You are mistaking. I don't see why this surprises people. It makes perfect sense to send back the data to earlier nodes in the chain, and first node does not know that it is talking to a client, so it will attempt to send it back as well.
On Wed, 10 May 2000, Scott G. Miller wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > > > If there is a key collision on the InsertRequest the > > existing data is returned. Is this such a good idea ? > On an insert request, no data is returned, unless I'm mistaken. > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v1.0.1 (GNU/Linux) > Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org > > iD8DBQE5Gal2pXyM95IyRhURAovxAKCfYyZSDdMg9ffbO0VthDEIZwdV8gCgq+ce > cdRcdsr9hCTzAMSZkMMFi8g= > =Sbme > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- > > > _______________________________________________ > Freenet-dev mailing list > Freenet-dev at lists.sourceforge.net > http://lists.sourceforge.net/mailman/listinfo/freenet-dev -- Oskar Sandberg md98-osa at nada.kth.se #!/bin/perl -sp0777i<X+d*lMLa^*lN%0]dsXx++lMlN/dsM0<j]dsj $/=unpack('H*',$_);$_=`echo 16dio\U$k"SK$/SM$n\EsN0p[lN*1 lK[d2%Sa2/d0$^Ixp"|dc`;s/\W//g;$_=pack('H*',/((..)*)$/) _______________________________________________ Freenet-dev mailing list Freenet-dev at lists.sourceforge.net http://lists.sourceforge.net/mailman/listinfo/freenet-dev
