Unter h**p://jigle.com findet sich neuerdings eine weiter internet-basierte Suchmaschine für den Esel.
Diese Suchmaschine soll den Esel nur sehr sehr wenig belasten und ich denke, man kann dem trauen, da sie von Maurice (der Serbverlist-Typ) und Sharereactor.com unterstützt wird. Probiert's mal aus!
Unten Stellungnahem zur Frage, wie's funktioniert und ob's schadet:
How Jigle interoperates with the eDonkey2000 network Jigle tries to communicate with the eDonkey2000 network without causing too much extra load on it.
Jigle communicates only with ed2k servers, not with peers. It doesn't even know anything about peers.
Communication with servers is UDP transport only, no TCP (so, Jigle allocates no 'user slots' at the servers).
Any ed2k network query must have a minumum length of two characters, or it is rejected.
Every network query that has been executed is locked for thirty minutes and cannot be repeated during that time.
Jigle creates only AND-type ed2k network queries, as they produce less network traffic than OR-type queries.
Network queries are not directly executed, every query is first stored to a queue, and Jigle does not execute more than one query from that queue during the time of 4 seconds. So, under high load, Jigle is expected to launch exactly one query every 4 seconds. The queue has a limited length (15 items, or, in other words, 60 seconds), additional queries beyond that are rejected.
The Jigle content IDs for the eDonkey2000 network have the following syntax:
ed2k:<size>:<hex-hash>
where <size> is the length of the content in bytes and <hex-hash> is the hexadecimal representation of its MD4 hash. Allthough the hash would suffice for the purpose of identification, there is no hash-based ed2k network query that returns information of any use to Jigle (AFAIK). Therefore, ID-based search is implemented as size-based search, which works very well, but demands to carry the size additionally to the hash in the content ID in order to work under all circumstances.
So, a fully qualified content ID of the eDonkey2000 network looks like that:
ed2k:95504:C664A1CE7ADC2541C5CF4A8CBB795B49
The cool thing about this is that any content ID can be used to construct a filename-independent URL to a content in the eDonkey2000 network through Jigle:
Try it out! In case you get an empty search result, it means that this content is currently not found in the database. Go ahead and launch an eDonkey2000 network query then to find out what names are currently in use for that file (if any).
Such an URL can be used in web pages or transferred to others by e-mail or in an IRC chat etc., just like any other URL.
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TuckerIII
Anmeldedatum: 01.01.1970 Beiträge: 0
Verfasst am: 03.02.2009, 12:18
das teil ist echt gut, das benutze ich schon eine ganze weile. einen link gibts auch auf unserer homepage: