The Polkadot EVM collective is a planned on-chain technical collective that deals with everything related to EVM. It is similar to the fellowship program, and instead of dealing with the runtime, it deals with EVM issues.
There are four goals of this collective. It is first and foremost a standardization body that will be in charge of its own RFC process. It wants to provide transparency over the development and maintenance of various tools that the ecosystem uses. It also tries to create an inclusive roadmap with the aim of reconcile different needs. And finally, it provides expert opinions when the need raises. We'll discuss the four goals in more details in the following sections.
The discussion of an on-chain Polkadot EVM collective has been under way during the early days of Frontier development. During the last few months, especially during Parity's "decentralization", we increasingly see the need of an on-chain collective as the Frontier project moves independent. The recent "OpenEVM" movement (credit to Giotto) heavily accelerated the process.
In the context of Polkadot EVM, there are a number of Polkadot-specific modifications we need to do. Polkadot EVM has custom precompiles as well as custom gas metering logic. In the past, we have also seen some specific use cases that require custom transaction format or new opcodes. The Polkadot EVM collective aims to create an RFC process to document them.
A standardization process is important in certain modifications. The collective itself acts as a review and audit body to help discover various security issues in the specifications. It also helps to improve interoperability across parachains, as eventually we want to have contracts on different parachains talking with each other freely.
The collective aims to bring more transparency over the development and maintenance of various tools that the ecosystem uses. We aim to link the membership of the EVM collective with the membership and merge rights in the polkadot-evm Github organization. It therefore becomes clear who is responsible for the maintenance and who can merge PRs. It avoids single-point-of-failure if one person is temporarily not available. It also helps in the situation that some technical differences between different members are non-conciliable (but hopefully we never come to that point).
During the past few years when working on the Frontier project, I've seen, at first hand, the vast different opinions on how the Polkadot community should work with EVM development. And I'm afraid to say, that it is still the case at this moment, that there's a big disconnect between the core development team, and the parachain ecosystem. While those are purely different technical views, they have vast influence on how subsequently the ecosystem develops tools and use contracts.
Should the EVM interpreter be on-chain or should EVM contracts be off-chain compiled first? How strict should we treat EVM compatiblity? What is the timeline of EVM? Should we support EVM indefinitely, or is it purely there to provide a migration path to WASM/RISC-V?
Such issues have big impact over dapp developers. If they develop on Polkadot, we want to make sure they have certainty over what they may have and not have in the near future, so that they know that whatever tools they developed wouldn't be made obsolete by the core dev team. The Pokladot EVM collective aims to provide a discussion platform that can provide some certainty.
We also deal with bigger issue in the roadmap, such as the migration of a complete Ethereum blockchain over to Polkadot. (Yes, this is possible and technically a planned feature in Frontier.)
The Polkadot EVM collective also aims to provide expert opinions and help in review, audit, and coordinate certain ecosystem initiatives. For example, the collective may be in charge to draft the detailed technical requirements for the new "OpenEVM" parachain and supervise its implementation. For this, we currently don't expect the collective to handle anything related to code implementation. It will likely be decided through a tendering process via a treasury referendum, and developed by an external team who wins the bid.
One is eligible as a member of the Polkadot EVM collective if one is involved in the development of a tool or a parachain/solochain that have EVM feature. This currently includes:
- Frontier
- Rust-EVM
- Moonbeam
- Astar
- Edgeware (EdgeEVM)
- Please submit PRs to add another tool to this list.
We currently only define two ranks, rank I and rank III. Rank I means a member is at least somewhat involved, and rank III means a member is deeply involved.
All seeding members are set to be rank III and is subject to a final vote of a root referendum.
- Please submit PRs to add your name to the seeding list.