Baking rewards as operations Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm...

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Baking rewards as operations



Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?Baking eligibility and start timeHow to calculate projected vs actual rewards for delegators using Tzscan API?What does it cost to make a contract through Tezos?When is baking rewards counted to the staking balance?How do rewards for revelations work?When are Tezos Rewards Unfrozen?How to manage rewards for small delegators?Only 60% of the rewards made by a baker are distributed to its delegators?Are bakers not paying promised rewards?smart contract for automatic baking/endorsement rewards to delegators












1















How do making rewards appear on the chain when they are credited to the baker? Is it a 'transaction' operation? How do I go about identifying them?



Thanks!










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    1















    How do making rewards appear on the chain when they are credited to the baker? Is it a 'transaction' operation? How do I go about identifying them?



    Thanks!










    share|improve this question







    New contributor




    Crypto Mike is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.























      1












      1








      1








      How do making rewards appear on the chain when they are credited to the baker? Is it a 'transaction' operation? How do I go about identifying them?



      Thanks!










      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      Crypto Mike is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      How do making rewards appear on the chain when they are credited to the baker? Is it a 'transaction' operation? How do I go about identifying them?



      Thanks!







      baking rewards






      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      Crypto Mike is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      share|improve this question







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      Crypto Mike is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









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      asked 4 hours ago









      Crypto MikeCrypto Mike

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      New contributor




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      New contributor





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      Check out our Code of Conduct.






















          2 Answers
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          1














          The rewards happen as part of the protocol and it's all on chain. But they are not a "transaction" in the normal sense of the word, as usually a transaction requires some user intervention. But there is fundamental movements of funds from the "freezer" to the delegates. Conceptually, the freezer temporarily holds all the bonds and rewards for baking and endorsing.



          To find this information on chain, we have to look at the very last block of the cycle we'd expect the reward.



          blockNumForRewards = (rewardedCycleNum + 6) * numOfBlocksInCycle



          For example, for cycle 93, the rewards for cycle 93 gets unlocked at the last block of cycle 98, so we need to look at block number (93 + 6) * 4096 = 405,504.



          After we knowing the block number, We can query for the block with our node by getting the hash from a block explorer like tzscan. In this case, BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf is our block hash:



          /chains/main/blocks/BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf


          Obviously there is a lot of information in here, but let's focus on the path that handles the balance changes, specifically metadata > balance_updates. Example:



          {
          "protocol": "PsddFKi32cMJ2qPjf43Qv5GDWLDPZb3T3bF6fLKiF5HtvHNU7aP",
          "chain_id": "NetXdQprcVkpaWU",
          "hash": "BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf",
          "metadata": {
          ...
          "balance_updates": [
          // this is what we care about
          ]
          }
          ...
          }


          This portion of the block is the balance updates that retains to what the protocol needs to apply regardless of the user interventions. In a lot of the blocks, this portion will just include the current block baker with its locked rewards and bonds. In the last block of the cycle, balance_updates also includes all the rewards and bonds unlocks for every baker that participated in cycle 93.



          Anyhow, let's dig into the specifics of one baker to understand further. For illustration, I've filtered out transactions for one particular baker tz1ivoFE...TD.



              "balance_updates": [
          ...
          {
          "kind": "freezer",
          "category": "deposits",
          "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
          "level": 93,
          "change": "-10368000000"
          },
          {
          "kind": "freezer",
          "category": "fees",
          "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
          "level": 93,
          "change": "-9362"
          },
          {
          "kind": "freezer",
          "category": "rewards",
          "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
          "level": 93,
          "change": "-321000000"
          },
          {
          "kind": "contract",
          "contract": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
          "change": "10689009362"
          },
          ...


          Inside of balance_updates array, it will include every "transaction" that needs to be adjusted for all these addresses including the "freezer". Each transaction also gives some clues on what they are for.



          The above is pretty typical what we'll see per baker. There are 3 "freezer" related transactions and one "contract". The "freezer" transaction are different by their category (deposits, fees and rewards). The categories are pretty self explanatory. Just in case you are wonder, deposits and rewards will include both baking and endorsements bonds and rewards. Notice that those freezer operations are negative values and they imply that these balances are subtracted from freezer.



          The "contract" transaction is what changes the balance to the baker in question. This is pretty similar to a user initiated transaction. If we add up the 3 freezer category's balances, they would add up to the change balance for the baker.






          share|improve this answer

































            0














            Currently rewards are done manually and off-chain. You manually (or via a script) need to transfer the rewards to delegators.



            When you transfer the rewards it will create transactions with operation ids which will be on-chain.



            You could write a tool to connect the dots and create your own reporting, or use some of the existing tools (eg: bakerei, tezos-reward-distributor, etc...)






            share|improve this answer
























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              2 Answers
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              2 Answers
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              active

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              active

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              active

              oldest

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              1














              The rewards happen as part of the protocol and it's all on chain. But they are not a "transaction" in the normal sense of the word, as usually a transaction requires some user intervention. But there is fundamental movements of funds from the "freezer" to the delegates. Conceptually, the freezer temporarily holds all the bonds and rewards for baking and endorsing.



              To find this information on chain, we have to look at the very last block of the cycle we'd expect the reward.



              blockNumForRewards = (rewardedCycleNum + 6) * numOfBlocksInCycle



              For example, for cycle 93, the rewards for cycle 93 gets unlocked at the last block of cycle 98, so we need to look at block number (93 + 6) * 4096 = 405,504.



              After we knowing the block number, We can query for the block with our node by getting the hash from a block explorer like tzscan. In this case, BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf is our block hash:



              /chains/main/blocks/BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf


              Obviously there is a lot of information in here, but let's focus on the path that handles the balance changes, specifically metadata > balance_updates. Example:



              {
              "protocol": "PsddFKi32cMJ2qPjf43Qv5GDWLDPZb3T3bF6fLKiF5HtvHNU7aP",
              "chain_id": "NetXdQprcVkpaWU",
              "hash": "BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf",
              "metadata": {
              ...
              "balance_updates": [
              // this is what we care about
              ]
              }
              ...
              }


              This portion of the block is the balance updates that retains to what the protocol needs to apply regardless of the user interventions. In a lot of the blocks, this portion will just include the current block baker with its locked rewards and bonds. In the last block of the cycle, balance_updates also includes all the rewards and bonds unlocks for every baker that participated in cycle 93.



              Anyhow, let's dig into the specifics of one baker to understand further. For illustration, I've filtered out transactions for one particular baker tz1ivoFE...TD.



                  "balance_updates": [
              ...
              {
              "kind": "freezer",
              "category": "deposits",
              "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
              "level": 93,
              "change": "-10368000000"
              },
              {
              "kind": "freezer",
              "category": "fees",
              "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
              "level": 93,
              "change": "-9362"
              },
              {
              "kind": "freezer",
              "category": "rewards",
              "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
              "level": 93,
              "change": "-321000000"
              },
              {
              "kind": "contract",
              "contract": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
              "change": "10689009362"
              },
              ...


              Inside of balance_updates array, it will include every "transaction" that needs to be adjusted for all these addresses including the "freezer". Each transaction also gives some clues on what they are for.



              The above is pretty typical what we'll see per baker. There are 3 "freezer" related transactions and one "contract". The "freezer" transaction are different by their category (deposits, fees and rewards). The categories are pretty self explanatory. Just in case you are wonder, deposits and rewards will include both baking and endorsements bonds and rewards. Notice that those freezer operations are negative values and they imply that these balances are subtracted from freezer.



              The "contract" transaction is what changes the balance to the baker in question. This is pretty similar to a user initiated transaction. If we add up the 3 freezer category's balances, they would add up to the change balance for the baker.






              share|improve this answer






























                1














                The rewards happen as part of the protocol and it's all on chain. But they are not a "transaction" in the normal sense of the word, as usually a transaction requires some user intervention. But there is fundamental movements of funds from the "freezer" to the delegates. Conceptually, the freezer temporarily holds all the bonds and rewards for baking and endorsing.



                To find this information on chain, we have to look at the very last block of the cycle we'd expect the reward.



                blockNumForRewards = (rewardedCycleNum + 6) * numOfBlocksInCycle



                For example, for cycle 93, the rewards for cycle 93 gets unlocked at the last block of cycle 98, so we need to look at block number (93 + 6) * 4096 = 405,504.



                After we knowing the block number, We can query for the block with our node by getting the hash from a block explorer like tzscan. In this case, BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf is our block hash:



                /chains/main/blocks/BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf


                Obviously there is a lot of information in here, but let's focus on the path that handles the balance changes, specifically metadata > balance_updates. Example:



                {
                "protocol": "PsddFKi32cMJ2qPjf43Qv5GDWLDPZb3T3bF6fLKiF5HtvHNU7aP",
                "chain_id": "NetXdQprcVkpaWU",
                "hash": "BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf",
                "metadata": {
                ...
                "balance_updates": [
                // this is what we care about
                ]
                }
                ...
                }


                This portion of the block is the balance updates that retains to what the protocol needs to apply regardless of the user interventions. In a lot of the blocks, this portion will just include the current block baker with its locked rewards and bonds. In the last block of the cycle, balance_updates also includes all the rewards and bonds unlocks for every baker that participated in cycle 93.



