RandomX is a proof-of-work (PoW) algorithm that is optimized for general-purpose CPUs. RandomX uses random code execution (hence the name) together with several memory-hard techniques to achieve the following goals:
- Prevent the development of a single-chip ASIC
- Minimize the efficiency advantage of specialized hardware compared to a general-purpose CPU
RandomX behaves like a keyed hashing function: it accepts a key K
and arbitrary input H
and produces a 256-bit result R
. Under the hood, RandomX utilizes a virtual machine that executes programs in a special instruction set that consists of a mix of integer math, floating point math and branches. These programs can be translated into the CPU's native machine code on the fly. Example of a RandomX program translated into x86-64 assembly is program.asm. A portable interpreter mode is also provided.
RandomX can operate in two main modes with different memory requirements:
- Fast mode - requires 2080 MiB of shared memory.
- Light mode - requires only 256 MiB of shared memory, but runs significantly slower
Full specification available in specs.md.
Design notes available in design.md.
RandomX is written in C++11 and builds a static library with a C API provided by header file randomx.h. Minimal API usage example is provided in api-example1.c. The reference code includes a benchmark
executable for testing.
Build dependencies: make
and gcc
(minimum version 4.8, but version 7+ is recommended).
Build using the provided makefile.
Build dependencies: Visual Studio 2017.
A solution file is provided.
Precompiled benchmark
binaries are available on the Releases page.
RandomX was primarily designed as a PoW algorithm for Monero. The recommended usage is following:
- The key
K
is selected to be the hash of a block in the blockchain - this block is called the 'key block'. For optimal mining and verification performance, the key should change every 2048 blocks (~2.8 days) and there should be a delay of 64 blocks (~2 hours) between the key block and the change of the keyK
. This can be achieved by changing the key whenblockHeight % 2048 == 64
and selecting key block such thatkeyBlockHeight % 2048 == 0
. - The input
H
is the standard hashing blob.
If you wish to use RandomX as a PoW algorithm for your cryptocurrency, we strongly recommend not using the default parameters and change at least the following:
- Size of the Dataset (
RANDOMX_DATASET_BASE_SIZE
andRANDOMX_DATASET_EXTRA_SIZE
). - Scratchpad size (
RANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L3
,RANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L2
andRANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L1
). - Instruction frequencies (parameters starting with
RANDOMX_FREQ_
).
Preliminary performance of selected CPUs using the optimal number of threads (T) and large pages (if possible), in hashes per second (H/s):
CPU | RAM | OS | AES | Fast mode | Light mode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AMD Ryzen 7 1700 | 16 GB DDR4 | Ubuntu 16.04 | hardware | 4090 H/s (8T) | 620 H/s (16T) |
Intel Core i7-8550U | 16 GB DDR4 | Windows 10 | hardware | 1700 H/s (4T) | 350 H/s (8T) |
Intel Core i3-3220 | 2 GB DDR3 | Ubuntu 16.04 | software | - | 145 H/s (4T) |
Raspberry Pi 3 | 1 GB DDR2 | Ubuntu 16.04 | software | - | 2.0 H/s (4T) † |
† Using the interpreter mode. Compiled mode is expected to increase performance by a factor of 10.
SChernykh has developed a CUDA miner for NVIDIA GPUs. Benchmarks are listed here.
Note that GPUs are at a disadvantage when running RandomX since the algorithm was designed to be efficient on CPUs.
Efficient mining requires more than 2 GiB of memory, which is difficult to hide in an infected computer and disqualifies many low-end machines such as IoT devices. Web mining is nearly impossible due to the large memory requirement and low performance in interpreted mode.
RandomX uses only operations that are guaranteed to give correctly rounded results by the IEEE 754 standard: addition, subtraction, multiplication, division and square root. Special care is taken to avoid corner cases such as NaN values or denormals.
The reference implementation has been validated on the following platforms:
- x86+SSE2 (32-bit, little-endian)
- x86-64 (64-bit, little-endian)
- ARMv7+NEON (32-bit, little-endian)
- ARMv8 (64-bit, little-endian)
- PPC64 (64-bit, big-endian)
- SChernykh - contributed significantly to the design of RandomX
- hyc - original idea of using random code execution for PoW
- nioroso-x3 - provided access to PowerPC for testing purposes
RandomX uses some source code from the following 3rd party repositories:
- Argon2d, Blake2b hashing functions: https://github.com/P-H-C/phc-winner-argon2
The author of RandomX declares no competing financial interest in RandomX adoption, other than being a holder or Monero. The development of RandomX was funded from the author's own pocket with only the help listed above.
If you'd like to use RandomX, please consider donating to help cover the development cost of the algorithm.
Author's XMR address:
845xHUh5GvfHwc2R8DVJCE7BT2sd4YEcmjG8GNSdmeNsP5DTEjXd1CNgxTcjHjiFuthRHAoVEJjM7GyKzQKLJtbd56xbh7V