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<epergny>
I read the doc https://github.com/multiformats/multiaddr but don't know how to change this: "Addresses": { "API": "/ip4/127.0.0.1/tcp/5001", "Announce": [],
<epergny>
to 192.168.0.0/16
<epergny>
can the "API" be changed to an array by adding [... ], then can I do "/ip4/192.168.0.0/16/tcp/5001" ? Looks weird to me
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<ToxicFrog>
epergny: I think you've fundamentally misunderstood what that option does
<ToxicFrog>
It's not configuring which addresses it accepts connections from; it's configuring which addresses it listens for connections to
<ToxicFrog>
127.0.0.1 means it listens for connections to localhost, which means other machines can't connect to it
<ToxicFrog>
0.0.0.0 means it listens to for connections to any network interface on the machine
<ToxicFrog>
But there's no way to say "bind to all interfaces but only accept connections from 192.168.*.*" -- that's the firewall's job.
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<ToxicFrog>
victorbjelkholm: intraswarm links are not the same as API calls, as far as I know
<und0ck3d>
hello everyone!
<ToxicFrog>
'morning
<und0ck3d>
I've been playing a lot with IPFS lately and been trying some things. One of the use cases I'm more interested atm is for website hosting. I've added a static site to IPFS, published and pinned it on both my laptop and server and added the "dnslink=/ipns/..." to my domain name in "_dnslink..." and "recursive" sub-domains. The PeerID I used on the TXT record is the one from the server which I though would give better results, however I'm noticing the websi
<und0ck3d>
to load sometimes and I'm not sure why as, for example, the IPFS website itself loads pretty fast...
<und0ck3d>
I've tried the ipfs.io gateway but now I'm using my own gateway as I thought it could improve the results too...
<und0ck3d>
Can anyone give some hints on where to improve or why this is hapenning?
<und0ck3d>
happening*
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<Voker57>
und0ck3d: IPNS resolving is not very reliable currently
<Voker57>
ipfs.io dnslinks directly to /ipfs/
<und0ck3d>
yeah, I was thinking about that because I've tried to use the content multihash instead of the peerID on dnslink=/ipfs/... and it showed much more faster results. maybe that's the (more boring) solution while IPNS is still not very reliable
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<Voker57>
yep
<und0ck3d>
ok thank you very much Voker57!
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<clever>
is there a way to create an IPFS directory object, that points to an existing IPFS file, without having to have that file on-disk as a normal non-ipfs file?
<lgierth>
clever: check out `ipfs object patch`
<lgierth>
it lets you add links to an existing object
<clever>
ah, that sounds like what i want
<Voker57>
also you can use `ipfs files` for convenient directory editing
<lgierth>
ah yes that too - that's actually the preferred way
<lgierth>
thank you
<clever>
i'm thinking i need to `ipfs add` an empty directory, then use one of the above to add a pre-existing file to it?
<lgierth>
you can do `ipfs object new unixfs-dir` too to get an empty dir
<lgierth>
or `ipfs files mkdir`
<clever>
nice
<clever>
hmmm, `ipfs files cp` needs a path, not an object hash
<lgierth>
yeah, `ipfs files` operates on a directory tree, and whenever something in there changes, the changed hash is bubbled up to /
<Voker57>
you can use /ipfs/Qm... as path
<clever>
is that / related to ipns any?
<clever>
ah, nice
<lgierth>
ipfs files stat / gives you info about that dir tree
<lgierth>
you can take the hash an give it to `ipfs name publish`
<clever>
not actually looking to publish things publicly
<clever>
just confirming that ipfs files is seperate from ipns
<lgierth>
yeah it's separate
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<clever>
looks like everything is good now
<lgierth>
coolio
<clever>
just have to wait for 2 of my systems to pin a 5gig file and it should be perfect
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<clever>
hmmm, and is there any way to query how many nodes have a given object?
