What is Nostr?
Douglas Huff [ARCHIVE] /
npub1xpr…6eq0
2023-06-07 02:11:00
in reply to nevent1q…m9v2

Douglas Huff [ARCHIVE] on Nostr: 📅 Original date posted:2011-08-03 🗒️ Summary of this message: The Bitcoin ...

📅 Original date posted:2011-08-03
🗒️ Summary of this message: The Bitcoin network is experiencing connectivity issues due to a lack of connectable slots. Sorting nodes by version could help resolve the problem.
📝 Original message:There's a bigger problem here honestly. The p2p network is just starved for
connectable slots.

You can start up a bitcoind, on a host with sufficient connectivity, with
-maxconnections=512 and they will fill in <15 minutes.

As to why sort by version: <=3.23 has problems serving the blocks from the
last 2 months. It can take days to weeks to get the whole chain if you're
connecting to those nodes.

--
Douglas Huff
On Aug 3, 2011 9:18 AM, "Rick Wesson" <rick at support-intelligence.com> wrote:
> Starting from bitcoinj, I have plenty of ways to publish DNS. Why sort
them
> by version? Ordering from highest to lowest?
>
> how about publishing addresses under version.example.com if you version
has
> a perfrence?
>
> -rick
>
>
> On Wed, Aug 3, 2011 at 7:10 AM, Mike Hearn <mike at plan99.net> wrote:
>
>> There's no project currently :-)
>>
>> Starting from Matts code is probably the way to go. It's written in PHP.
>> Alternatively, you could write a Java app for it, as there are drop-in
DNS
>> serving libraries you could link with BitCoinJ+sqlite. It probably
wouldn't
>> be that hard. You'd want to sort nodes by version, how long they've been
>> observed to exist, the last polling time, etc.
>>
>> On Wed, Aug 3, 2011 at 4:00 PM, Rick Wesson <
rick at support-intelligence.com
>> > wrote:
>>
>>> Mike,
>>>
>>> I think I can contribute to your DNS seeding project. Could you help
>>> define long-lived peers?
>>>
>>> -rick
>>>
>>>
>>> On Wed, Aug 3, 2011 at 3:04 AM, Mike Hearn <mike at plan99.net> wrote:
>>>
>>>> This is expected to happen from time to time of course as it's
inherently
>>>> racy, but there are a *lot* of bad nodes appearing in the DNS seeds.
>>>>
>>>> $ nmap -oG /tmp/x -p 8333 `dig +short bitseed.bitcoin.org.uk
>>>> dnsseed.bluematt.me bitseed.xf2.org`
>>>> ...
>>>> Nmap done: 48 IP addresses (25 hosts up) scanned in 9.80 seconds
>>>>
>>>> $ grep -c 'closed' /tmp/x
>>>> 6
>>>>
>>>> So of 48 IPs returned only 19 are actually usable. This is slowing down
>>>> peer bringup for the Android apps, which don't currently save the
addresses
>>>> of last-used peers (yes, I know we should fix this).
>>>>
>>>> I was talking to a friend a few days ago about Bitcoin, he seemed
>>>> interested. I'm hoping he might take on DNS seeding as a project. A
custom
>>>> DNS server that watches the network to find long-lived peers that run
the
>>>> latest version would be helpful for resolving this kind of thing.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>>> BlackBerry&reg; DevCon Americas, Oct. 18-20, San Francisco, CA
>>>> The must-attend event for mobile developers. Connect with experts.
>>>> Get tools for creating Super Apps. See the latest technologies.
>>>> Sessions, hands-on labs, demos & much more. Register early & save!
>>>> http://p.sf.net/sfu/rim-blackberry-1
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> Bitcoin-development mailing list
>>>> Bitcoin-development at lists.sourceforge.net
>>>> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bitcoin-development
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20110803/520f6d84/attachment.html>;
Author Public Key
npub1xpryrka5nmn2vq9uum4qfjcvkfdne95l3ug4sxhdkcnndu4uu6eqrc6eq0