Good day,
I've gotten my company to tentatively agree to hosting a couple mirrors of repositories for software that we use and need to make sure that the requirements for new mirrors at http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/CreatePublicMirrors are within our allowances. The portion I'm looking for clarification on is the very last NOTE block at the bottom of the page which states:
"If you have a data cap which is lower than 15 Tb (depending on region), please don't try to add that machine as a mirror."
Is the unit there in teraBITS (little b) or teraBYTES (big b)? I'm not working with a data cap but do have a 95th percentile bandwidth allotment that I must keep mirrors under and if that 15 Tb is representative of the traffic I could expect over a month then 15 Tb of traffic would be right around 6 Mbps and acceptable while 15 TB of traffic would be over my allotment.
Anyone have some bandwidth graphs they can share for their public mirrors?
Thanks, Greg
Hi Greg, From my own experience here in Clouvider (UK), you can expect more than 6Mbps of traffic (95 percentle) going through your mirror.
With Kind Regards, Dominik Nowacki
Clouvider Limited is a limited company registered in England and Wales. Registered number: 08750969. Registered office: 88 Wood Street, London, United Kingdom, EC2V 7RS. Please note that Clouvider Limited may monitor email traffic data and also the content of email for the purposes of security and staff training. This message contains confidential information and is intended only for the intended recipient. If you do not believe you are the intended recipient you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this e-mail. Please notify abuse@clouvider.net of this e-mail immediately by e-mail if you have received this e-mail by mistake and delete this e-mail from your system. E-mail transmission cannot be guaranteed to be secure or error-free as information could be intercepted, corrupted, lost, destroyed, arrive late or incomplete, or contain viruses. Clouvider Limited nor any of its employees therefore does not accept liability for any errors or omissions in the contents of this message, which arise as a result of e-mail transmission. If verification is required please request a hard-copy version.
-----Original Message----- From: centos-mirror-bounces@centos.org [mailto:centos-mirror-bounces@centos.org] On Behalf Of Greg Walters Sent: 07 April 2015 20:06 To: CentOS-mirror@centos.org Subject: [CentOS-mirror] Clarification on new mirror reqs
Good day,
I've gotten my company to tentatively agree to hosting a couple mirrors of repositories for software that we use and need to make sure that the requirements for new mirrors at http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/CreatePublicMirrors are within our allowances. The portion I'm looking for clarification on is the very last NOTE block at the bottom of the page which states:
"If you have a data cap which is lower than 15 Tb (depending on region), please don't try to add that machine as a mirror."
Is the unit there in teraBITS (little b) or teraBYTES (big b)? I'm not working with a data cap but do have a 95th percentile bandwidth allotment that I must keep mirrors under and if that 15 Tb is representative of the traffic I could expect over a month then 15 Tb of traffic would be right around 6 Mbps and acceptable while 15 TB of traffic would be over my allotment.
Anyone have some bandwidth graphs they can share for their public mirrors?
Thanks, Greg
What do you see on average?
Thanks, Greg
On 4/7/15 2:09 PM, Dominik Nowacki wrote:
Hi Greg, From my own experience here in Clouvider (UK), you can expect more than 6Mbps of traffic (95 percentle) going through your mirror.
With Kind Regards, Dominik Nowacki
Clouvider Limited is a limited company registered in England and Wales. Registered number: 08750969. Registered office: 88 Wood Street, London, United Kingdom, EC2V 7RS. Please note that Clouvider Limited may monitor email traffic data and also the content of email for the purposes of security and staff training. This message contains confidential information and is intended only for the intended recipient. If you do not believe you are the intended recipient you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this e-mail. Please notify abuse@clouvider.net of this e-mail immediately by e-mail if you have received this e-mail by mistake and delete this e-mail from your system. E-mail transmission cannot be guaranteed to be secure or error-free as information could be intercepted, corrupted, lost, destroyed, arrive late or incomplete, or contain viruses. Clouvider Limited nor any of its employees therefore does not accept liability for any errors or omissions in the contents of this message, which arise as a result of e-mail transmission. If verification is required please request a hard-copy version.
-----Original Message----- From: centos-mirror-bounces@centos.org [mailto:centos-mirror-bounces@centos.org] On Behalf Of Greg Walters Sent: 07 April 2015 20:06 To: CentOS-mirror@centos.org Subject: [CentOS-mirror] Clarification on new mirror reqs
Good day,
I've gotten my company to tentatively agree to hosting a couple mirrors of repositories for software that we use and need to make sure that the requirements for new mirrors at http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/CreatePublicMirrors are within our allowances. The portion I'm looking for clarification on is the very last NOTE block at the bottom of the page which states:
"If you have a data cap which is lower than 15 Tb (depending on region), please don't try to add that machine as a mirror."
