Realith / Object coordination infrastructure
Why RealithArchitectureRoadmap
English EN German DE French FR Spanish ES Portuguese PT Chinese ZH Arabic AR Japanese JA Estonian ET Russian RU
Realith / Navigation
Architecture
Introduction
Realith ArchitectureArchitecture MapFoundational frameShort definitionArchitectural thesisClass of problemsNot a platform and not just a blockchain
The missing layer
The missing layerWhere the gap appearsWhat is missingInfrastructure characterLocal reconstructionEvent-first
System primitives
PrimitivesSubjectStructureStructure propertiesObjectVersion and transitionRelationsContourAdmissionPermissionAccessRightClaim against the networkLayer algebra
Object state logic
State logicObject and stateActive versionTransitionCausal basisRecognition basisCanonical recognitionCanonical stateCanon invariantsConflict
Canonization layer
CanonizationRealith blockchainLower layerWhat is canonizedSemantic vs blockchainEpochsHistory compactionState summaries
Token layer
Token layerUtility tokenToken formsACT
Operator and roles
Operator and rolesNode rolesOperator layerOperator boundaryVisibility and observabilityReceipts and proofsDeployment
Visibility regimes
VisibilityVisibility as a modeMetadataOperator observabilityHidden contoursPublished outcomePrivacy boundariesDefined and deferred
Compatibility layer
CompatibilityCanon boundaryCompatibility functionsGateways and adaptersExternal systemsEVM
Applicability criteria
ApplicabilityClass of problemsSigns of applicabilityCanonical scenarioWhen it is excessiveNot an industry list
Architectural boundaries
BoundariesBoundaries in the canonWhat it is notNo center of interpretationWhat does not followWhat the network does not promiseInfrastructure boundaryNot a platformNot token-firstService ≠ ownership
Architecture status
StatusDefinedHypothesesMulti-contourDeferredPublicly permissibleNot settled
Terminology
TermsCoreCoordination layersState and canonOperator and verificationCompatibility and executionNode roles and deploymentToken terms
Main Why RealithArchitectureRoadmap
Information Legal NoticeDisclaimerPrivacy and CookiesContactCompany
Language
English EN German DE French FR Spanish ES Portuguese PT Chinese ZH Arabic AR Japanese JA Estonian ET Russian RU
Architecture
Introduction
Realith ArchitectureArchitecture MapFoundational frameShort definitionArchitectural thesisClass of problemsNot a platform and not just a blockchain
The missing layer
The missing layerWhere the gap appearsWhat is missingInfrastructure characterLocal reconstructionEvent-first
System primitives
PrimitivesSubjectStructureStructure propertiesObjectVersion and transitionRelationsContourAdmissionPermissionAccessRightClaim against the networkLayer algebra
Object state logic
State logicObject and stateActive versionTransitionCausal basisRecognition basisCanonical recognitionCanonical stateCanon invariantsConflict
Canonization layer
CanonizationRealith blockchainLower layerWhat is canonizedSemantic vs blockchainEpochsHistory compactionState summaries
Token layer
Token layerUtility tokenToken formsACT
Operator and roles
Operator and rolesNode rolesOperator layerOperator boundaryVisibility and observabilityReceipts and proofsDeployment
Visibility regimes
VisibilityVisibility as a modeMetadataOperator observabilityHidden contoursPublished outcomePrivacy boundariesDefined and deferred
Compatibility layer
CompatibilityCanon boundaryCompatibility functionsGateways and adaptersExternal systemsEVM
Applicability criteria
ApplicabilityClass of problemsSigns of applicabilityCanonical scenarioWhen it is excessiveNot an industry list
Architectural boundaries
BoundariesBoundaries in the canonWhat it is notNo center of interpretationWhat does not followWhat the network does not promiseInfrastructure boundaryNot a platformNot token-firstService ≠ ownership
Architecture status
StatusDefinedHypothesesMulti-contourDeferredPublicly permissibleNot settled
Terminology
TermsCoreCoordination layersState and canonOperator and verificationCompatibility and executionNode roles and deploymentToken terms
Realith / Architecture

Canonization Layer

The `blockchain layer` in Realith is a layer of canonization, not the whole architecture.

Contents of the section

  • What the Network Canonizes
  • Epochs
  • History Compaction
  • Published State Summaries
  • Lower Canonization Layer
  • The Realith Blockchain
  • Semantic Layer vs Blockchain Layer
On this page
Contents of the section
Legal NoticeDisclaimerPrivacy and CookiesContactCompany