* rather than have all jobs created hooked into the clock for offset updates, have the jobQueue stay hooked up and update any active jobs accordingly (killing a memory leak of a JobTiming objects - one per job)
* dont go totally insane during shutdown and log like mad (though the clientApp things still log like mad, since they don't know the router is going down)
* adjust memory buffer sizes based on real world values so we don't have to expand/contract a lot
* dont display things that are completely useless (who cares what the first 32 bytes of a public key are?)
* reduce temporary object creation
* use more efficient collections at times
* on shutdown, log some state information (ready/timed jobs, pending messages, etc)
* explicit GC every 10 jobs. yeah, not efficient, but just for now we'll keep 'er in there
* only reread the router config file if it changes (duh)
the router.config var "profileOrganizer.reliabilityThresholdFactor=0.75" (or environment property -DprofileOrganizer.reliabilityThresholdFactor=0.5) etc
"burn it it" some more, but its looking good.
* test all tunnels we manage every period or two. later we'll want to include some randomization to help fight traffic analysis, but that falls into the i2p 3.0 tunnel chaff / mixing / etc)
* test inbound tunnels correctly (use an outbound tunnel, not direct)
* only give the tunnels 30 seconds to succeed
* mark the tunnel as tested for both the inbound and outbound side and adjust the profiles for all participants accordingly
* keep track of the 'last test time' on a tunnel
* new tunnel test response time profile stat, as well as overall router stat (published in the netDb as "tunnel.testSuccessTime")
* rewrite of the speed calculator - the value it generates now is essentially "how many round trip messages can this router pass in a minute".
it also allows a few runtime configurable options:
= speedCalculator.eventThreshold:
we use the smallest measurement period that has at least this many events in it (10m, 60m, 24h, lifetime)
= speedCalculator.useInstantaneousRates:
when we use the estimated round trip time, do we use instantaneous or period averages?
= speedCalculator.useTunnelTestOnly:
do we only use the tunnel test time (no db response or tunnel create time, or even estimated round trip times)?
* fix the reliability calculator to use the 10 minute tunnel create successes, not the (almost always 0) 1 minute rate.
* persist the tunnel create response time and send success time correctly (duh)
* add a new main() to PeerProfile - PeerProfile [filename]* will calculate the values of the peer profiles specified. useful for tweaking the calculator, and/or the configurable options. ala:
java -DspeedCalculator.useInstantaneousRates peerProfiles/profile-*.dat
remove semantic inconsistency wrt getRemoteId(false) - it shouldn't ever timeout, since it always returns immediately
javadoc (though i wish i understood the close/close2/sendClose more clearly so i could javadoc that process)
* netDb.failedPeers (how many peers didn't reply to a lookup in time)
* netDb.searchCount (how many searches we send out in a 3 hour period)
probabalistically include the leaseSet of the sender in the garlic sent
to a peer if the client requests it to be included (aka if they want
replies). By default, this is enabled (disable by setting the I2CP
prop "shouldBundleReplyInfo=false"). Also, by default the probability is
30% (w00 h00, arbitrary values!), which can be overridden via the I2CP
prop "bundleReplyInfoProbability=80" (or =10, or =100, etc). The tradeoff
here is quicker replies in exchange for bandwidth (the dbStore).
Yeah, it'd be nice if there were something keeping track of which leaseSet
each client sent to each peer so that it could explicitly include it only
if it were necessary, but for now that's probably overkill.