(response from Doug forwarded below)
It's a very good point. I have no experience with database engines. I
had assumed that in most cases, data could always be indexed in RAM, and
wanted to know where to go when that's not the case. I will look into
that solution, further.
I am very interested to solve the blockchain compression problem, and
think I've got a great way that will not just compress the blockchain,
but improve the network for lightweight clients. But the idea is not
fully formed yet, so I was holding off...
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [Bitcoin-development] Full Clients in the future -
Blockchain management
Date: Sat, 2 Jun 2012 12:07:44 -0500
From: Douglas Huff <m...@jrbobdobbs.org>
To: Alan Reiner <etothe...@gmail.com>
I think you're trying to solve something a little out of scope, really.
Most of the issues aren't really issues for other clients using
established storage mechanisms (bdb,SQLite,etc) and they're using them
precisely because this is a problem that people have been working on for
decades and a poor candidate for reinvention.
If you really look at what you're proposing it's fundamentally how bdb
operates except your indexing format is usage domain specific and you're
in charge of all the resource management semantics. While at the same
time you'll be missing many of the newer features that make working
with/recovering/diagnosing issues in the storage layer easier.
If you're really wanting to talk about pruning methods to prevent the
massive amount of duplicated; but no longer pertinent, data that's a
different story and please continue. :)
--
Douglas Huff
On Jun 2, 2012, at 10:40, Alan Reiner <etothe...@gmail.com
<mailto:etothe...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Devs,
I have decided to upgrade Armory's blockchain utilities, partly out of
necessity due to a poor code decision I made before I even decided I
was making a client. In an effort to avoid such mistakes again, I
want to do it "right" this time around, and realize that this is a
good discussion for all the devs that will have to deal with this
eventually...
The part I'm having difficulty with, is the idea that in a few years
from now, it just may not be feasible to hold transactions
file-/pointers/ in RAM, because even that would overwhelm standard RAM
sizes. Without any degree of blockchain compression, I see that the
most general, scalable solution is probably a complicated one.
On the other hand, where this fails may be where we have already
predicted that the network will have to split into "super-nodes" and
"lite nodes." In which case, this discussion is still a good one, but
just directed more towards the super-nodes. But, there may still be a
point at which super-nodes don't have enough RAM to hold this data...
(1) As for how small you can get the data: my original idea was that
the entire blockchain is stored on disk as blkXXXX.dat files. I store
all transactions as 10-byte "file-references." 10 bytes would be
-- X in blkX.dat (2 bytes)
-- Tx start byte (4 bytes)
-- Tx size bytes (4 bytes)
The file-refs would be stored in a multimap indexed by the first 6
bytes of the tx-hash. In this way, when I search the multimap, I
potentially get a list of file-refs, and I might have to retrieve a
couple of tx from disk before finding the right one, but it would be a
good trade-off compared to storing all 32 bytes (that's assuming that
multimap nodes don't have too much overhead).
But even with this, if there are 1,000,000,000 transactions in the
blockchain, each node is probably 48 bytes (16 bytes + map/container
overhead), then you're talking about 48 GB to track all the data in
RAM. mmap() may help here, but I'm not sure it's the right solution
(2) What other ways are there, besides some kind of blockchain
compression, to maintain a multi-terabyte blockchain, assuming that
storing references to each tx would overwhelm available RAM? Maybe
that assumption isn't necessary, but I think it prepares for the worst.
Or maybe I'm too narrow in my focus. How do other people envision
this will be handled in the future. I've heard so many vague notions
of "well we could do /this/ or /that/, or it wouldn't be hard to do
/that/" but I haven't heard any serious proposals for it. And while I
believe that blockchain compression will become ubiquitous in the
future, not everyone believes that, and there will undoubtedly be
users/devs that /want/ to maintain everything under all circumstances.
-Alan
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