![]() ![]() You can click on some fee level in the legend to hide all fee levels below that level. Similarly, in the fee chart, the height reflects the total amount of fee the pending transactions pay. If a stripe on the weight chart is much bigger than on the count chart, the transactions in this stripe are larger more computation demanding than the average. In the weight chart the height of the graph reflects the total transaction size gas limit instead of the number of transactions. The vertical axis of the chart can be switched between count, fee, and weight. The horizontal axis is time and you can choose the range from the last 2h to all. If a colored stripe persists over several hours without getting smaller, this means that transactions paying this amount of fee are not confirmed during this time, because there are higher paying transactions that take precedence. Since miners prefer high fee transactions, a new block usually only removes the top-most 1 MB worth of transactons from the queue. Higher fee transactions are stacked on top of it. The lowest colored stripe is for transactions that pay the lowest fee. The data is separated into different fee levels given in satoshi per bytes corresponding to the gas price. The mempool is also cleared when I reboot my node. Note that in decentralized cryptocurrencies there is no global transaction mempool every node keeps its own set of unconfirmed transactions that it has seen. The data is generated from my full node and is updated every minute. The transactions are colored by the amount of fee they pay per virtual byte gas price they pay. It gives a real-time view and shows how the mempool evolves over the time. This page displays the number, fee, or weight of the unconfirmed transactions, also known as the transactions in the mempool (the transactions that haven't been written to the block-chain yet and kept in the volatile memory). ![]() May 16: I had some server issues and lost all transactions when restarting the node. ![]()
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