Hyperledger
Hyperledger (or the Hyperledger Project) is an umbrella project of open source blockchains and related tools that the Linux Foundation[1] started in December 2015. IBM, Intel, and SAP Ariba have contributed to support the collaborative development of blockchain-based distributed ledgers. It was renamed the Hyperledger Foundation in October 2021.
Formation | 2015 |
---|---|
Founded at | United States |
Legal status | Foundation |
Purpose | Blockchains |
Headquarters | 1 Letterman Drive |
Location |
|
Official language | English |
Owner | The Linux Foundation |
Staff | 51–200 |
Website | www |
History and aims
In December 2015, the Linux Foundation announced the creation of the Hyperledger Project. The founding project members were announced in February 2016, with ten further members and the governing board announced a month later on March 29.[2] On May 19, Brian Behlendorf was appointed the project’s executive director.[3]
The project’s objective is to advance cross-industry collaboration by developing blockchains and distributed ledgers, focusing on improving the systems’ performance and reliability (compared to cryptocurrency designs) so they can support global business transactions by major technological, financial, and supply chain companies.[4] The project integrates independent open protocols and standards in a framework for use-specific modules, including blockchains with their own consensus and storage routines, and services for identity, access control and smart contracts. There was some debate about whether the Hyperledger would develop its own bitcoin-type cryptocurrency, but Behlendorf clearly stated the Hyperledger Project would never build its own cryptocurrency.[5]
In early 2016, the project began accepting proposals for incubation of codebases and other technologies as core elements. One of the first proposals was for a codebase combining previous work by Digital Asset, Blockstream's libconsensus and IBM's OpenBlockchain.[6] This was later named Fabric.[7] In May, Intel's distributed ledger, named Sawtooth,[8] was incubated.[9]
In January 2018, Hyperledger released the production-ready Sawtooth 1.0.[10] In January 2019, the first long-term-support version of Hyperledger Fabric (v1.4) was announced.[11]
Daniela Barbosa was named executive director of Hyperledger Foundation in October 2021.[12]
Members and governance
Early members of the initiative included blockchain ISVs, (Blockchain, ConsenSys, Digital Asset, R3, Onchain), well-known technology platform companies (Cisco, Fujitsu, Hitachi, IBM, Intel, NEC, NTT DATA, Red Hat, VMware), financial services firms (ABN AMRO, ANZ Bank, BNY Mellon, CLS Group, CME Group, the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC), Deutsche Börse Group, J.P. Morgan, State Street, SWIFT, Wells Fargo, Sberbank), business software companies like SAP, academic institutions (Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance, Blockchain at Columbia, UCLA Blockchain Lab), systems integrators and others (Accenture, Calastone, Wipro, Credits, Guardtime, IntellectEU, Nxt Foundation, Symbiont, Smart Block Laboratory).[13]
The governing board of the Hyperledger Project consists of ten members chaired by Robert Palatnick, (managing director and chief technology architect for DTCC), and a fifteen-member Technical Steering Committee chaired by Tracy Kuhrt, Associate Director, Blockchain and Multiparty Systems Architecture, at Accenture.[14]
Notable frameworks
Hyperledger Fabric
Hyperledger Fabric is a permissioned blockchain infrastructure, originally contributed by IBM and Digital Asset, providing a modular architecture with a delineation of roles between the nodes in the infrastructure, execution of Smart Contracts (called "chaincode" in Fabric) and configurable consensus and membership services. A Fabric Network comprises (1) "Peer nodes", which execute chaincode, access ledger data, endorse transactions and interface with applications; (2) "Orderer nodes" which ensure the consistency of the blockchain and deliver the endorsed transactions to the peers of the network; and (3) Membership Service Providers (MSPs), each generally implemented as a Certificate Authority, managing X.509 certificates which are used to authenticate member identity and roles.[16] Hyperledger Fabric allows for use of different consensus algorithms, but the consensus algorithm that is most commonly used with the platform is Practical Byzantine Fault Tolerance (PBFT).[17]
Fabric is primarily aimed at integration projects, in which a Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT) is required, offering no user facing services other than an SDK for Node.js, Java and Go.
Fabric supports chaincode in Go and JavaScript (via Hyperledger Composer, or natively since v1.1) out-of-the-box, and other languages such as Java by installing appropriate modules. It is therefore potentially more flexible than competitors that only support a closed Smart Contract language.
