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@ -272,13 +272,36 @@ with the consensus protocol. |
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### Peers |
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#### Seed |
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A seed node is a node who relays the addresses of other peers which they know |
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of. These nodes constantly crawl the network to try to get more peers. The |
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addresses which the seed node relays get saved into a local address book. Once |
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these are in the address book, you will connect to those addresses directly. |
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Basically the seed nodes job is just to relay everyones addresses. You won't |
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connect to seed nodes once you have received enough addresses, so typically you |
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only need them on the first start. The seed node will immediately disconnect |
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from you after sending you some addresses. |
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#### Persistent Peer |
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Persistent peers are people you want to be constantly connected with. If you |
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disconnect you will try to connect directly back to them as opposed to using |
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another address from the address book. On restarts you will always try to |
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connect to these peers regardless of the size of your address book. |
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All peers relay peers they know of by default. This is called the peer exchange |
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protocol (PeX). With PeX, peers will be gossipping about known peers and forming |
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a network, storing peer addresses in the addrbook. Because of this, you don't |
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have to use a seed node if you have a live persistent peer. |
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#### Connecting to Peers |
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To connect to peers on start-up, specify them in the |
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`$TMHOME/config/config.toml` or on the command line. Use seeds to |
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specify seed nodes from which you can get many other peer addresses, and |
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`$TMHOME/config/config.toml` or on the command line. Use `seeds` to |
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specify seed nodes, and |
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`persistent_peers` to specify peers that your node will maintain |
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persistent connections with. |
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For instance, |
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For example, |
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tendermint node --p2p.seeds "f9baeaa15fedf5e1ef7448dd60f46c01f1a9e9c4@1.2.3.4:46656,0491d373a8e0fcf1023aaf18c51d6a1d0d4f31bd@5.6.7.8:46656" |
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@ -287,10 +310,8 @@ specify seeds for a running node to connect to: |
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curl 'localhost:46657/dial_seeds?seeds=\["f9baeaa15fedf5e1ef7448dd60f46c01f1a9e9c4@1.2.3.4:46656","0491d373a8e0fcf1023aaf18c51d6a1d0d4f31bd@5.6.7.8:46656"\]' |
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Note, if the peer-exchange protocol (PEX) is enabled (default), you |
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should not normally need seeds after the first start. Peers will be |
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gossipping about known peers and forming a network, storing peer |
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addresses in the addrbook. |
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Note, with PeX enabled, you |
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should not need seeds after the first start. |
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If you want Tendermint to connect to specific set of addresses and |
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maintain a persistent connection with each, you can use the |
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