On Thu, 2005-11-24 at 13:12 -0700, Collins Richey wrote:
On 11/24/05, Bryan J. Smith thebs413@earthlink.net wrote:
IMO, this is purely a mechanical problem. Whatever the methods, other FOSS providers manage to avoid this type of erratic delivery. I don't have a clue how. I have no experience setting up or maintaining a system of mirrors.
I'm on the fifth attempt this morning to get through about 200 packages, and I don't think the results would have been much different if I were trying to sync a local mirror. This isn't even the post-new-update-rush, for $DEITY sake.The first 3 attempts hung totally at retrieving a man update. The next attempt waded through about 80 more packages and then hung. The final attempt is trying many mirrors again and not getting there again.
I've changed my mirror settings a few times, but there does not appear to be an ideal solution. Thus my frustration.
---- FWIW - I set up a new system yesterday with CentOS 4.1 disks and of course then had to update...it was 192 packages. It took a while - no errors.
I then added dag's repository and was able to get what I wanted there.
Dag has told this list that his primary server - heanet is an Apache test site which probably accounts for some if not most of the errors that I have gotten with it reports errors from his repository such as 0 sized repomd. When I need to update things of a critical nature, I disable dag's repo and can update from CentOS no problem.
Yes, there have been times when it's taken a day or two to get everything updated, primarily because of issues with dag repository and it's frustrating but I guess I never saw the need to whine about it and suspect that others feel the same way.
As has been suggested by others, if you feel the need for reliability, you always have the option to create your own mirror and rsync the repositories that you use.
Craig