Changes for page Networks
Last modified by Zenna Elfen on 2026/01/05 21:51
From version 35.1
edited by Zenna Elfen
on 2026/01/05 19:51
on 2026/01/05 19:51
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To version 58.1
edited by Zenna Elfen
on 2026/01/05 20:58
on 2026/01/05 20:58
Change comment:
There is no comment for this version
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... ... @@ -2,45 +2,24 @@ 2 2 ((( 3 3 (% class="container" %) 4 4 ((( 5 -= Peer-for-Peer Networks = 6 - 7 -P4P, short for Peer-4-Peer (which in turn is short for Peer-for-Peer) are a family of networks which build on principles of local-first, peer-2-peer, open-source, routing agnostic (offline-first) and mutual-aid principles. The above is a lot of terms which in and of themselves carry a lot of meaning, yet when combined they enable censorship-resistant, resilient and adaptive, sustainable and energy-efficient communication infrastructures. 8 -))) 9 -))) 10 - 11 - 12 - 13 - 14 - 15 - 16 - 17 17 == Building Blocks of P4P Networks == 18 18 7 +Making a P4P network is a bit different than traditional communication networks, namely because we side-step the traditional confinement of the internet layers and connect in a variety of means, from bluetooth to sneakernet and beyond. This is of course very nice in a variety of circumstances and to read more about the principles and capabilities of P4P networks, see the [[about>>doc:P4P.WebHome]] page. 19 19 20 -(% class="col-xs-12 col-sm-5" %) 21 -((( 22 -To fully assemble a P4P network one needs a few different building blocks, below is an overview of 15 of those building blocks. Lost in translation? Take a look at the [[terminology>>doc:P4P.Definitions.WebHome]]. 23 - 24 -{{box title="==== Contents ==== 25 - 26 -====== ======"}} 27 -{{toc depth="5"/}} 28 -{{/box}} 9 +To fully assemble a P4P network one needs a few different building blocks, below is an overview of 15 of those building blocks. This outline of 15 building blocks has been collaboratively developed. If you see something missing or would like to give feedback, please reach out to Zenna. Now, let's dive into the building-blocks which make P4P protocols. 29 29 ))) 11 +))) 30 30 31 31 32 32 33 33 34 - 35 - 36 - 37 - 38 - 39 - 40 40 (% class="row" %) 41 41 ((( 42 -==== ==== 18 +(% class="col-xs-12 col-sm-8" %) 19 +((( 20 +== 15 Building Blocks of P4P Networks == 43 43 22 + 44 44 ==== **1. Data Synchronization** ==== 45 45 46 46 > Synchronization answers **how updates flow between peers** and how they determine what data to exchange. This layer is about **diffing, reconciliation, order, causality tracking, and efficient exchange**, not persistence or user-facing collaboration semantics. ... ... @@ -178,14 +178,34 @@ 178 178 179 179 180 180 160 + 161 +))) 181 181 163 + 164 + 165 + 166 + 167 + 168 + 169 +(% class="col-xs-12 col-sm-4" %) 170 +((( 171 +{{box title="==== **Contents** ==== 172 + 173 + "}} 174 +{{toc depth="5"/}} 175 +{{/box}} 176 +))) 177 + 178 + 179 +(% class="col-xs-12 col-sm-12" %) 180 +((( 182 182 == Distributed Network Types == 183 183 184 184 185 185 [[Flowchart depicting distributed network variants, under development. Building on work from Z. Elfen, 2024: ~[~[https:~~~~/~~~~/doi.org/10.17613/naj7d-6g984~>~>https://doi.org/10.17613/naj7d-6g984~]~]>>image:P4P_Typology.png||alt="Flowchart depicting typologies of distributed networks, such as Friend-2-Friend, Grassroots Networks, Federated Networks, Local-First, P2P and P4P Networks" data-xwiki-image-style-alignment="center" height="649" width="639"]] 186 186 187 -== == 188 188 187 + 189 189 == Overview of P4P Networks == 190 190 191 191 {{include reference="Projects.WebHome"/}}