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Cc: Bitcoin Dev <bitcoin-development@lists.sourceforge.net>
Subject: Re: [Bitcoin-development] Squashing redundant tx data in blocks on
the wire
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--e89a8f83a7c98c5a7f04fe8328d9
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
> Most things I've seen working in this space are attempting to minimize
> the data transfered. At least for the miner-interested case the round
> complexity is much more important because a single RTT is enough to
> basically send the whole block on a lot of very relevant paths.
Agreed. Yaron's scheme is magical because it is non-interactive. I send you
a packet of O(expected-delta) and you immediately figure out the delta
without further back and forth communication, each requiring an RTT.
> I know much better is possible (see up-thread where I linked to an old
> proposal to use forward error correction to transfer with low data
> transfer (but not optimal) and negligible probability of needing a
> round-trip, with a tradeoff for more overhead for lower roundtrip
> probability).
FEC schemes are both fairly complex, because the set is constantly
changing, and (if i understand your suggestion correctly) they add
additional metadata overhead (albeit mostly during tx propagation). Set
reconciliation is near optimal.
In any case, I have no horse here (I think changing the client so it's
multithreaded is the best way to go), but Yaron's work is pretty cool and
may be applicable.
- egs
--e89a8f83a7c98c5a7f04fe8328d9
Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
<p dir="ltr"><br>
> Most things I've seen working in this space are attempting to minimize<br>
> the data transfered. At least for the miner-interested case the round<br>
> complexity is much more important because a single RTT is enough to<br>
> basically send the whole block on a lot of very relevant paths.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Agreed. Yaron's scheme is magical because it is non-interactive. I send you a packet of O(expected-delta) and you immediately figure out the delta without further back and forth communication, each requiring an RTT.</p>
<p dir="ltr">> I know much better is possible (see up-thread where I linked to an old<br>
> proposal to use forward error correction to transfer with low data<br>
> transfer (but not optimal) and negligible probability of needing a<br>
> round-trip, with a tradeoff for more overhead for lower roundtrip<br>
> probability).</p>
<p dir="ltr">FEC schemes are both fairly complex, because the set is constantly changing, and (if i understand your suggestion correctly) they add additional metadata overhead (albeit mostly during tx propagation). Set reconciliation is near optimal. </p>
<p dir="ltr">In any case, I have no horse here (I think changing the client so it's multithreaded is the best way to go), but Yaron's work is pretty cool and may be applicable.</p>
<p dir="ltr">- egs</p>
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