Hyperledger Sawtooth
Originally contributed by Intel, Sawtooth includes a dynamic consensus feature enabling hot swapping consensus algorithms in a running network. Among the consensus options is a novel consensus protocol known as "Proof of Elapsed Time," a lottery-design consensus protocol that optionally builds on trusted execution environments provided by Intel's Software Guard Extensions (SGX).[18] Sawtooth supports Ethereum smart contracts via "seth" (a Sawtooth transaction processor integrating the Hyperledger Burrow EVM).[19] In addition to Solidity support, Sawtooth includes SDKs for Python, Go, Javascript, Rust, Java, and C++.[20]
Tools
Hyperledger Aries
Hyperledger Aries is a toolkit for decentralized identity solutions. It supports issuance, storage, and presentations of verifiable credentials, providing the functionality to create and manage decentralized, self-sovereign identities. It supports secure, peer-to-peer messaging using a variety of protocols. Aries includes implementations in Python, Go, .NET, and JavaScript. Hyperledger Aries interacts with other Hyperledger projects like Indy and Ursa. Indy provides the ledger technology, and Ursa provides shared cryptographic functions.[21]
Hyperledger Caliper
Hyperledger Caliper is a blockchain benchmark tool and one of the Hyperledger projects hosted by The Linux Foundation. Hyperledger Caliper allows users to measure the performance of a specific blockchain implementation with a set of predefined use cases. Hyperledger Caliper will produce reports containing a number of performance indicators, such as TPS (Transactions Per Second), transaction latency, resource utilization etc. The intent is for Caliper results to be used by other Hyperledger projects as they build out their frameworks, and as a reference in supporting the choice of a blockchain implementation suitable for a user's specific needs. Hyperledger Caliper was initially contributed by developers from Huawei, Hyperchain, Oracle, Bitwise, Soramitsu, IBM and the Budapest University of Technology and Economics.[22]
Hyperledger Cello
Hyperledger Cello is a blockchain module toolkit and one of the Hyperledger projects hosted by The Linux Foundation. Hyperledger Cello aims to bring the on-demand "as-a-service" deployment model to the blockchain ecosystem to reduce the effort required for creating, managing and terminating blockchains. It provides a multi-tenant chain service efficiently and automatically on top of various infrastructures, e.g., baremetal, virtual machine, and more container platforms. Hyperledger Cello was initially contributed by IBM, with sponsors from Soramitsu, Huawei and Intel.[23]
Baohua Yang and Haitao Yue from IBM Research are committed part-time to developing and maintaining the project.
Hyperledger Composer
Hyperledger Composer was a set of collaboration tools for building blockchain business networks that make it simple and fast for business owners and developers to create smart contracts and blockchain applications to solve business problems. Built with JavaScript, leveraging modern tools including node.js, npm, CLI and popular editors, Composer offered business-centric abstractions as well as sample apps with easy to test DevOps processes to create robust blockchain solutions that drive alignment across business requirements with technical development.[24]
Blockchain package management tooling contributed by IBM. Composer was a user-facing rapid prototyping tooling, running on top of Hyperledger Fabric, which allows the easy management of Assets (data stored on the blockchain), Participants (identity management, or member services) and Transactions (Chaincode, a.k.a. Smart Contracts, which operate on Assets on the behalf of a Participant). The resulting application can be exported as a package (a BNA file) which may be executed on a Hyperledger Fabric instance, with the support of a Node.js application (based on the Loopback application framework) and provide a REST interface to external applications.
Composer provided a GUI user interface "Playground" for the creation of applications, and therefore represents an excellent starting point for Proof of Concept work.
On the 27th of April, 2020 the Hyperledger Technical Steering Committee moved Hyperledger Composer to the "End of Life" lifecycle stage, ending new development.[25]
Hyperledger Explorer
Hyperledger Explorer is a blockchain module and one of the Hyperledger projects hosted by The Linux Foundation. Designed to create a user-friendly Web application, Hyperledger Explorer can view, invoke, deploy or query blocks, transactions and associated data, network information (name, status, list of nodes), chain codes and transaction families, as well as any other relevant information stored in the ledger. Hyperledger Explorer was initially contributed by IBM, Intel and DTCC.[26]
Hyperledger Quilt
Hyperledger Quilt is a business blockchain tool and one of the Hyperledger projects hosted by The Linux Foundation. Hyperledger Quilt offers interoperability between ledger systems by implementing the Interledger protocol (also known as ILP), which is primarily a payments protocol and is designed to transfer value across distributed ledgers and non-distributed ledgers. The Interledger protocol provides atomic swaps between ledgers (even non-blockchain or distributed ledgers) and a single account namespace for accounts within each ledger. With the addition of Quilt to Hyperledger, The Linux Foundation now hosts both the Java (Quilt) and JavaScript (Interledger.js) Interledger implementations. Hyperledger Quilt was initially contributed by NTT Data and Ripple.[27]
See also
References
- "Linux Foundation Unites Industry Leaders to Advance Blockchain Technology - The Linux Foundation". The Linux Foundation. 2015-12-17. Archived from the original on 2017-07-17. Retrieved 2018-04-28.
