John Dillon [ARCHIVE] on Nostr: 📅 Original date posted:2013-07-28 📝 Original message:-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED ...
📅 Original date posted:2013-07-28
📝 Original message:-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA256
On Wed, Jul 24, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Tier Nolan <tier.nolan at gmail.com> wrote:
> Distributing headers with 1/64 of the standard POW means that a header would
> be broadcast approximately once every 9 seconds (assuming a 10 minute block
> time). This was picked because sending 80 byte headers every 9 seconds
> shouldn't represent much load on the network.
As Peter said, "much" should be quantified.
Remember that there is a statistical distribution here, what is the probability
of how many seconds per headers?
> This creates an incentive for miners to take headers into account. If all
> the headers were worth less than a full block, then a fork which was losing
> would suddenly be winning if a block is found. A fork will only become the
> main chain due to a new block, if it is within 16 mini-confirms.
Sounds like you are changing economics and requiring miners to have even better
network connections. This is not a thing to do lightly and it probably a bad
idea.
> Second, if a header builds on a header that is in the header tree, then it
> is broadcast, even if it doesn't meet full POW (only 1/64 required). This
> gives information on which fork is getting the most power.
>
> It gives information about potential "consensus loss" forks, where a
> significant number of miners are following an alternative chain.
>
> In fact, this is probably worth doing as an initial step.
I understand Pieter Wuille is working on letting Bitcoin propagate and make use
of pure block headers, a step towards SPV and partial UTXO mode.
Orphan measurement would be very useful for a lot of reasons, how about you
think about that first? It wouldn't have the potential data rate issues either
and should be a very simple change. Just set some threshold relative to the
height of the best block where you will not further propagate and orphan
block(header) and prior to that limit do so freely. I believe the change would
be 100% compatible with the P2P protocol as it is based on inventories.
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📝 Original message:-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
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On Wed, Jul 24, 2013 at 11:55 AM, Tier Nolan <tier.nolan at gmail.com> wrote:
> Distributing headers with 1/64 of the standard POW means that a header would
> be broadcast approximately once every 9 seconds (assuming a 10 minute block
> time). This was picked because sending 80 byte headers every 9 seconds
> shouldn't represent much load on the network.
As Peter said, "much" should be quantified.
Remember that there is a statistical distribution here, what is the probability
of how many seconds per headers?
> This creates an incentive for miners to take headers into account. If all
> the headers were worth less than a full block, then a fork which was losing
> would suddenly be winning if a block is found. A fork will only become the
> main chain due to a new block, if it is within 16 mini-confirms.
Sounds like you are changing economics and requiring miners to have even better
network connections. This is not a thing to do lightly and it probably a bad
idea.
> Second, if a header builds on a header that is in the header tree, then it
> is broadcast, even if it doesn't meet full POW (only 1/64 required). This
> gives information on which fork is getting the most power.
>
> It gives information about potential "consensus loss" forks, where a
> significant number of miners are following an alternative chain.
>
> In fact, this is probably worth doing as an initial step.
I understand Pieter Wuille is working on letting Bitcoin propagate and make use
of pure block headers, a step towards SPV and partial UTXO mode.
Orphan measurement would be very useful for a lot of reasons, how about you
think about that first? It wouldn't have the potential data rate issues either
and should be a very simple change. Just set some threshold relative to the
height of the best block where you will not further propagate and orphan
block(header) and prior to that limit do so freely. I believe the change would
be 100% compatible with the P2P protocol as it is based on inventories.
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