> even for such simple graph as: > A ----c----> B
> there is not luck for me, as B cannot tell to the A that it received > the message from it Right. > So how B tells A this? If I understand only with IHUs? Which are sent > only directly? Right. > So if there is a bad link backwards this could make IHUs be badly > transmitted and in the limit no IHU would get to A and A would not > know that there is maybe a very good link towards B? Only if the backwards link is nonexistent -- IHUs are highly redundant, you'd need to lose 9 IHUs in a row in the current implementation. > I am thinking about very long HAM links which work only in one > direction, using two separate channels for each direction (so two > routers on each side) If you get me in touch with people who are actually interested in putting Babel on such a network, I'll be glad to work on the issue. I'm willing to generalise from a single example, but I'm not going to try to generalise from 0 examples ;-) -- Juliusz _______________________________________________ Babel-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/babel-users