                Anyhow, let's dig into the specifics of one baker to understand further. For illustration, I've filtered out transactions for one particular baker tz1ivoFE...TD.



                    "balance_updates": [
                ...
                {
                "kind": "freezer",
                "category": "deposits",
                "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
                "level": 93,
                "change": "-10368000000"
                },
                {
                "kind": "freezer",
                "category": "fees",
                "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
                "level": 93,
                "change": "-9362"
                },
                {
                "kind": "freezer",
                "category": "rewards",
                "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
                "level": 93,
                "change": "-321000000"
                },
                {
                "kind": "contract",
                "contract": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
                "change": "10689009362"
                },
                ...


                Inside of balance_updates array, it will include every "transaction" that needs to be adjusted for all these addresses including the "freezer". Each transaction also gives some clues on what they are for.



                The above is pretty typical what we'll see per baker. There are 3 "freezer" related transactions and one "contract". The "freezer" transaction are different by their category (deposits, fees and rewards). The categories are pretty self explanatory. Just in case you are wonder, deposits and rewards will include both baking and endorsements bonds and rewards. Notice that those freezer operations are negative values and they imply that these balances are subtracted from freezer.



                The "contract" transaction is what changes the balance to the baker in question. This is pretty similar to a user initiated transaction. If we add up the 3 freezer category's balances, they would add up to the change balance for the baker.






                share|improve this answer




























                  1












                  1








                  1







                  The rewards happen as part of the protocol and it's all on chain. But they are not a "transaction" in the normal sense of the word, as usually a transaction requires some user intervention. But there is fundamental movements of funds from the "freezer" to the delegates. Conceptually, the freezer temporarily holds all the bonds and rewards for baking and endorsing.



                  To find this information on chain, we have to look at the very last block of the cycle we'd expect the reward.



                  blockNumForRewards = (rewardedCycleNum + 6) * numOfBlocksInCycle



                  For example, for cycle 93, the rewards for cycle 93 gets unlocked at the last block of cycle 98, so we need to look at block number (93 + 6) * 4096 = 405,504.



                  After we knowing the block number, We can query for the block with our node by getting the hash from a block explorer like tzscan. In this case, BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf is our block hash:



                  /chains/main/blocks/BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf


                  Obviously there is a lot of information in here, but let's focus on the path that handles the balance changes, specifically metadata > balance_updates. Example:



                  {
                  "protocol": "PsddFKi32cMJ2qPjf43Qv5GDWLDPZb3T3bF6fLKiF5HtvHNU7aP",
                  "chain_id": "NetXdQprcVkpaWU",
                  "hash": "BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf",
                  "metadata": {
                  ...
                  "balance_updates": [
                  // this is what we care about
                  ]
                  }
                  ...
                  }


                  This portion of the block is the balance updates that retains to what the protocol needs to apply regardless of the user interventions. In a lot of the blocks, this portion will just include the current block baker with its locked rewards and bonds. In the last block of the cycle, balance_updates also includes all the rewards and bonds unlocks for every baker that participated in cycle 93.



                  Anyhow, let's dig into the specifics of one baker to understand further. For illustration, I've filtered out transactions for one particular baker tz1ivoFE...TD.



                      "balance_updates": [
                  ...
                  {
                  "kind": "freezer",
                  "category": "deposits",
                  "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
                  "level": 93,
                  "change": "-10368000000"
                  },
                  {
                  "kind": "freezer",
                  "category": "fees",
                  "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
                  "level": 93,
                  "change": "-9362"
                  },
                  {
                  "kind": "freezer",
                  "category": "rewards",
                  "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
                  "level": 93,
                  "change": "-321000000"
                  },
                  {
                  "kind": "contract",
                  "contract": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
                  "change": "10689009362"
                  },
                  ...


                  Inside of balance_updates array, it will include every "transaction" that needs to be adjusted for all these addresses including the "freezer". Each transaction also gives some clues on what they are for.



                  The above is pretty typical what we'll see per baker. There are 3 "freezer" related transactions and one "contract". The "freezer" transaction are different by their category (deposits, fees and rewards). The categories are pretty self explanatory. Just in case you are wonder, deposits and rewards will include both baking and endorsements bonds and rewards. Notice that those freezer operations are negative values and they imply that these balances are subtracted from freezer.



                  The "contract" transaction is what changes the balance to the baker in question. This is pretty similar to a user initiated transaction. If we add up the 3 freezer category's balances, they would add up to the change balance for the baker.






                  share|improve this answer















                  The rewards happen as part of the protocol and it's all on chain. But they are not a "transaction" in the normal sense of the word, as usually a transaction requires some user intervention. But there is fundamental movements of funds from the "freezer" to the delegates. Conceptually, the freezer temporarily holds all the bonds and rewards for baking and endorsing.



