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@ -110,10 +110,10 @@ public:
@@ -110,10 +110,10 @@ public:
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* |
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* To that end: |
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* * Addresses are organized into buckets. |
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* * Address that have not yet been tried go into 1024 "new" buckets. |
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* * Based on the address range (/16 for IPv4) of source of the information, 64 buckets are selected at random |
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* * Addresses that have not yet been tried go into 1024 "new" buckets. |
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* * Based on the address range (/16 for IPv4) of the source of information, 64 buckets are selected at random. |
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* * The actual bucket is chosen from one of these, based on the range in which the address itself is located. |
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* * One single address can occur in up to 8 different buckets, to increase selection chances for addresses that |
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* * One single address can occur in up to 8 different buckets to increase selection chances for addresses that |
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* are seen frequently. The chance for increasing this multiplicity decreases exponentially. |
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* * When adding a new address to a full bucket, a randomly chosen entry (with a bias favoring less recently seen |
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* ones) is removed from it first. |
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