Evaluation of IPFS paper
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An evaluation of the IPFS paper
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2021-01-06 Mark Spanbroek
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https://ipfs.io/ipfs/QmR7GSQM93Cx5eAg6a6yRzNde1FQv7uL6X1o4k7zrJa3LX/ipfs.draft3.pdf
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Goal of this evaluation is to find things to adopt or avoid while designing
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Dagger. It is not meant to be a criticism of IPFS.
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#### Pros:
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+ IPFS is designed by simplifying, evolving, and connecting proven techniques
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(§3)
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+ Consists of a stack of separately described sub-protocols (§3)
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+ Uses Coral DSHT to favor data that is nearby, reducing latency of lookup
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(§2.1.2)
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+ Uses proof-of-work in S/Kademlia to discourage Sybil attacks (§2.1.3)
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+ Favors self-describing values such as multihash (§3.1) and multiaddr (§3.2.1)
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+ BitSwap protocol for exchanging blocks supports multiple strategies (§3.4.2)
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+ Uses content addressing (§3.5)
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+ The Merkle DAG is simple, yet allows constucting filesystems,
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key-value stores, databases, messaging system, etc.. (§3.5)
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#### Cons:
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- Kademlia prefers long-lived nodes, which is not ideal for mobile enviroments
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(§2.1.1)
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- BitSwap falls just short of introducing a currency with micro payments,
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necessitating additional work for nodes to find blocks to barter with (§3.4)
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- Merkle DAGs and Paths (§3.5.1) feel like an unnecessary complication at the
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protocol level; they could have been implemented on top of a system consisting
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solely of content addressable chunks
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- Object pinning (§3.5.3) inevitably leads to centralized gateways to IPFS, such
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as Infura and Pinata
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- There are no self-describing multiformats for encryption and signing (§3.5.5)
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- IPFS uses variable size blocks instead of fixed-size chunks (§3.6)
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- Supporting version control directly in IPFS feels like an unnecessary
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complication (§3.6.5)
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- Handles mutable state by hacking it into the routing DHT, instead of using a
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separate mutable naming system like ENS
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