Reaver GPUReaver GPU
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Introduction

Reaver GPU is a decentralized GPU compute network on Solana. Anyone with idle hardware can host a node and earn rewards; anyone who needs compute can rent it by the second, settled trustlessly on-chain.

What is Reaver GPU

Reaver GPU turns scattered, underused GPUs into a single elastic compute market. Instead of routing every workload through a handful of centralized clouds, Reaver GPU matches renters directly with independent node operators across the world, then verifies and settles the exchange on the Solana L1.

The result is a permissionless marketplace where pricing is set by supply and demand rather than by a single vendor, and where payment for compute is enforced by smart contracts rather than by invoices.

Host a node

Connect a GPU, pass the benchmark, and start earning per-second rewards for completed work.

Rent compute

Submit a containerized workload, pick a GPU class, and pay only for the seconds you use.

Stake & secure

Stake the network token to back honest nodes and share in protocol fees.

Settle on-chain

Every job is metered, signed, and settled in a single Solana transaction.

Why decentralized GPU

Centralized GPU clouds are expensive, capacity-constrained, and opaque. Meanwhile, gaming rigs, mining farms, and idle datacenter racks sit unused for most of the day. Reaver GPU closes that gap:

  • Lower cost — operators with sunk-cost hardware undercut cloud list prices, often by 50–80%.
  • Open supply — capacity grows as operators join, not when a single provider expands a region.
  • Verifiable settlement — usage is metered and paid in-protocol, so neither side trusts the other blindly.
  • Censorship resistance — no central party can revoke access to a workload or a payout.

How it works

At a high level, a job moves through four stages:

  1. Submit — a renter publishes a workload spec (image, GPU class, duration cap) and escrows funds.
  2. Schedule — the scheduler matches the job to an eligible node based on hardware, region, and reputation.
  3. Execute — the node runs the container in an isolated environment and streams signed usage receipts.
  4. Settle — at completion, escrow releases to the operator minus protocol fees, all on-chain.
New here? Jump to the Quickstart to connect a wallet and run your first GPU job in a few minutes.

Core concepts

TermMeaning
NodeA host machine offering one or more GPUs to the network.
RenterA user submitting compute workloads and paying for execution.
SchedulerThe off-chain matching layer that assigns jobs to nodes.
ReceiptA signed, timestamped record of metered GPU-seconds.
SettlementThe on-chain release of escrowed funds against verified receipts.

Next steps

Pick the path that matches your goal: