> That sounds good. I’d also like to be able to run multiple coin/block
> generators on multiple machines, all behind a single NAT address. I
> haven’t tried this yet so I don’t know if it works on the current
> software.The current version will work fine. They’ll each connect over the Internet, while incoming connections only come to the host that port 8333 is routed to.
As an optimisation, I’ll make a switch “-connect=1.2.3.4” to make it only connect to a specific address. You could make your extra nodes connect to your primary, and only the primary connects over the Internet. It doesn’t really matter for now, since the network would have to get huge before the bandwidth is anything more than trivial.
> BTW I don’t remember if we talked about this, but the
other day some
> people were mentioning secure timestamping. You want to be able
to
> prove that a certain document existed at a certain time in the
past.
> Seems to me that bitcoin’s stack of blocks would be perfect
for this.
Indeed, Bitcoin is a distributed secure timestamp server for transactions. A few lines of code could create a transaction with an extra hash in it of anything that needs to be timestamped. I should add a command to timestamp a file that way.
> > > Later I want to add interfaces to make it really easy
to integrate
> > > into websites from any server side language.
>
> Right, and I’d like to see more of a library interface that
could be
> called from programming or scripting languages, on the client
side as
> well.
Exactly.
Satoshi Nakamoto
https://www.bitcoin.org