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<darkdrgn2k[m]>
so im trying ot use `ipfs add -r --raw-leaves --nocopy *`
<darkdrgn2k[m]>
but seems the blocks folder size keesp increasing!
<darkdrgn2k[m]>
1006M and i added a gig of data like the above
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<darkdrgn2k[m]>
yeh
<darkdrgn2k[m]>
does raw leaves work for like a samba mount?
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<TUSF>
I wonder if the * is causing it to do something unexpected, along with you already marking it as recursive?
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<TUSF>
nvm, widely misinterpretted what you meant
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<darkdrgn2k[m]>
im going ot guess that raw-leaves dont work on non unix partions
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<darkdrgn2k[m]>
if not.. why not, and what do they work on?
<TUSF>
Actually, it doesn't appear to work too well on my end either, actually
<TUSF>
Added 200MB of images with --nocopy, and it seems that it was fully copied into my repo?
<TUSF>
Unless I'm misunderstanding how --nocopy is supposed to work
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<TUSF>
darkdrgn2k[m]: Have you restarted your daemon since enabling the filestore?
<darkdrgn2k[m]>
don't think I did or sure
<darkdrgn2k[m]>
but in the past I did have it work..
<darkdrgn2k[m]>
I added few Tb without xooyy
<darkdrgn2k[m]>
xopy
<darkdrgn2k[m]>
copy
<TUSF>
hrmm, instead of checking if Filestore is enabled in configurations, it should check if the filestore was actually set-up to begin with.
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<darkdrgn2k[m]>
the filestore ls command says its not
<darkdrgn2k[m]>
config says it is
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<OliverUv>
I see there's nobody in #js-ipfs - is this the appropriate place to talk to those devs?
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<OliverUv>
Anyway, I'm looking to use js-ipfs in-browser to store some data, and later sync it with a master (server) node in a server-client configuration (i'm very sorry) mostly because we want to take advantage of IPFS' chunking/hasing/etc now, and perhaps use the decent. stuff later
<OliverUv>
(can't use the decentralized stuff currently anyway, because we're in China and it seems the *.preload.ipfs.io addresses are blocked
<OliverUv>
So my question is: in browser, what's the best way to take advantage of IPFS' chunking, hashing, and storage capabilities? With ability to sync many clients to a server? I was looking at js-ipfs-repo but I'm not sure that's what I want to use, so now I'm trying js-ipfs and trying to limit it so it's not trying to connect to any other nodes unless I tell it to
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<JCaesar>
btw, is there a command to reset ~everything?
<JCaesar>
Filestore, pins, repository content…
<JCaesar>
Hm. I removed all pins and mfs entries manually and am now running ipfs repo gc, but that is taking up more ram than I have. (interestingly, not the daemon, but the client.)
<JCaesar>
Maybe I should just backup the config file and delete the rest.
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<edd[m]>
random thought: how does ipfs protect against deliberate hash collisions?
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<JCaesar>
By using a cryptographically strong hash.
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<JCaesar>
Hint: there is no known SHA2-256 collision. And if there was, the multihashes would quickly allow switching to something else.
<r0kk3rz>
not to mention that by chunking files and hashing the chunks it'll be a lot harder to make a meaningful collision
<JCaesar>
dunno. the chunks are still MB-sized, right? Also, as soon as you have one colliding chunk, you can make colliding files for free, they just have to contain the chunk.
<r0kk3rz>
iirc the default chunk size is like 256kb
<JCaesar>
Ah, that may be the maximum.
<JCaesar>
Oh, and... raw leaves. Those are essentially unchunked files, right?
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<r0kk3rz>
no they're still chunked
<r0kk3rz>
theres just less json wrappery overhead
<r0kk3rz>
so yeah, 256 bit hash with 256kb chunk size, good luck making a collision
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<u42p>
hi, i am trying to pin zdj7WZpLoZYr4AoDUdpCNBVHLi1S8y6muFoCgwUa9kmxUpYCr (ham from cloudflare's stackexchange mirror) but it takes days already. why? and is that normal?
<JCaesar>
r0kk3rz: the sha1 collision is 150kB, btw…
<Kolonka[m]>
in what way is the json wrapping shortened?
<Kolonka[m]>
I had assumed there would just be slightly less data in the rest of the block
<voker57>
might be 'normal', if it's big
<JCaesar>
Hm, if I do an ipfs refs -r on that, it is rather slow…
<u42p>
JCaesar: couple of thousand files i think
<voker57>
stuck on 314 nodes for me
<u42p>
it resumes every now and then, i am at 18409 nodes after 5 days...
<JCaesar>
I mean, it is possible that there is a reference to a thing among there that is not reachable anymore.
<JCaesar>
Then the pin would never finish
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<u42p>
how long _should_ pinning a hash with a couple of thousand files(?) take in an average situation?
<voker57>
depends on size of files and your bandwidth
<voker57>
here either IPFS is hitting some DHT bugs or cloudflare hosts experience problems
<JCaesar>
then again, the ipfs idea of "data moves at the speed of the underlying networks" is sadly not a reality, at least not one I have experienced… :/
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<deltab>
edd[m]: aiui, the situation is similar to git: nodes won't request blocks they already have, so if you're trying to get someone to see two different files with the same hash, you'd have to get them to fetch one of them, read it and rely on it, and then record the hash but not pin the file, so that it can expire and then be replaced by the other one
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<edd[m]>
Yeah
<deltab>
and if the first file is still accessible on the network, the victim could get it instead of your replacement
<edd[m]>
It's interesting
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<velua[m]>
Anyone got a good new guide for hosting a website served via IPFS?
<xpitr>
well i'd rather do `ipfs name publish ` than editing dns entries
<xpitr>
you still use dnslink, just point it to /ipns/
<swedneck[m]1>
yes, but the problem with ipns is that it's slow (without pubsub enabled), and you have to refresh it by doing `ipfs name publish` again
<swedneck[m]1>
now you can set the ipns refresh period to like a week or something, but then if you forget to refresh it it'll stop working..
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<swedneck[m]1>
is there any way to get the daemon to use less ram?
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<voker57>
restart it
<voker57>
and/or lower connection number in config