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Caching Torrent files in DNS

bodin writes "This is a proof of concept version of BitTorrent where the torrent files are transported over DNS. This will of course bog down BIND servers all over the planet. Everyone should be thankful that the files are not sent over DNS."

2 of 283 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Idiot by dtdns · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you read the article and know anything about DNS, you can see that he is splitting the file into 126 byte segments and storing the parts in TXT records of individual hosts. The host naming scheme is quite clever, I might add.

    The goal is to offload the duty of serving up the files from the download servers to an existing distributed network. He even mentions that the DNS servers caching these records would consume massive amounts of memory, and then (like a spammer) blows it off as "its [memory] not that expensive today anyway."

    If this is actually implemented on a wide scale, DNS administrators will simply stop caching TXT records, putting the load right back on the original download server where it belongs. Or worse, they may stop caching records altogether, which could only lead us all down the path of chaos, death and destruction.

    I agree that it's clever, but like a deadly virus, not something that should leave the lab on a large scale.

  2. Re:We have the technology! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They are not talking about transfering data directly through the DNS channels. They are talking about using the DNS system to replace the tracker server. In reality they are both doing basically the same thing -- they are both mearly creating an abstration that points to the actual electronic address where are resource is located.

    While I am not really to hot about tracking through BIND I do think that the two protocols can learn from each other. What makes DNS so great is that it is a distributed system which balances the load more or less evenly among connected nodes but the system is useless in dealing with dynamic IP, NAT, intermittent connections, etc. that effect most work stations at the fringe of the Internet. This is were P2P technologies like bittorent are starting to excel. Taken together these technologies could create a new hybridized standard that will once again allow workstations to be a presence on the Internet by creating a new Universal Resource Locator (URL) that will transend the barriors of DHCP, NAT, etc. and reinforce the advantage of distributed hierchies to peer to peer.