                  To find this information on chain, we have to look at the very last block of the cycle we'd expect the reward.



                  blockNumForRewards = (rewardedCycleNum + 6) * numOfBlocksInCycle



                  For example, for cycle 93, the rewards for cycle 93 gets unlocked at the last block of cycle 98, so we need to look at block number (93 + 6) * 4096 = 405,504.



                  After we knowing the block number, We can query for the block with our node by getting the hash from a block explorer like tzscan. In this case, BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf is our block hash:



                  /chains/main/blocks/BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf


                  Obviously there is a lot of information in here, but let's focus on the path that handles the balance changes, specifically metadata > balance_updates. Example:



                  {
                  "protocol": "PsddFKi32cMJ2qPjf43Qv5GDWLDPZb3T3bF6fLKiF5HtvHNU7aP",
                  "chain_id": "NetXdQprcVkpaWU",
                  "hash": "BLdha4dMeWYxYkuP46eCgYwsgBYiKPNFLvgiu5NqgdxPLhkgzUf",
                  "metadata": {
                  ...
                  "balance_updates": [
                  // this is what we care about
                  ]
                  }
                  ...
                  }


                  This portion of the block is the balance updates that retains to what the protocol needs to apply regardless of the user interventions. In a lot of the blocks, this portion will just include the current block baker with its locked rewards and bonds. In the last block of the cycle, balance_updates also includes all the rewards and bonds unlocks for every baker that participated in cycle 93.



                  Anyhow, let's dig into the specifics of one baker to understand further. For illustration, I've filtered out transactions for one particular baker tz1ivoFE...TD.



                      "balance_updates": [
                  ...
                  {
                  "kind": "freezer",
                  "category": "deposits",
                  "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
                  "level": 93,
                  "change": "-10368000000"
                  },
                  {
                  "kind": "freezer",
                  "category": "fees",
                  "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
                  "level": 93,
                  "change": "-9362"
                  },
                  {
                  "kind": "freezer",
                  "category": "rewards",
                  "delegate": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
                  "level": 93,
                  "change": "-321000000"
                  },
                  {
                  "kind": "contract",
                  "contract": "tz1ivoFEvbfbUNav5FwLvmxzMGcNXWxY9qTD",
                  "change": "10689009362"
                  },
                  ...


                  Inside of balance_updates array, it will include every "transaction" that needs to be adjusted for all these addresses including the "freezer". Each transaction also gives some clues on what they are for.



                  The above is pretty typical what we'll see per baker. There are 3 "freezer" related transactions and one "contract". The "freezer" transaction are different by their category (deposits, fees and rewards). The categories are pretty self explanatory. Just in case you are wonder, deposits and rewards will include both baking and endorsements bonds and rewards. Notice that those freezer operations are negative values and they imply that these balances are subtracted from freezer.



                  The "contract" transaction is what changes the balance to the baker in question. This is pretty similar to a user initiated transaction. If we add up the 3 freezer category's balances, they would add up to the change balance for the baker.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited 1 hour ago

























                  answered 2 hours ago









                  FrankFrank

                  1,297418




                  1,297418























                      0














                      Currently rewards are done manually and off-chain. You manually (or via a script) need to transfer the rewards to delegators.



                      When you transfer the rewards it will create transactions with operation ids which will be on-chain.



                      You could write a tool to connect the dots and create your own reporting, or use some of the existing tools (eg: bakerei, tezos-reward-distributor, etc...)






                      share|improve this answer




























                        0














                        Currently rewards are done manually and off-chain. You manually (or via a script) need to transfer the rewards to delegators.



                        When you transfer the rewards it will create transactions with operation ids which will be on-chain.



                        You could write a tool to connect the dots and create your own reporting, or use some of the existing tools (eg: bakerei, tezos-reward-distributor, etc...)






                        share|improve this answer


























                          0












                          0








                          0







                          Currently rewards are done manually and off-chain. You manually (or via a script) need to transfer the rewards to delegators.



                          When you transfer the rewards it will create transactions with operation ids which will be on-chain.



                          You could write a tool to connect the dots and create your own reporting, or use some of the existing tools (eg: bakerei, tezos-reward-distributor, etc...)






                          share|improve this answer













                          Currently rewards are done manually and off-chain. You manually (or via a script) need to transfer the rewards to delegators.



                          When you transfer the rewards it will create transactions with operation ids which will be on-chain.



                          You could write a tool to connect the dots and create your own reporting, or use some of the existing tools (eg: bakerei, tezos-reward-distributor, etc...)







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered 3 hours ago









                          lostdorjelostdorje

                          4659




                          4659






















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