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<lgierth>
not really - you can never be sure that there isn't even more nodes out there that have it :) `ipfs dht findprovs <hash>` gives you a minimum number though
<clever>
yeah, they could be offline
<clever>
yeah, it listed 3 id's, and that shows up in `ipfs id` on one node
<lgierth>
note that all the DHT stuff is sloppy and probabilistic
<lgierth>
so it's not always 100% accurate, but generally converges pretty okay
<lgierth>
(just because distributed networks are messy)
<clever>
yeah
<und0ck3d>
is there any link around about using IPFS for git hosting? I remember I've read something from whyrusleeping I think
<lgierth>
igis.io
<lgierth>
it's very early days
<epergny>
ToxicFrog: "If you want it to accept connections from other machines as well, change it to /ip4/0.0.0.0/tcp/5001" so...
<lgierth>
better don't open up 5001 to the public
<epergny>
there are only two option for /x.x.x.x/ part: 0.0.0.0 or 127.0.0.1
<lgierth>
it gives people full control over your node
<clever>
hmmm, is there any way to have a local alias for nodes i control, so findprov gives usable names?
<epergny>
lgierth: ok gotcha
<epergny>
oh well SSH port forwarding is it going to be I guess : )
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<ToxicFrog>
epergny: no, the options are any address associated with a network interface on your machine
<ToxicFrog>
Plus 0.0.0.0 for "all interfaces"
<ToxicFrog>
Basically, this lets you pick which network card(s) the daemon will listen for connections on.
<epergny>
oh gotcha
<epergny>
ToxicFrog: I'm using a SSH tunnel as you suggested
<clever>
any command to show the total bandwidth usage by ipfs?, so i can see how fast this pin cmd is working?
<ToxicFrog>
(if you've done network programming, this is the addr.sin_addr field in the arguments to bind(2))
<ToxicFrog>
epergny: the CID is based on the data; same data == same CID (hence "content-addressed filesystem"). And I can in fact echo test |ipfs add and get the same CID back.
<epergny>
ToxicFrog: thanks... I tested from another user account (different .ipfs key / config) and indeed they're the same but...
<epergny>
I'm confused by this sentence: "IPFS by default also wraps the file you give it into some metadata used by ipfs itself. That is why it is different. --raw-leaves utilizes CID to communicate to others that data under the hash has no wrapping."
<epergny>
does the "QmeomffUNfm...." contains the SHA-256 of "test" or of "test+metadata" (metadata which would happen to be the same for all of us)
<Voker57>
the latter
<epergny>
ah
<epergny>
Voker57: tyvm
<Voker57>
clever: ipfs stats bw
<ToxicFrog>
IIRC the metadata is just hashing algorithm used + length of hash, so if you haven't been fiddling with those settings it's going to be the same
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<clever>
Voker57: nice
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<epergny>
what is "porcelain"?
<epergny>
I find this in a discussion from 2015: "To be clear, this might fit the plumbing/porcelain split. Plumbing = hash of top node in the merkle DAG. Porcelain = hash of the original file content."
<epergny>
If I know the SHA-256 of a file but don't have the actual file, can I easily find its hash as computed by IPFS?
<epergny>
Voker57: thanks, reading
<clever>
epergny: not that i know of, the DAG layer makes that difficult
<lgierth>
yeah there's chunking
<lgierth>
ipfs is able to ingest files without chunking though, to preserve the original hashes from other systems
<lgierth>
that's how the btc/eth/zec and git/torrent integrations work
<clever>
is there a size limit when doing it without chunking?
<epergny>
oh and from the command line that'd be "ipfs add --some-option-goes-here" ?
<lgierth>
nope, no limit technically. there is a limit to the size of objects when transferring though (in bitswap)
<lgierth>
we're working on a workaround to that limit
<lgierth>
working with large objects locally works fine though, at least
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<epergny>
it's not that I need to do that: it's to understand how it works : )
<lgierth>
the issue with large objects without chunking is that we can only verify the data once we have received all of it
<lgierth>
so we've put a limit on that for the time being, until there's a better way
<lgierth>
we don't wanna write broken data to disk, but we also don't wanna keep it in ram until it can be verified, because then someone could DoS us
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<epergny>
but as it's a content addressed system, for a file whose IPFS hash is "Qm...", I can be sure that in the future that same file's IPFS hash shall stay "Qm..." (if I use the same hash algo of course)?