Is the unit there in teraBITS (little b) or teraBYTES (big b)? I'm not working with a data cap but do have a 95th percentile bandwidth allotment that I must keep mirrors under and if that 15 Tb is representative of the traffic I could expect over a month then 15 Tb of traffic would be right around 6 Mbps and acceptable while 15 TB of traffic would be over my allotment.
Anyone have some bandwidth graphs they can share for their public mirrors?
Thanks, Greg
CentOS-mirror mailing list CentOS-mirror@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-mirror
Greg, we were observing around 25-35 Mbps of traffic.
With Kind Regards, Dominik Nowacki
Clouvider Limited is a limited company registered in England and Wales. Registered number: 08750969. Registered office: 88 Wood Street, London, United Kingdom, EC2V 7RS. Please note that Clouvider Limited may monitor email traffic data and also the content of email for the purposes of security and staff training. This message contains confidential information and is intended only for the intended recipient. If you do not believe you are the intended recipient you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this e-mail. Please notify abuse@clouvider.net of this e-mail immediately by e-mail if you have received this e-mail by mistake and delete this e-mail from your system. E-mail transmission cannot be guaranteed to be secure or error-free as information could be intercepted, corrupted, lost, destroyed, arrive late or incomplete, or contain viruses. Clouvider Limited nor any of its employees therefore does not accept liability for any errors or omissions in the contents of this message, which arise as a result of e-mail transmission. If verification is required please request a hard-copy version.
-----Original Message----- From: centos-mirror-bounces@centos.org [mailto:centos-mirror-bounces@centos.org] On Behalf Of Greg Walters Sent: 07 April 2015 20:18 To: centos-mirror@centos.org Subject: Re: [CentOS-mirror] Clarification on new mirror reqs
What do you see on average?
Thanks, Greg
On 4/7/15 2:09 PM, Dominik Nowacki wrote:
Hi Greg, From my own experience here in Clouvider (UK), you can expect more than 6Mbps of traffic (95 percentle) going through your mirror.
With Kind Regards, Dominik Nowacki
Clouvider Limited is a limited company registered in England and Wales. Registered number: 08750969. Registered office: 88 Wood Street, London, United Kingdom, EC2V 7RS. Please note that Clouvider Limited may monitor email traffic data and also the content of email for the purposes of security and staff training. This message contains confidential information and is intended only for the intended recipient. If you do not believe you are the intended recipient you should not disseminate, distribute or copy this e-mail. Please notify abuse@clouvider.net of this e-mail immediately by e-mail if you have received this e-mail by mistake and delete this e-mail from your system. E-mail transmission cannot be guaranteed to be secure or error-free as information could be intercepted, corrupted, lost, destroyed, arrive late or incomplete, or contain viruses. Clouvider Limited nor any of its employees therefore does not accept liability for any errors or omissions in the contents of this message, which arise as a result of e-mail transmission. If verification is required please request a hard-copy version.
-----Original Message----- From: centos-mirror-bounces@centos.org [mailto:centos-mirror-bounces@centos.org] On Behalf Of Greg Walters Sent: 07 April 2015 20:06 To: CentOS-mirror@centos.org Subject: [CentOS-mirror] Clarification on new mirror reqs
Good day,
I've gotten my company to tentatively agree to hosting a couple mirrors of repositories for software that we use and need to make sure that the requirements for new mirrors at http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/CreatePublicMirrors are within our allowances. The portion I'm looking for clarification on is the very last NOTE block at the bottom of the page which states:
"If you have a data cap which is lower than 15 Tb (depending on region), please don't try to add that machine as a mirror."
Is the unit there in teraBITS (little b) or teraBYTES (big b)? I'm not working with a data cap but do have a 95th percentile bandwidth allotment that I must keep mirrors under and if that 15 Tb is representative of the traffic I could expect over a month then 15 Tb of traffic would be right around 6 Mbps and acceptable while 15 TB of traffic would be over my allotment.
Anyone have some bandwidth graphs they can share for their public mirrors?
Thanks, Greg
CentOS-mirror mailing list CentOS-mirror@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-mirror
On Tue, Apr 07, 2015 at 02:17:35PM -0500, Greg Walters wrote:
What do you see on average? On 4/7/15 2:09 PM, Dominik Nowacki wrote:
Hi Greg, From my own experience here in Clouvider (UK), you can expect more than 6Mbps of traffic (95 percentle) going through your mirror.
For CentOS at our site (ftp.icm.edu.pl) between Aug 25th and yesterday we got 12.6 Mbps on average. Daily averages were between 1.9 and 29.3 Mbps.
