On Sun, Aug 10, 2014 at 4:07 PM, Bob McElrath <bob_bitc...@mcelrath.org> wrote:
> I had the same problem (repeatedly) which came down a hardware problem.

This is actually an independent problem (though something to be aware
of). Flaky hardware can make synchronization fail completely - as it
relies on being able to exactly assess the validity of everything in
the blockchain.

Stilll...

> m...@bitwatch.co [m...@bitwatch.co] wrote:
>> Hello all,
>>
>> I'm currently synchronizing a new node and right now, at a progress of a
>> height of 197'324 blocks, I count in my debug.log an aweful amount of
>> 38'447 orphaned blocks which is about 19.5 %.
>>
>> It has been I while since I watched the synchronization process closely,
>> but this number seems pretty high to me.

Orphan blocks during synchronization are unfortunately very common,
and the result of a mostly broken download logic in the client. They
are blocks that are further ahead in the chain than the point where
you're currently synchronized to, and thus can't be validated yet.
Note that 'orphan' here means 'we do not know the parent'; it doesn't
just mean 'not in the main chain'. They are blocks that are received
out of order.

As Jeff mentions, headers-first synchronization fixes this problem
(and many other download-logic related things), by first verifying the
headers in the chain (thus already having partially validated
everything), and then downloading the blocks (in not necessarily the
right order) anymore, from multiple peers in parallel. There is
currently a pull request for it, but it's not production ready
(#4468).

>> I'm wondering about the following: would it be possible for a malicious
>> party to generate chains of blocks with low difficulity which are not
>> part of the main chain to slow down the sync process?

Yes and no. While you're still synchronization, and don't actually
know the best chain, a peer could send you stale branches (with valid
proof of work), which you would accept, store and process. But it has
to be done very early, as once you learn of a good-enough chain, a
branch with more proof of work would be requires due to some
heuristics designed to exactly prevent such an attack.

-- 
Pieter

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