Polygon
هل أنت مستعد لاستدعاء هذا في الإنتاج؟
الخطة المجانية تغطي المشاريع الشخصية. الدفع حسب الاستخدام يتوسع دون بطاقة.
Polygon
الخطة المجانية تغطي المشاريع الشخصية. الدفع حسب الاستخدام يتوسع دون بطاقة.
Polygon PoS is a high-throughput chain — a Bor block every ~2 seconds adds up to tens of thousands of blocks a day and a state and history that grow fast — so how you sync a node determines whether it stays current, how much disk it needs, and which queries it can answer. A node running the wrong strategy either falls behind the chain head or cannot serve the historical data your application depends on. Note that Polygon runs two components: Heimdall (the validator/checkpoint layer) and Bor (the EVM block producer), and a full node syncs both. This guide compares the available sync methods so a developer or node operator can decide which one fits their workload on chain 137 — balancing sync time, storage, and the depth of state and history they need — or, if running infrastructure is not worth it, lean on the managed endpoint at https://polygon.therpc.io/YOUR_API_KEY instead.
eth_call at old blocks, debug_traceTransaction/trace work, deep analytics, and indexers reconstructing past state; it costs substantially more disk than a pruned node, which is why managed archive RPC is often the better value.eth_syncing (the checkSyncStatus example) to compute currentBlock versus highestBlock, and surface that percentage plus blocks-behind-head on an operations dashboard. Because Polygon advances every ~2s, alert when your node's head stops keeping pace, not just when initial sync finishes.currentBlock keeps advancing. A node that reconnects but stops progressing is a stall to page on.https://polygon.therpc.io/YOUR_API_KEY endpoint, so reads continue while one node is resyncing, pruning, or stuck on a minority fork. A fallback is what keeps your application live during single-node maintenance on chain 137.