On Sunday 11 January 2004 07:40 am, Garb wrote:
> > On Sat, Jan 10, 2004 at 06:04:17PM +, Andrew Dickson wrote:
> >> Let's face it, freenet was working brilliantly this
> >> time last year... Content was slow, but it was
> >> accessible. At the moment freenet is dead in the
> >> water.
> >
> > The unstable network on the other hand is working pretty well. We
> > should be merging the code in the next week or so, however the unstable
> > network *is* rather small (100 nodes or so). Anyone who is willing to
> > provide bug reports and upgrade their nodes daily should try the
> > unstable branch however.
> >
> >> Why is the stable network not reverting back to the
> >> older code until these new bugs are ironed out?
>
> Actually I have wondered a great deal about this myself. Why did Freenet
> break in the first place and - assuming that it happened through an error
> introduced by an update about a year ago - why wasn't the stable version
> reverted to the last working version, so we could have avoided paralyzing
> the entire net for a year? Even if the fix is allmost ready for the big
> launch, the other issues would be interesting to know about, just for
> historical reasons.
The last working version didn't work very well, especially on a larger
scale. There were overloading problems for nodes, and routing problems
that next-gen routing were going to address that were made worse.
Added to this, the project recently agreed to have a stable as well as
unstable network. Before that, the network had stable and unstable nodes
all attempting to work together. This made improvements in the node
difficult to measure when older nodes are part of the network.
Backing off to an ancient build also removes any and all improvements and
bugfixes made all over the codebase, including some FCP related that I was
interested in.
More than likely, things will stabilize again over time (perhaps shorter
than everyone thinks) and we will have two separate networks and hopefully
less complaining and whining on freenet-dev. Overall things are looking
better in the unstable network, and there's talk of merging some changes
into the stable branch, but all this takes time and effort. Keep in mind
it's still 0.5, which implies it's not ready for 1.0 release.
--
Jay Oliveri "In the land of the blind,
GnuPG ID: 0x5AA5DD54 the one-eyed man is king."
FCPTools Maintainer
www.sf.net/users/joliveri
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