- "Open Source Blockchain Effort for the Enterprise Elects Leadership Positions and Gains New Investments - Hyperledger". Hyperledger. 2016-03-29. Retrieved 2018-04-28.
- "Founder of the Apache Software Foundation Joins Linux Foundation to Lead Hyperledger Project". 2016-05-19. Archived from the original on 2016-06-10.
- "Linux Foundation's Hyperledger Project Announces 30 Founding Members and Code Proposals To Advance Blockchain Technology". 2016-02-09. Archived from the original on 2016-02-25. Retrieved 2016-02-17.
- "Hyperledger Blockchain Project Is Not About Bitcoin". eWEEK. Retrieved 2018-04-28.
- "Incubating Project Proposal: Joint DAH/IBM proposal". Tamas Blummer, Christopher Ferris. March 29, 2016. Retrieved June 21, 2016.
- "hyperledger/fabric". GitHub. Retrieved 2016-06-23.
- "hyperledger/sawtooth-core". GitHub. Retrieved 2018-04-28.
- "Sawtooth Lake Hyperledger Incubation Proposal". Mic Bowman, Richard Brown. April 14, 2016. Retrieved June 21, 2016.
- "Hyperledger releases Hyperledger Sawtooth 1.0, its second distributed ledger project". TechCrunch. 30 January 2018. Retrieved 2019-05-28.
- "Hyperledger Fabric 1.4 marks a very important milestone: First LTS release". JAXenter. 2019-01-11. Retrieved 2019-05-28.
- Bambysheva, Nina. "As Bitcoin, Ethereum Gain Popularity, Hyperledger's Executive Director 'Passes The Baton' To Dow Jones Veteran". Forbes. Retrieved 2022-04-18.
- "Our Corporate Members". The Linux Foundation. Retrieved 2019-03-10.
- "Leadership". Hyperledger Foundation. Retrieved 2022-04-18.
- Castillo, Michael del. "Hyperledger Unanimously Approves First Ethereum Codebase For Enterprises". Forbes. Retrieved 2019-09-26.
- Androulaki, Elli; Barger, Artem; Bortnikov, Vita; Cachin, Christian; Christidis, Konstantinos; De Caro, Angelo; Enyeart, David; Ferris, Christopher; Laventman, Gennady; Manevich, Yacov; Muralidharan, Srinivasan; Murthy, Chet; Nguyen, Binh; Sethi, Manish; Singh, Gari; Smith, Keith; Sorniotti, Alessandro; Stathakopoulou, Chrysoula; Vukolić, Marko; Weed Cocco, Sharon; Yellick, Jason (2018). "Hyperledger Fabric: A Distributed Operating System for Permissioned Blockchains". arXiv:1801.10228. doi:10.1145/3190508.3190538. S2CID 3863072.
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- Bollen, Benjamin. "Introduce a start for Burrow EVM as Sawtooth Transaction Processor". github.com. Hyperledger. Retrieved 18 May 2017.
- "Available SDKs". sawtooth.hyperledger.org. Archived from the original on June 16, 2018. Retrieved November 23, 2018.
- "Hyperledger Aries - Hyperledger". Retrieved August 21, 2023.
- "Measuring Blockchain Performance with Hyperledger Caliper - Hyperledger". Hyperledger. 2018-03-19. Retrieved 2018-06-16.
- "Hyperledger Cello - Hyperledger". Hyperledger. Retrieved 2018-04-28.
- "Hyperledger Composer - Hyperledger". Hyperledger. Retrieved 2018-04-28.
- "Move Composer to End of Life". Hyplerledger Wiki. Retrieved 10 Sep 2021.
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