<Voker57>
and same chunking algorithm and CIV version
<Voker57>
CID *
<epergny>
I see, thanks a lot.
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<lgierth>
the defaults for the chunking options can change
<lgierth>
when you have to rely on the exact same options, specify them on `ipfs add`
<lgierth>
e.g. we'll eventually change from sha256 to blake2b for hashing, and there's promising chunking algorithms on the horizon too
<lgierth>
epergny: ^
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<Icefoz>
lgierth: What would need to change in a chunking algorithm?
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<epergny>
lgierth: ah thanks, just played a bit with "--cid-version".
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<lgierth>
Icefoz: there's rabin fingerprinting for example, and variations of it. i stumbled upon something completely different too recently, maybe i can find it in my bookmarks
<lgierth>
there's also some work on a unixfs v2 data structure, so that'd change the hashes too
<Icefoz>
Oooh, interesting.
<Icefoz>
So you chunk based off some feature of the contents of the chunk instead of just file offsets
<Icefoz>
So if part of the file gets modified, including size changes, but the rest doesn't then you keep the unchanged blocks.
<Icefoz>
That's really interesting.
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<epergny>
Icefoz: "So you chunk based off some feature of the contents of the chunk.."
<epergny>
Icefoz: you meant "... contents of the file..." right
<Icefoz>
Yeah, my bad.
<epergny>
Icefoz: np, but I was confused staring at that for a while : )
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<lgierth>
Icefoz: yeah content-dependent chunking makes it even more interesting. for video frames for example
<Icefoz>
That sounds really cool but could also get really hard to reason about... Hm.
<lgierth>
yep :)
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<mazeto>
hello everyone. My ipfs client (the default go implementation) is hogging my CPU. I believe it is due to the number of connections (perhaps). I tried to set the process niceness low (linux), doesn't help much. How can I set the max number of connections?
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<mazeto>
maybe "Swarm": { "ConnMgr": { "LowWater"... on the CONFIG file? what are these settings?
<Icefoz>
mazeto: Yeah that's right.
<Icefoz>
LowWater is the minimum number of connections it tries to have to other peers, HighWater is the max number.
<mazeto>
ohh, thx!
<Icefoz>
If you set them too low then network performance will suffer, but iirc 200-400 or so should be okay-ish
<whyrusleeping>
Yeah, as we improve overall connectivity we can move towards lowering those numbers
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<mazeto>
how can I tell ipfs to use a specific as storage?
<Icefoz>
mazeto: A specific what?
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<epergny>
is there a way to find which content was last added to an ipfs node? (easy way)
<Voker57>
ls -Rt ~/.ipfs/blocks ?
<epergny>
Voker57: I was fearing some answer like that: was hoping for some CLI and API call)
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<epergny>
that was just curiosity anyway
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<lgierth>
nope, we don't keep additional metadata for the data blocks
<lgierth>
only what's in the blocks themselves
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<epergny>
I see but something like "ipfs stats repo" gives info on the local (?) repo that aren't recalculated each single time from every block right? I was wondering if a pointer to the last added content was available.
<Voker57>
it is recalculcated each single time
<epergny>
oh wow
<epergny>
I guess that simplifies a lot of things. That's smart.
<epergny>
so it's possible to have, say, ~/repo1 and ~/repo2 and do "export IPFS_PATH=~/repo1" (or repo2) before re-launching the ipfs daemon and everything shall just work? (gonna try asap)
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<epergny>
ah yup, it works like that. I'm in love already.
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<Voker57>
not really smart but simplifies for now, yes
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<hsanjuan>
There's a PR so that repo stat won't be recalculated every time anymore
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<M404privacynotfo>
Test
<M404privacynotfo>
heh darkdrgn2k great to see you here 😆
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<epergny>
M404privacynotfo: test succeeded
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