Yes, I’m familiar with that write up…. I wrote it!
And yes, it's why I later grabbed a bunch of compression algorithms and went with
lzss as it compressed well, fast an ld was tiny compared to others...
https://virtuallyfun.com/wordpress/2014/06/06/i-forget-what-i-was-looking-f…
I would highly recommend compressing the frames for sure. On high latency links it sure
helps too.
It's also why cisco had licensed LZS compression for their serial links. And totally
worth looking at.
From: Jeffrey H. Johnson
Sent: Monday, 3 September 2018 15:12
To: Derek Fawcus
Cc: tuhs(a)minnie.tuhs.org
Subject: Re: [TUHS] RetroNet…
Interestingly -
https://virtuallyfun.com/wordpress/2013/10/25/doom-ipx-revisited/ has a good writeup on
the Doom IPX issue - it was a poor implementation sending mainly empty frames.
https://virtuallyfun.com/wordpress/2014/06/10/announcing-hecnetnt/ shows how adding
compression to a bridge is able to eliminate 80% of the traffic.
Bring this back on topic, perhaps adding optional LZO compression, but enabled by default,
would be a good idea for RetroNet.
--Jeff
On Sep 2, 2018, at 6:45 PM, Derek Fawcus <dfawcus+lists-tuhs(a)employees.org> wrote:
On Thu, Aug 30, 2018 at 12:11:17PM -0600, Grant Taylor via TUHS wrote:
But if you want to use RetroNet to play Doom across IPX with buddies across town, then you
should be able to do so.
Err - maybe not.
I recall doing that once or twice on our office LAN at the time, it was very chatty - as I
recall it sucked most of the available b/w.
(Or maybe that was just 'cause it was using broadcast packets)
DF