- Start Date: 2020-09-22
- Original HIP PR: #42
- Author: @mrallen1, @abhay
- HIP Number: 13
- Tracking Issue: #43
- Status: Deployed (audit / txn)
This proposal introduces a new type of transaction to the Helium blockchain called transfer_gateway_v1
. This transaction will be an atomic transfer of an onboarded Hotspot / gateway from one owner to another. This transaction can have an optional amount of HNT associated.
Although new RAK Hotspot Miners coming online and future efforts towards other gateways are underway, we can enable existing hotspot owners to redirect coverage resources to hosts who are willing to provide coverage in underutilized areas.
Over 7000 hotspots (at the time of writing) have come online since launching the Helium network. They have been placed in over 1500 cities. Some cities like Modesto, Brooklyn, New York, and San Francisco have over 250 hotspots deployed over a relatively small area. Other notable cities like New Orleans or Knoxville, TN are significantly under covered by existing hotspots.
- Any Helium hotspot owner who has deployed at least one hotspot.
- The Helium blockchain engineering team.
This new transaction would require two parties to sign the transaction in order to update the gateway's owner in the ledger.
- Current owner creates a partially signed transaction with an optional HNT amount that is required to complete the transaction.
- Current owner sends the partially signed transaction to the receiving owner.
- Recipient signs the transaction and pays the DC fee to submit the transaction to the blockchain.
- If the receiving account contains sufficient HNT balance as requested by the current owner and contains enough HNT to burn into DCs for the transaction, the transaction is accepted and the gateway's owner is updated in the ledger.
- The hotspot no longer appears in the sender's hotspot list and now appears in the recipient's hotspot list.
The Helium Wallet CLI currently supports exporting a partially completed transaction as either a QR code or a Base64-encoded text blob. Either of these formats would be useful for competing the transaction.
Not considered. The Helium blockchain team will implement the transaction and implementation via the command line client. Future work on integrating this transfer into the Helium mobile app will be proritized but is out of scope of this HIP.
Besides some additional complexity on ownership changing for a Hotspot across blocks, no additional downside was characterized while developing his proposal.
We believe this approach will enable owners to transfers their Hotspots to other prospective owners. Other alternatives have been considered including a multi-transaction series which may be too complex for implementation and maintainence. Ultimately, we're looking to implement a simple solution that will enable an frequently requested feature.
Other alternatives that were considered including just allowing a Hotspot to be disassociated from an account. There are a few concerns with this approach which included accounting for rewards between this action and a future association to another account. It also increases complexity as the Hotspot would need to have another add_gateway
transaction issued at a later date rather than a single swap transaction as described here.
Another limitation that was considered was that the receiving owner would have to have a Helium wallet before accepting a Hotspot via transfer_gateway_v1
. Although this increases friction of transfers, it was deemed not a significant cost give that in some cases, the receipient would need to pay an amount of HNT as requested by the sender.
We expect that some Helium hotspots will be transfered to new owners and perhaps may move locations to provide more favorable coverage.
The Helium blockchain team will not be explicitly tracking success metrics for this transaction type addition but we expect that coverage will be improved in underserved areas as hotspots become transferrable.