Changes for page Networks
Last modified by Zenna Elfen on 2025/11/24 12:07
From version 8.1
edited by Zenna Elfen
on 2025/11/23 22:48
on 2025/11/23 22:48
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To version 17.1
edited by Zenna Elfen
on 2025/11/24 12:07
on 2025/11/24 12:07
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... ... @@ -1,9 +1,167 @@ 1 1 (% class="box" %) 2 2 ((( 3 -This page contains an overview of all P4P Networks in this wiki. You can also [[add a P4P Network>>doc:Projects.WebHome]] or have a look at the [[P4P Applications>>doc:P4P.Applications.WebHome]]. 3 +This page contains an overview of all P4P Networks in this wiki and their building blocks. 4 + 5 +You can also [[add a P4P Network>>doc:Projects.WebHome]] or have a look at the [[P4P Applications>>doc:P4P.Applications.WebHome]]. 4 4 ))) 5 5 8 +{{toc/}} 6 6 7 7 11 +== Building Blocks of P4P Networks == 8 8 13 + 14 +(% class="box" %) 15 +((( 16 +To fully assemble a P4P network one needs a few different building blocks, below is an overview of 15 of those building blocks. Lost in translation? Take a look at the [[terminology>>doc:P4P.Definitions.WebHome]]. 17 +))) 18 + 19 + 20 +==== **1. Data Synchronization** ==== 21 + 22 +> Synchronization answers **how updates flow between peers** and how they determine what data to exchange. This layer is about **diffing, reconciliation, order, causality tracking, and efficient exchange**, not persistence or user-facing collaboration semantics. 23 + 24 +* //How do peers detect differences and synchronize state?// 25 +* Examples: Range-Based Set Reconciliation, RIBLT, Gossip-based sync, State-based vs op-based sync, Lamport/Vector/HLC clocks, Braid Protocol 26 + 27 + 28 + 29 +==== **2. Collaborative Data Structures & Conflict Resolution** ==== 30 + 31 +> This layer defines **how shared data evolves** when multiple peers edit concurrently. It focuses on **conflict-free merging, causality, and consistency of meaning**, not transport or storage. CRDTs ensure deterministic convergence, while event-sourced or stream-driven models maintain a history of all changes and derive consistent state from it. 32 + 33 +* //How do peers collaboratively change shared data and merge conflicts?// 34 +* Examples: CRDTs (Yjs, Automerge), OT, Event Sourcing, Stream Processing, Version Vectors, Peritext 35 + 36 + 37 + 38 +==== **3. Data Storage & Replication** ==== 39 + 40 +> This layer focuses on **durability, consistency, and redundancy**. It handles write-paths, crash-resilience, and replication semantics across nodes. It is the “database/storage engine” layer where **data lives and survives over time**, independent of sync or merging logic. 41 + 42 +* //How is data persisted locally and replicated between peers?// 43 +* Examples: SQLite, IndexedDB, LMDB, Hypercore (append-only logs), WALs, Merkle-DAGs (IPFS/IPLD), Blob/media storage 44 + 45 + 46 + 47 +==== **4. Peer & Content Discovery** ==== 48 + 49 +> Discovery occurs in two phases: 50 +> 1. **Peer Discovery** → finding _any_ nodes 51 +> 2. **Topic Discovery** → finding _relevant_ nodes or resources 52 +> These mechanisms enable decentralized bootstrapping and interest-based overlays. 53 + 54 +* //How do peers find each other, and how do they discover content in the network?// 55 +* Examples: DHTs (Kademlia, Pastry), mDNS, DNS-SD, Bluetooth scanning, QR bootstrapping, static peer lists, Interest-based routing, PubSub discovery (libp2p), Rendezvous protocols 56 + 57 + 58 + 59 +==== **5. Identity & Trust** ==== 60 + 61 +> Identity systems ensure reliable mapping between peers and cryptographic keys. They underpin authorization, federated trust, and secure overlays. 62 + 63 +* //How peers identify themselves, authenticate, and establish trustworthy relationships?// 64 +* Examples: PKI, Distributed Identities (DIDs), Web-of-Trust, TOFU (SSH-style), Verifiable Credentials (VCs), Peer key fingerprints (libp2p PeerIDs), Key transparency logs 65 + 66 + 67 + 68 +==== **6. Transport Layer** ==== 69 + 70 +> This layer provides logical connections and flow control. QUIC and WebRTC bring modern congestion control and encryption defaults; Interpeer explores transport beyond IP assumptions. 71 + 72 +* //How do peers establish end-to-end byte streams and reliable delivery?// 73 +* Examples: TCP, UDP, QUIC, SCTP, WebRTC DataChannels, Interpeer transport stack 74 + 75 + 76 + 77 +==== **7. Underlying Transport (Physical/Link Layer)** ==== 78 + 79 +> Highly relevant for **offline-first / edge networks**, device-to-device communication, and mesh networks and relates to the hardware which facilitates connections. 