There are supposed to be many ways of restricting your throughput; you can just configure your mirror to cap your output at 10Mbps, for example. This at least is doable with iptables, if not at a "higher" level. I know some ftp daemons provide easy support for that, I don't know about web servers...
Personally, people can download all they want from my mirror....
Ahh, isn't University bandwidth great? :)
--Jim
On Mon, Sep 28, 2009 at 7:38 AM, Marten Lehmann lehmann@cnm.de wrote:
Hello,
We are doing about 35Mb/s of traffic on our CentOS box here...
that's definetely too much for us. We are really interested to be a CentOS mirror, but we cannot efford more than 10MBit average bandwidth for CentOS per month.
Is it possible to define in which ratio a mirror shall be listed for updates and downloads?
And is it possible to delist a mirror until the end of a month if the traffic has been too much for this certain month (e.g. due to a openoffice update)?
Regards Marten _______________________________________________ CentOS-mirror mailing list CentOS-mirror@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-mirror