@compendia/ipfs-bitswap-commonjs

Node.js implementation of the Bitswap data exchange protocol used by IPFS

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import compendiaIpfsBitswapCommonjs from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/@compendia/ipfs-bitswap-commonjs';
</script>

README

ipfs-bitswap

Travis CI

JavaScript implementation of the Bitswap 'data exchange' protocol used by IPFS

Lead Maintainer

Dirk McCormick

Table of Contents

Install

npm

> npm install ipfs-bitswap

Use in Node.js or in the browser with browserify, webpack or any other bundler

const Bitswap = require('ipfs-bitswap')

Use in a browser using a script tag

Loading this module through a script tag will make the IpfsBitswap object available in the global namespace.

<script src="https://unpkg.com/ipfs-bitswap/dist/index.min.js"></script>
<!-- OR -->
<script src="https://unpkg.com/ipfs-bitswap/dist/index.js"></script>

API

See https://ipfs.github.io/js-ipfs-bitswap

Stats

const bitswapNode = // ...

const stats = bitswapNode.stat()

Stats contains a snapshot accessor, a moving average acessor and a peer accessor.

Besides that, it emits "update" events every time it is updated.

stats.on('update', (stats) => {
  console.log('latest stats snapshot: %j', stats)
})

Peer accessor:

You can get the stats for a specific peer by doing:

const peerStats = stats.forPeer(peerId)

The returned object behaves like the root stats accessor (has a snapshot, a moving average accessors and is an event emitter).

Global snapshot accessor:

const snapshot = stats.snapshot
console.log('stats: %j', snapshot)

the snapshot will contain the following keys, with the values being bignumber.js instances:

// stats: {
//   "dataReceived":"96",
//   "blocksReceived":"2",
//   "dataReceived":"96",
//   "dupBlksReceived":"0",
//   "dupDataReceived":"0",
//   "blocksSent":"0",
//   "dataSent":"0",
//   "providesBufferLength":"0",
//   "wantListLength":"0",
//   "peerCount":"1"
// }

Moving average accessor:

const movingAverages = stats.movingAverages

This object contains these properties:

  • 'blocksReceived',
  • 'dataReceived',
  • 'dupBlksReceived',
  • 'dupDataReceived',
  • 'blocksSent',
  • 'dataSent',
  • 'providesBufferLength',
  • 'wantListLength',
  • 'peerCount'
const dataReceivedMovingAverages = movingAverages.dataReceived

Each one of these will contain one key per interval (miliseconds), being the default intervals defined:

  • 60000 (1 minute)
  • 300000 (5 minutes)
  • 900000 (15 minutes)

You can then select one of them

const oneMinuteDataReceivedMovingAverages = dataReceivedMovingAverages[60000]

This object will be a movingAverage instance.

Development

Structure

» tree src
src
├── constants.js
├── decision-engine
│   ├── index.js
│   └── ledger.js
├── index.js
├── network.js             # Handles peerSet and open new conns
├── notifications.js       # Handles tracking of incomning blocks and wants/unwants.
├─── want-manager          # Keeps track of all blocks the peer (self) wants
│   ├── index.js
│   └── msg-queue.js       # Messages to send queue, one per peer
└─── types
    ├── message            # (Type) message that is put in the wire
    │   ├── entry.js
    │   ├── index.js
    │   └── message.proto.js
    └── wantlist           # (Type) track wanted blocks
        ├── entry.js
        └── index.js

Performance tests

You can run performance tests like this:

$ npm run benchmarks

Profiling

You can run each of the individual performance tests with a profiler like 0x.

To do that, you need to install 0x:

$ npm install 0x --global

And then run the test:

$ 0x test/benchmarks/get-many

This will output a flame graph and print the location for it. Use the browser Chrome to open and inspect the generated graph.

Flame graph

Contribute

Feel free to join in. All welcome. Open an issue!

This repository falls under the IPFS Code of Conduct.

License

MIT