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Author Topic: Using OpenDNS Instead of ISP  (Read 1819 times)
pickaxepete (OP)
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August 16, 2014, 05:09:26 PM
Last edit: June 24, 2015, 10:31:37 AM by pickaxepete
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MajidBC
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August 17, 2014, 09:30:21 AM
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I didn't know that internet connection makes difference in mining. Have you compared your results with the other kind of connection?
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August 17, 2014, 03:22:06 PM
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I didn't know that internet connection makes difference in mining. Have you compared your results with the other kind of connection?
The idea of higher communication time does lend to the loss of accepted shares in that if someone else solves before you then your share will be rejected - essentially, it's a first-come, first-served practice.
I am looking at it as reducing any bottlenecks, which I have (limited) control over, and got out of a pool which had a 200ms ping and into one of only 50ms. The longer it takes to get the information, the longer it takes to submit shares. Just like a delay for one race car in a 1/4 mile race, all things being equal (car, setup, skill), the one off the line first will win.
No, I haven't compared, directly, or tested. I'm not sure how I could test this myself.
So, you made it 4 times faster. That's a big deal. Isn't it more expensive?
jonnybravo0311
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August 17, 2014, 04:36:30 PM
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I didn't know that internet connection makes difference in mining. Have you compared your results with the other kind of connection?
The idea of higher communication time does lend to the loss of accepted shares in that if someone else solves before you then your share will be rejected - essentially, it's a first-come, first-served practice.
I am looking at it as reducing any bottlenecks, which I have (limited) control over, and got out of a pool which had a 200ms ping and into one of only 50ms. The longer it takes to get the information, the longer it takes to submit shares. Just like a delay for one race car in a 1/4 mile race, all things being equal (car, setup, skill), the one off the line first will win.
No, I haven't compared, directly, or tested. I'm not sure how I could test this myself.
So, you made it 4 times faster. That's a big deal. Isn't it more expensive?
opendns is free.  That being written, you might want to benchmark your ISP's DNS server against using opendns.  Grab namebench and run it to see what it gives you back.  When my ISP's DNS servers crapped out, I changed to opendns, only to change back because of the latency introduced by opendns.

Jonny's Pool - Mine with us and help us grow!  Support a pool that supports Bitcoin, not a hardware manufacturer's pockets!  No SPV cheats.  No empty blocks.
MajidBC
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August 17, 2014, 06:34:52 PM
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I didn't know that internet connection makes difference in mining. Have you compared your results with the other kind of connection?
The idea of higher communication time does lend to the loss of accepted shares in that if someone else solves before you then your share will be rejected - essentially, it's a first-come, first-served practice.
I am looking at it as reducing any bottlenecks, which I have (limited) control over, and got out of a pool which had a 200ms ping and into one of only 50ms. The longer it takes to get the information, the longer it takes to submit shares. Just like a delay for one race car in a 1/4 mile race, all things being equal (car, setup, skill), the one off the line first will win.
No, I haven't compared, directly, or tested. I'm not sure how I could test this myself.
So, you made it 4 times faster. That's a big deal. Isn't it more expensive?
opendns is free.  That being written, you might want to benchmark your ISP's DNS server against using opendns.  Grab namebench and run it to see what it gives you back.  When my ISP's DNS servers crapped out, I changed to opendns, only to change back because of the latency introduced by opendns.
I'm assuming that your job is related to networking. Thanks for the info.
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August 18, 2014, 12:40:11 AM
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DNS servers do not have anything to do with latency, there only job is to take your web request ie: www.google.com to an ip and make the connection, once done they are done. Now having a good dns server with a faster response time is key when opening web pages and waiting for web pages to load. As far as mining the dns would only have less then a second of interaction find your -o ip address to real ip and making the connection (basically dns is the guy who hooks you up with a blind date), once you two meet he is out of there.

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jonnybravo0311
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August 18, 2014, 01:21:48 AM
Last edit: August 18, 2014, 03:24:24 AM by jonnybravo0311
 #7

DNS servers do not have anything to do with latency, there only job is to take your web request ie: www.google.com to an ip and make the connection, once done they are done. Now having a good dns server with a faster response time is key when opening web pages and waiting for web pages to load. As far as mining the dns would only have less then a second of interaction find your -o ip address to real ip and making the connection (basically dns is the guy who hooks you up with a blind date), once you two meet he is out of there.

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Yes response time of the DNS server itself is crucial but if it takes you 200ms to get to the DNS server instead of 10ms that is an extra 380ms of time wasted.  That's latency.

Jonny's Pool - Mine with us and help us grow!  Support a pool that supports Bitcoin, not a hardware manufacturer's pockets!  No SPV cheats.  No empty blocks.
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August 18, 2014, 01:41:39 AM
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Correct, but as i stated earlier once that connection is made there is virtual no more latency other then the time it takes the data to travel from point A to B, the dns part is over. So changing DNS servers just to save a one time use.. well if it makes you happy Smiley

Also this might help finding the fastest and reliable dns server..

https://www.grc.com/dns/benchmark.htm



jonnybravo0311
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August 18, 2014, 12:32:16 PM
 #9

Thanks for the information, that's very helpful. DNS aside, latency in the communitcation between the miner and the pool(s) will have an affect on the number of accepted shares, correct? Although it may only be negligible at times when the difference in latency is only slight, it could lead to almost completely wasted time and energy if the difference between two pools is significant - e.g. two pools: one at 50ms, one at 250ms. EDIT: to clarify, it would be a waste to mine at a pool with a 250ms ping, compared to the one with the 50ms ping.
Yes, latency is an important factor; however, it is not the only one.  Using your example, I'd mine at a pool with 250ms latency and 0% fee vs the 50ms one with a 5% fee.

Jonny's Pool - Mine with us and help us grow!  Support a pool that supports Bitcoin, not a hardware manufacturer's pockets!  No SPV cheats.  No empty blocks.
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August 22, 2014, 12:31:40 AM
 #10

As mentioned above DNS is only for looking up resolution from a hostname to IP.  Once its been looked up by the operating system, the OS will then cache it for a period of time as well. 

For example on your windows PC if you connect to www.google.com it will obtain the IP from your DNS which will take a certain ms.  But it then keeps that information for the next 24-48 hours (example time frame)

Unless you had a horrid ISP you'd likely be better off looking to tweak your OS to keep the DNS cache longer
specialed101
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August 22, 2014, 11:46:40 AM
 #11

Hi,

    Use Google's DNS servers. They are free, and have never let me down.

        8.8.8.8
        8.8.4.4

"Can I be the sockpuppet General of the Underpants Gnomes?" ~ specialed101
soronto
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August 25, 2014, 12:20:42 PM
 #12

Hi,

    Use Google's DNS servers. They are free, and have never let me down.

        8.8.8.8
        8.8.4.4

And they are helpful to track your Internet activity....
notlist3d
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August 26, 2014, 06:34:31 AM
 #13

Hi,

    Use Google's DNS servers. They are free, and have never let me down.

        8.8.8.8
        8.8.4.4

And they are helpful to track your Internet activity....

They are a viable solution.  Their 8.8.8.8 is hard to forget.  Ive had good luck with them.  And they will be board to tears if they are looking at my mining traffic.
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