>Hmm. Try 531; if this doesn't work... are you in the default
>seednodes.ref?

No - I started with that, built up a big list of nodes and have now remembered to save 
it so that when my routing 
table gets eaten (a distressingly common occurence - roughly every other boot) I can 
reseed it.

My node (build 530) now knows about 95 other nodes (down from the seeded 146) and 
seems healthy.

Although thses errors keep showing up:
Nov 6, 2002 6:38:41 PM (freenet.diagnostics.StandardDiagnostics, main): Found file for 
var socketTime type: 3
Nov 6, 2002 6:38:41 PM (freenet.diagnostics.StandardDiagnostics, main): Did NOT find 
file for var socketTime type: 4

>> What are those limits, and how do they work?
>Freenet contains numerous arguably totally arbitrary limits, partly due
>to java's inability to give us any real load statistics.

So, twiddle 'em till it works then tell the list so they can copy me.  Got it :)

>> Second problem.  Downloading the jargon file single 
>> html file, the FEC error popped up in my browser 
>> again - and then non human readable stuff started 
>> filling my browser window.
>Will look at this.
>> Annoyingly the system overloaded my CPU and I had 
>> to crash it before I could capture it.
>Eh?
I didn't manage to get a copy of the junk it pasted into the browser - but it looked 
like [human ureadable]
java.lang.eception.[human unreadable]

Can the 'FEC download' to browser be made more understandable?  Or, preferably, 
completely transparent?

>> Also, had some interesting speculation in the irc 
>> channel - why does the graph fror your datastore 
>> include an entry for 1gig+ keys?  Has anyone ever 
>> insderted such a key - and what would happen if 
>> someone inserted 10 20gig keys or so and requested 
>> them from elsewhere on the network to forve their 
>> propogation?
>No, because nodes only cache keys up to 1/200th the size of the
>datastore. When you include fields, this means that to cache a 1gb key
>you'd need a 210GB node or so - certainly not the common case. If you
>want to insert really big files, use fishtools or fproxy to insert them
>as FEC splitfiles - and tell us how you get on.

Ok - that makes sense.
A similar question still occurs with more sanely sized keys - insert a large number of 
5 meg keys and simultaneously 
request them from a large number of clients -watch that old data go bye bye.




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