Mike Hearn [ARCHIVE] on Nostr: 📅 Original date posted:2011-08-03 🗒️ Summary of this message: Many bad nodes ...
📅 Original date posted:2011-08-03
🗒️ Summary of this message: Many bad nodes are appearing in the DNS seeds, slowing down peer bringup for Android apps. A custom DNS server may help resolve the issue.
📝 Original message: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.
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🗒️ Summary of this message: Many bad nodes are appearing in the DNS seeds, slowing down peer bringup for Android apps. A custom DNS server may help resolve the issue.
📝 Original message: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.
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