Jonas Schnelli
9 years ago
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REDUCE TRAFFIC |
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Some node operators need to deal with bandwith cap given by their ISPs. |
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By default, bitcoin-core allows up to 125 connections to different peers, 8 of |
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them outbound (and therefore 117 max inbound connections). |
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The default settings can result in relatively significant traffic consumption. |
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Ways to reduce traffic: |
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1. Use `-maxuploadtarget=<MiB per day>` |
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A major part of the traffic is caused by serving historic blocks to other nodes |
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in initial blocks download state (syncing up a new node). |
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This option can be specified in MiB per day and is turned off by default. |
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This is *not* a hard limit but a threshold to minimize the outbound |
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traffic. When the limit is about to be reached, the uploaded data is cut by not |
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serving historic blocks (blocks older than one week). |
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Keep in mind that new nodes require other nodes that are willing to serve |
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historic blocks. **The recommended minimum is 144 blocks per day (max. 144MB |
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per day)** |
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2. Disable "listening" (`-listen=0`) |
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Disable listening will result in fewer nodes connected (remind the max of 8 |
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outbound peers). Fewer nodes will result in less traffic usage because relaying |
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blocks and transaction needs to be passed to fewer nodes. |
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3. Reduce maximal connections (`-maxconnections=<num>`) |
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Reducing the connected nodes to a miniumum can be desired in case traffic |
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limits are tiny. Keep in mind that bitcoin trustless model works best if you are |
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connected to a handfull of nodes. |
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