On Thu, 7 Sep 2006, Ralph Angenendt wrote:
Les Mikesell wrote:
On Thu, 2006-09-07 at 13:08 -0500, Johnny Hughes wrote:
What's the problem with that scheme? It's hundreds of times faster on my second and subsequent machines - and would be for anyone else going through a proxy configured to cache large objects.
What is wrong with that scheme is that only 1 mirror is listed ... if you loose the connection, if it gets overloaded in the middle of your transfer, etc. then there is no failover.
Doesn't your geo-ip enabled DNS service drop non-responding servers? It has been much less trouble in practice from my locations than the fedora or centos4 repositories.
But there is no geo-IP in Centos3 ...
Actually we do use geo-IP in the backend dns for mirror.centos.org - using powerdns and some custom perl.
That looks at the users location and will give a relevant mirror - however as we only have mirror servers in the us and eu it is prety moot for .au
We use that because it can give out one of a random list oif mirrors and thus spreads the load, whereas previously both yum and up2date hit only one of the set of mirrors in rrdns - due to a bug in the python libraries, and so all the load was taken by one server.
Lance
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