On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 4:57 AM, Wladimir <laa...@gmail.com> wrote: > Just wondering: Would there be a use for a [static] node that, say, always > serves only the first 100000 blocks? Or, even, a static range like block > 100000 - 200000?
The last time we discussed this sipa collected data based on how often blocks were feteched as a function of their depth and there was a huge increase for recent blocks that didn't really level out until 2000 blocks or so— presumably its not uncommon for nodes to be offline for a week or two at a time. But sure I could see a fixed range as also being a useful contribution though I'm struggling to figure out what set of constraints would leave a node without following the consensus? Obviously it has bandwidth if you're expecting to contribute much in serving those historic blocks... and verifying is reasonably cpu cheap with fast ecdsa code. Maybe it has a lot of read only storage? I think it should be possible to express and use such a thing in the protocol even if I'm currently unsure as to why you wouldn't do 100000 - 200000 _plus_ the most recent 144 that you were already keeping around for reorgs. In terms of peer selection, if the blocks you need aren't covered by the nodes you're currently connected to I think you'd prefer to seek node nodes which have the least rare-ness in the ranges they offer. E.g. if you're looking for a block 50 from the tip, you're should probably not prefer to fetch it from someone with blocks 100000-150000 if its one of only 100 nodes that has that range. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Put Bad Developers to Shame Dominate Development with Jenkins Continuous Integration Continuously Automate Build, Test & Deployment Start a new project now. Try Jenkins in the cloud. http://p.sf.net/sfu/13600_Cloudbees _______________________________________________ Bitcoin-development mailing list Bitcoin-development@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bitcoin-development