. Subsequently, developers decided to conduct additional testing and discussed whether to create a “shadow fork” of the Holesky testnet to ensure a smooth deployment of the subsequent mainnet upgrade. Although finality was restored to the testnet on Monday, it has not yet reached a fully usable state for all research purposes.
Reports suggest that Pectra could potentially launch on the Ethereum mainnet as early as April 25, approximately 30 days after the upgrade is deployed to the new Hoodi testnet. The Ethereum Foundation plans to invest significant resources into this new network, running a “similar number of validator nodes” as the mainnet.
According to the records from Thursday’s meeting, the Hoodi testnet will specifically allow researchers to test the validator node exit functionality, as there has been congestion in the validator exit queue on Holesky. The Holesky and Sepolia testnets will continue to be used for other research purposes.
Improvements Brought by Pectra
The name “Pectra” combines the “Prague” upgrade of the execution layer with the “Electra” upgrade of the consensus layer, aimed at enhancing the experience for users and network operators. One of the primary improvement proposals is EIP-7702, which will grant cryptocurrency wallets certain smart contract functionalities. The purpose of this change is to further advance Ethereum towards account abstraction, a technology that allows wallet developers to add user-friendly features, such as using tokens other than Ether (ETH) to pay transaction fees.
Another key proposal, EIP-7251, will alleviate some of the burdens faced by Ethereum validators. This change will increase the maximum staking limit for a single validator from 32 ETH to 2,048 ETH, meaning that those wishing to stake more than 32 ETH will no longer need to spread their assets across so many nodes, improving convenience for validators and reducing the startup time for new nodes.