What Is Netsplit?
Netsplits are the worst thing that can happen to your internet connection. It's like you're on the phone with your mom, and all of a sudden—BAM!—she's gone. And then you're just sitting there, staring at your phone and wondering what just happened and if she's OK. It's also like when your friend says they want to meet up with you after school but then doesn't show up, and you have to walk home alone, thinking about all the things they could have said that would have prevented this from happening (and how many times they could have texted). And it's kind of like when someone asks you out on a date, and then moments later they cancel on you because their cousin came into town unexpectedly and needs their help organizing her wedding registry. If you've ever used IRC, you know how frustrating it can be when your connection drops. You try to reconnect, and you get kicked off the server. You try again, and you get kicked off again. And then you start getting the "You have been idle for too long" message. That's what happens when there's a netsplit or network split. It's when one or more of your connections splits off from the rest of the network, so they don't share information anymore. An example of netsplit can be seen by looking at IRC servers and clients. Consider a scenario where four servers (A, B, C, and D) are connected. Server A has a user named John; server B has a user named Sam; server C has a user named Smith; server D has a user named Sohail. Each user is connected to his or her server at the beginning, and all of these servers are IRC frontend applications and are connected
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