Hello John
It is really nice job.
I am writing from Bangladesh, a country on South Asia with population of 1500 Million with 144k squire kilometer. Highest density of population.
Anyway, I myself Maintain few of Linux Project & GNU Projects. I started with CentOS. Now it's becoming bigger and bigger.
You work just give me a visual idea of Disk Space Usage of CentOS Mirror Project. In my other email, I said that CentOS is the easiest to Mirror, but CentOS Master Mirror Maintainer Disagreed with me.
Just forget everything, Let me give you a Thanks from deep of my heart to build the Idea, create the graph & finally share with us. It's a real nice work which can share with others and show the CentOS Judgment of using Disk Space for it's Supporter (Mirror Hoster)
Just a query, Can I use this graph on any blog, website or other media?
Kindly
Ahamed Bauani http://www.google.com/search?q=bauani
My Mirror Site Located in Bangladesh http://mirrors.bd-servers.net/centos/
On Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 6:13 AM, J.H. warthog9@kernel.org wrote:
Hey Everyone,
Just thought I'd share a graph I made up which shows the relative size on disk of what kernel.org has.
http://userweb.kernel.org/~warthog9/wall-o-shame/mirrors.all.oct.1.2010.pret...
I'm going to try and update it every so often (new graphs will be in that wall-o-shame directory).
Just figured it's some interesting data, and I must say I'm actually quite impressed with CentOS' judicious use of disk space.
Anyway just sharing since I needed the graph for other things.
- John 'Warthog9' Hawley
Chief Kernel.org Administrator _______________________________________________ CentOS-mirror mailing list CentOS-mirror@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-mirror