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@benhenryhunter
benhenryhunter / missedSlotBids.md
Last active March 22, 2024 03:09
Over a roughly 2 hour window, the max profit relay delivered 9 blocks that failed to be added to chain due to wrong block hash. The relay’s auto demotion check was not working correctly to demote this builder.
[
{
"slot": "8366820",
"parent_hash": "0x27dcb717d5921af93e2b56a82f546e1c11b33619238510cbe36e4d8c43f446a8",
"block_hash": "0x6868f8e474a163bb17f39d05847aa8e3f1b38db3cca0dfc9bd139db1da8dcde2",
"builder_pubkey": "0x8e6df6e0a9ca3fd89db2aa2f3daf77722dc4fbcd15e285ed7d9560fdf07b7d69ba504add4cc12ac999b8094ff30ed06c",
"proposer_pubkey": "0xb6d5424e28a738d002c96a19db7434fff22877272649e0ca38b579bb44398f3977f43af6c055414b7a71ec2bd7cb8480",
"proposer_fee_recipient": "0x72FDdC41CA177551Ce5949C75a92b945eFa04141",
"gas_limit": "30000000",
@yorickdowne
yorickdowne / HallOfBlame.md
Last active October 15, 2025 16:03
Great and less great SSDs for Ethereum nodes

Overview

Syncing an Ethereum node is largely reliant on latency and IOPS, I/O Per Second, of the storage. Budget SSDs will struggle to an extent, and some won't be able to sync at all. IOPS can roughly be used as proxy of / predictor for latency. Measuring latency directly is arguably better.

This document aims to snapshot some known good and known bad models.

The drive lists are ordered by interface and then by capacity and alphabetically by vendor name, not by preference. The lists are not exhaustive at all. @mwpastore linked a filterable spreadsheet in comments that has a far greater variety of drives and their characteristics. Filter it by DRAM yes, NAND Type TLC, Form Factor M.2, and desired capacity.

For size, 4TB is a conservative choice which also supports a Fusaka "supernode". The smaller 2TB drive should last an Ethereum full node until at least sometime 2026, with [pre-merge history expiry](http

@mrladeia
mrladeia / readme.md
Last active June 16, 2025 06:14
Iptables to Oracle Cloud port 80 and 443 open

IPTABLES to Oracle Cloud port 80 and 443 open

If you need to open up ports 80 and 443, on file /etc/iptables/rules.v4 just add

-A INPUT -p tcp -m state --state NEW -m multiport --dports 80,443 -j ACCEPT

directly below