Friday, June 12, 2026

New validator performance analysis tool from ethPandaOps

Neon-lit validator operator views historical performance on Dora explorer dashboard with epoch timelines and latency graphs.

Ethereum infrastructure group ethPandaOps added a withdrawal-address validator dashboard to Dora through Pull Request #692, which was opened on May 11, 2026, and merged into the ethpandaops/dora master branch on May 19, 2026. The update gives Dora a new validator observability view tied to withdrawal addresses or withdrawal credentials, rather than a broad all-purpose staking analytics suite.

The feature was also included in Dora release v1.22.7, published on May 19, 2026, at 19:11 on GitHub. The release notes describe Dora as adding “a new withdrawal validator dashboard” with lookup by withdrawal address or credentials, validator status, balances and queue breakdown.

New Dashboard Focuses on Validator Visibility

The confirmed feature set is specific. According to the merged PR, the dashboard shows validator counts, active, online and offline status, pending queue breakdown, balances and validator rows, while also adding withdrawal-address filtering support for validator list, activity and offline views. That makes the new page a targeted monitoring layer for grouped validators, not a complete diagnostic replacement for client logs, beacon-node telemetry or external alerting.

The Lab by ethPandaOps also presents a validator report interface for Ethereum validator performance, including attestation correctness, sync committee participation and balance history. Those are the metrics visible in the public-facing Lab description, while claims around latency diagnosis, APR optimization or infrastructure tuning remain expected operator use cases rather than confirmed measured outcomes from the release itself.

Operator Benefits Remain Use-Case Dependent

For node operators, the practical benefit is improved visibility over validator groups associated with the same withdrawal address or credentials. The dashboard can help surface status, balance and queue patterns more efficiently, but the release does not claim to guarantee better rewards, lower downtime or improved validator performance after deployment.

The update fits ethPandaOps’ broader public-infrastructure mandate: the group describes its tooling as open-source Ethereum infrastructure intended to improve reliability, performance and visibility for node operators and developers. In this case, Dora’s new validator dashboard adds another layer of observability inside the explorer stack, while operators still need separate monitoring, alerting and client-level analysis to manage production validator infrastructure.

Scroll to Top
Chain Report
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.