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Thread: Skips/Fades, Sometimes Why Unknown, Sometimes Really Obvious Why

  1. #1
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    I watch my uploads pretty closely, and when it looks like something is going 'off the rails, I pull out all the stops to try and figure out why.

    A lot of the time, it's simply unknown, especially when the propagation appears to be 100% (at least one server other than the one I'm posting at is getting the stream perfectly), but others seem to be having major trouble.

    Today is a good example. Giganews/US is getting the propagated parts without any problems whatsoever, but Giganews/EU was skipping like crazy. After watching that for a good 6 hours, I took a look at the propagation and found that Giga/EU had changed it's feeds around, taking from an outfit called 'sonic.net, 'alt.net' and 'xlned.com.. Why they would change things around I have no idea, especially as Giganews/US hadn't changed at all.

    So I checked around, and Blocknews had changed it's feeds around as well. Major skips.

    Now, usually some minor stuff I wouldn't mention it, but why the folks running these plants change their feed/peering arrangement around is a bit beyond me. What they'll be left with is huge gaps in their plant they'll be fighting for days/weeks/months if they don't figure it out quick.

    BTW, neither Astra/US, Astra/EU have changed their feeds, and no problems, just like Giga/US.

    'If it isn't broke, why fix it?'

  2. Newsgroups   -   #2
    i do hope you sent them email=) just so they know what a fucked-up thing they've done =)

  3. Newsgroups   -   #3
    Did you ask in giganews.general?

  4. Newsgroups   -   #4
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    Who did you upload it through? Astraweb? If several large providers had problems maybe it culd have been the original posting server that mangled something? I don't know. How do you tell who changes what around? Just look at the header?

  5. Newsgroups   -   #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by hdjunky View Post
    How do you tell who changes what around? Just look at the header?
    Look at the header, it tells you where the data originated from, and who it went through on it's travels to the server you just d/l'ed it from.

    If your posted data ends up not 'arriving' at lots of other servers, then obviously, the posting servers propagation is having problems. If at least one other (independent) server system receives everything okay, then obviously something is going on with those other servers.

    Virtually without fail, sending a 'heads up' to 'front office' folks is an exercise in futility. They really don't have a clue.

  6. Newsgroups   -   #6
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    I've never really understood why Usenet servers even have a 'propagation path' -- I mean, why can't Giganews get Astraweb's posts directly (and vice-versa) without having all those middlemen?

    I assume that usenet was just never set up that way.

  7. Newsgroups   -   #7
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    It all depends on the 'peering'.

    Now, you and I may agree that Giga and Astra are #1 and #2 (or, #2 and #1), but usenet servers live by those peering agreements, whether they are 'on paper', a 'handshake', ironclad or just a passing thing that was set up in dim history.

    What's generally interesting, is that LOTS of stuff posted to one DOES go directly to the other, for hours/days, they out of the blue, things start getting routes through some server you never heard of. After a few hours/days, it changes back to what we'd consider 'normal'.

    There may be embedded messages being passed between the servers to say 'hey, I've got some maintenance to do right now, hold off on your direct traffic for the next 'x' hours' or some such. Then again, it might also be something completely random in their operation they do to show that they aren't 'colluding' in passing traffic, I don't know.

    But yep, at the end of the day, doesn't make much sense for even the 'top five' servers to send tons of traffic through servers that have 'dodgy' reputations for good (or even fair) operation. That's life I guess.

  8. Newsgroups   -   #8
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    Now that I think about it, I bet because the system was designed for the concept that Usenet would always consist of very many small, local news servers -- rather than just a few huge servers, as we have with commercial binary servers today. Usenet did indeed start out that way (and text-only servers are still fairly numerous) but the system founders probably never foresaw the rise of binaries (and it's unique set of challenges) as well as corporate consolidation (as in Highwinds buying up a slew of independent providers)

    So I'd imagine that with a system of thousands (or tens of thousands) of separate NNTP servers (as perhaps originally envisioned by the creators) it's obvious that relying on direct-peering between every single provider would be far too inefficient.

    But with only about a dozen or so major binary servers today, I believe this serial-peering arrangement has few benefits and mainly serves as an additional source of error.

    And then I suppose it's also possible that a company would rather not take action that it believes mainly serves to improve the quality of service of it's chief competitor.

  9. Newsgroups   -   #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by zot View Post
    But with only about a dozen or so major binary servers today, I believe this serial-peering arrangement has few benefits and mainly serves as an additional source of error.

    And then I suppose it's also possible that a company would rather not take action that it believes mainly serves to improve the quality of service of it's chief competitor.
    Then again, no one provider has such a huge advantage in their userbase that they can stick their noses up in the air and basically say the H*LL with everybody else. Okay, maybe GN if (a BIG IF) they dropped their prices by 2/3rds or thereabouts. hahahaha

    There have been many consolidations, buyouts, mergers, etc. over the years, but if you take a look at the traffic counts around the planet, that it hasn't hampered anything, and the continued drop in the cost of storage (and thereby the running of the plants) has meant that 'keeping pace' with that growth has been fairly easy to do.

    I first got 'involved' with usenet in 1987, a 'refugee' from Fidonet, and ran my own message-only operation from 1994-8 (ISDN the fastest connection available, after running a dial-up BBS for some 4 years previous). Then as DSL began to be fielded, things started to really take off.

    But binaries is the biggie. The 'internet' has an 'internet2', maybe the usenet 'heavyweights' need to get together and figure out some kind of 'usenet2' to route things more efficiently and 'self-correct' the packets, maybe using the par2's, and maybe coming up with an improved upload schema that takes something like JBinUp to the next level (since it's block level now, how about bit level?).

    The kind of speed most of us have access to today was unthinkable even 5 years ago, the robustness of the system needs to be improved, from the upload to the storage to the inter-transfers to the download. It's long overdue.

  10. Newsgroups   -   #10
    before even thinking about usenet2 we need to put a stop to copyright mafia activity and dmca.
    otherwise it wont be of much help
    usenet is not like those anonymouse p2p networks.. it has massive ammounts of data centered at one place(several places) and its vulnerable
    Humans must deal with these criminals .. and its up to our society whether it will be through fear and blood (get you own 9\11 MPAA!) or through legal measures. it depends heavily on the governments and how bad they want to control internet(people). because make no mistake. its not about money and their so-called "millions" they supposedly lost due to piracy, its about control and power
    Last edited by Hypatia; 09-18-2011 at 11:53 AM.

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