80 + 81 +* //How does data move across the medium?// 82 +* Examples: Ethernet, Wi-Fi Direct / Wi-Fi Aware (post-AWDL), Bluetooth Mesh, LoRa, NFC, Cellular, CSMA/CA, TDMA, FHSS 83 + 84 + 85 + 86 +==== **8. Session & Connection Management** ==== 87 + 88 +> Manages **connection lifecycle**, including authentication handshakes, reconnection after drops, and session continuation—especially important in lossy or mobile networks. 89 + 90 +* //How are connections initiated, authenticated, resumed, and kept alive?// 91 +* Examples: TLS handshake semantics, Noise IK/XX patterns, session tokens, keep-alive heartbeats, reconnection strategies, session resumption tickets 92 + 93 + 94 + 95 +==== **9. Content Addressing** ==== 96 + 97 +> Content addressing ensures **immutability, verifiability, and deduplication**. Identity of data = cryptographic hash, enabling offline-first and tamper-evident systems. 98 + 99 +* //How is data addressed and verified by content, not location?// 100 +* Examples: IPFS CIDs, BitTorrent infohashes, Git hashes, SHA-256 addressing, Named Data Networking (NDN) 101 + 102 + 103 + 104 +==== **10. P2P Connectivity** ==== 105 + 106 +> Connectivity ensures peers bypass NATs/firewalls to reach each other. 107 + 108 +* //How can two peers connect directly across networks, firewalls, and NATs?// 109 +* Examples: IPv6 direct, NAT Traversal, STUN, TURN, ICE (used in WebRTC), UDP hole punching, UPnP 110 + 111 + 112 + 113 +==== **11. Session & Connection Management** ==== 114 + 115 +> Manages **connection lifecycle**, including authentication handshakes, reconnection after drops, and session continuation. 116 + 117 +* //How are connections initiated, authenticated, resumed, and kept alive?// 118 +* Examples: TLS handshake semantics, Noise IK/XX patterns, session tokens, keep-alive heartbeats, reconnection strategies, session resumption tickets 119 + 120 + 121 + 122 +==== **12. Message Format & Serialization** ==== 123 + 124 +> Serialization ensures **portable data representation**, forward-compatible schemas, and efficient messaging. IPLD provides content-addressed structuring for P2P graph data. 125 + 126 +* //How is data encoded, structured, and made interoperable between peers?// 127 +* Examples: CBOR, Protocol Buffers, Cap’n Proto, JSON, ASN.1, IPLD schemas, Flatbuffers 128 + 129 + 130 + 131 +==== **13. File / Blob Synchronization** ==== 132 + 133 +> Bulk data syncing has **different trade-offs** than small collaborative state (chunking, deduplication, partial transfer, resume logic). Critical for media and archival P2P use-cases. 134 + 135 +//How are large objects transferred and deduplicated efficiently across peers?// 136 +Examples: BitTorrent chunking, IPFS block-store, NDN segments, rsync-style delta sync, ZFS send-receive, streaming blob transfers 137 + 138 + 139 +==== **14. Local Storage & Processing Primitives** ==== 140 + 141 +> Provides durable on-device state and local computation (event sourcing, materialization, compaction). Enables offline-first writes and deterministic replay. 142 + 143 +* //How do nodes persist, index, and process data locally—without external servers?// 144 +* Examples: RocksDB, LevelDB, SQLite, LMDB, local WALs/append-only logs, embedded stream processors (NATS Core JetStream mode, Actyx-like edge runtimes), Kafka-like libraries 145 + 146 + 147 + 148 +==== **15. Crash Resilience & Abortability** ==== 149 + 150 +> Ensures P2P apps don’t corrupt state on crashes. Tied to **local storage & stream-processing**, and critical in offline-first and distributed update pipelines. Abortability is the updated term for Atomicity as part of the ACID abbreviation. 151 + 152 +* //How do nodes recover and maintain correctness under failure?// 153 +* Examples: WALs, idempotent ops, partial log replay, transactional journaling, write fences 154 + 155 + 156 + 157 + 158 +== Distributed Network Types == 159 + 160 + 161 +[[Flowchart depicting distributed network variants, under development. Building on work from Z. Elfen, 2024: ~[~[https:~~~~/~~~~/doi.org/10.17613/naj7d-6g984~>~>https://doi.org/10.17613/naj7d-6g984~]~]>>image:P4P_Typology.png||alt="Flowchart depicting typologies of distributed networks, such as Friend-2-Friend, Grassroots Networks, Federated Networks, Local-First, P2P and P4P Networks" data-xwiki-image-style-alignment="center" height="649" width="639"]] 162 + 163 + 164 + 165 +== Overview of P4P Networks == 166 + 9 9 {{include reference="Projects.WebHome"/}}
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