sqltorrent
ipfs
sqltorrent | ipfs | |
---|---|---|
5 | 483 | |
269 | 22,527 | |
1.1% | 0.2% | |
0.0 | 4.4 | |
about 8 years ago | 3 months ago | |
C | ||
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
sqltorrent
-
BTFS (BitTorrent Filesystem)
Or even better store data as an sqlite file that is full-text-search indexed. Then you can full-text search the torrent on demand: https://github.com/bittorrent/sqltorrent
- SQLite BitTorrent Vfs
-
How to circumvent Sci-Hub ISP block
"There was that project some guy posted a while back that used a combination of sqlite and partial downloads to enable searches on a database before it was downloaded all the way."
https://github.com/bittorrent/sqltorrent
- Hosting SQLite databases on GitHub Pages (or any static file hoster)
-
Distributed search engines using BitTorrent and SQLite
Interesting question. I looked at the source code to understand that.
SQLite knows where to look for when you open a SQLite database and you run a query, right? It just asks the underlying filesystem to provide N bytes starting from an offset using a C function, then it repeats the same operation on different portions of the file, it does its computation and everybody is happy.
The software relies on sqltorrent, which is a custom VFS for SQLite. That means that SQLite function to read data from a file stored in the filesystem is replaced by a custom function. Such custom code computes which Torrent block(s) should have the highest priority, by dividing the offset and the number of bytes that SQLite wants to read by the size of the torrent blocks. It is just a division.
See: https://github.com/bittorrent/sqltorrent/blob/master/sqltorr...
ipfs
-
Filecoin Foundation Successfully Deploys IPFS in Space
> CDNs
If you think IPFS is trying to "re-spin CDNs as their invention", I'm pretty sure you misunderstand what IPFS. The homepage is a great starting point if you're curious rather than antagonistic: https://ipfs.tech/
> IPFS doesn't solve persistence of data
I don't think it claims to solve this either? What it does claim to solve is the persistence of identifiers of data.
> doesn't solve churn in p2p systems
What P2P system has ever done so or even claimed to have done so?
- Ask HN: Do we have a protocol for interplanetary internet?
- Create bug Microsoft Windows98 to help me get the job and the other
-
Build an AI-powered NFT generator with TS, GPT, Polygon and CASE (Part 1/2)
We will create a web app that will let users mint a NFT in one click: creating an AI art from a prompt, storing it on IPFS and mint the unique NFT in Polygon so you can see it on OpenSea. Pretty cool right ?
-
Building Trust in a Trustless World: Decentralized Applications Unveiled
IPFS, which stands for Inter-Planetary File System, is a decentralized storage system where files are distributed among peers in a peer-to-peer (P2P) network. It operates on a "content addressable" model, meaning that each file is given a unique hash that serves as its identifier. By using this hash, you can retrieve any file from any IPFS node in the network.
-
rarbg archive removed from GitHub due to DMCA
Like this? https://ipfs.tech/
-
Mirrors or alternatives to e621 on the decentralized / distributed web
Was thinking of something and figured it would be a good opportunity to ask here. With the censorship madness going on in the world and furry community included, I often worry if even places like e621 can remain free and open in the face of increasing pressure by increasingly angry and authoritarian crowds. For both this and other geek reasons I've been interested in decentralized internet technology for a long time, following projects like IFPS which I just love as a concept.
-
How would you exchange information between places thousands of light years apart? How would "internet" work at such distances?
Using the Interplanetary File System, a real thing that exists today, designed for this purpose.
-
Alternative to Youtube Vimeo
I post a lot about IPFS, I was using the 'ipfs mount' to virtually offer my entire collection from my NAS (on a private 'swarm' of course) to the remote stations.
- Vous avez un avatar hexagonal sur reddit ? Félicitations, c'est un NFT. Vous ne le saviez pas ? C'est normal, reddit évite soigneusement d'utiliser ce terme, réussissant ainsi à vendre des NFT à ses utilisateurs largement anti-crypto.
What are some alternatives?
sql.js-httpvfs - Hosting read-only SQLite databases on static file hosters like Github Pages
arweave - The Arweave server and App Developer Toolkit.
torrent-net - Distributed search engines using BitTorrent and SQLite
ZeroNet - ZeroNet - Decentralized websites using Bitcoin crypto and BitTorrent network
datasette - An open source multi-tool for exploring and publishing data
orbitdb - Peer-to-Peer Databases for the Decentralized Web
IPSQL - InterPlanetary SQL
nostr - a truly censorship-resistant alternative to Twitter that has a chance of working
apsw - Another Python SQLite wrapper
skynet-webportal - A webapp that makes Skynet accessible to web browsers.
SkySQL
graph-node - Graph Node indexes data from blockchains such as Ethereum and serves it over GraphQL