R.
Our monthly average is 13.6 Mbps. We're located in Vancouver, Canada.
On Tue, Apr 7, 2015 at 12:34 PM, Rafal Maszkowski rzm@icm.edu.pl wrote:
On Tue, Apr 07, 2015 at 02:17:35PM -0500, Greg Walters wrote:
What do you see on average? On 4/7/15 2:09 PM, Dominik Nowacki wrote:
Hi Greg, From my own experience here in Clouvider (UK), you can expect more
than 6Mbps of traffic (95 percentle) going through your mirror.
For CentOS at our site (ftp.icm.edu.pl) between Aug 25th and yesterday we got 12.6 Mbps on average. Daily averages were between 1.9 and 29.3 Mbps.
R.
„Walczy on z całym zapamiętaniem przeciwko intelektowi” - z akt personalnych prof. A. Baeumlera _______________________________________________ CentOS-mirror mailing list CentOS-mirror@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-mirror
Greg,
Here is a RRD graph of my mirror (http://mirror.redsox.cc/pub) here in Central, NC... This is for 1 week with 1 hour averages. You can see my 95th percentile is ~63Mbps.
On Tue, Apr 7, 2015 at 3:37 PM, Robert Duffy rob@esecuredata.com wrote:
Our monthly average is 13.6 Mbps. We're located in Vancouver, Canada.
On Tue, Apr 7, 2015 at 12:34 PM, Rafal Maszkowski rzm@icm.edu.pl wrote:
On Tue, Apr 07, 2015 at 02:17:35PM -0500, Greg Walters wrote:
What do you see on average? On 4/7/15 2:09 PM, Dominik Nowacki wrote:
Hi Greg, From my own experience here in Clouvider (UK), you can expect more
than 6Mbps of traffic (95 percentle) going through your mirror.
For CentOS at our site (ftp.icm.edu.pl) between Aug 25th and yesterday we got 12.6 Mbps on average. Daily averages were between 1.9 and 29.3 Mbps.
R.
„Walczy on z całym zapamiętaniem przeciwko intelektowi” - z akt personalnych prof. A. Baeumlera _______________________________________________ CentOS-mirror mailing list CentOS-mirror@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-mirror
-- Regards, Rob
Robert Duffy eSecureData.com Inc. 1478 Hartley Ave. Coquitlam, BC V3K 7A1 T: (800) 620-1985 F: (800) 620-1986
This communication is intended for the use of the recipient to which it is addressed, and may contain confidential, personal and or privileged information. Please contact the sender immediately if you are not the intended recipient of this communication, and do not copy, distribute, or take action relying on the contents herein. Any communication received in error, or subsequent reply, should be deleted or destroyed.
CentOS-mirror mailing list CentOS-mirror@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-mirror
Greg,
Here’s my stats from this past 7 days.
NOTE: In and Out here are opposite from what you’d normally expect them to mean in MRTG. That big Out spike is most likely a repo update from another mirror on the same vlan.
Max In: 171.7 Mb/s (1.7%) Average In: 14.8 Mb/s (0.1%) Current In: 171.7 Mb/s (1.7%) Max Out: 1803.2 Mb/s (18.0%) Average Out: 123.3 Mb/s (1.2%) Current Out: 4263.3 kb/s (0.0%)
Logan Best | Senior Infrastructure Engineer @Webair.com http://webair.com/ Webair Internet Development Inc. | 501 Franklin Ave | Garden City, NY 11530 Office 516.938.4100, ext. 223 | Fax 516.938.5100 logan.best@webair.com mailto:logan.best@webair.com
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On Apr 7, 2015, at 3:05 PM, Greg Walters greg.walters@gatewaymedia.com wrote:
Good day,
I've gotten my company to tentatively agree to hosting a couple mirrors of repositories for software that we use and need to make sure that the requirements for new mirrors at http://wiki.centos.org/HowTos/CreatePublicMirrors are within our allowances. The portion I'm looking for clarification on is the very last NOTE block at the bottom of the page which states:
"If you have a data cap which is lower than 15 Tb (depending on region), please don't try to add that machine as a mirror."
Is the unit there in teraBITS (little b) or teraBYTES (big b)? I'm not working with a data cap but do have a 95th percentile bandwidth allotment that I must keep mirrors under and if that 15 Tb is representative of the traffic I could expect over a month then 15 Tb of traffic would be right around 6 Mbps and acceptable while 15 TB of traffic would be over my allotment.
Anyone have some bandwidth graphs they can share for their public mirrors?
Thanks, Greg
CentOS-mirror mailing list CentOS-mirror@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-mirror