Transaction Throughput Limits

Transaction Throughput Limits define the maximum number of transactions a blockchain can process within a given timeframe. This is a fundamental constraint that dictates the scalability of a protocol and its ability to handle high-frequency trading activity.

When a protocol reaches its throughput limit, transactions are delayed or dropped, leading to increased congestion and higher costs. For financial derivatives platforms, this can prevent the timely updating of oracle prices or the execution of complex order types, limiting the depth and liquidity of the market.

Scaling solutions such as sharding, sidechains, and rollups are designed to bypass these limits by processing transactions off the main chain or in parallel. Traders must be aware of these limits, as they can lead to market inefficiencies and difficulty in exiting positions during periods of extreme volatility.

Designing for high throughput is essential for building robust, professional-grade financial infrastructure.

Market Volatility Thresholds
Order Throughput
Proof Generation Throughput
State Variable Packing Limits
Parallelized Proof Computation
On-Chain Transaction Throughput
System Bottlenecks
WebSocket Connection Limits