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Hi there,
Is it possible if I just got national connectivity only and submit to mirror list? Like Fedora EPEL[1] & Fedora Linux[1] did.
[1] https://mirrors.fedoraproject.org/publiclist#ID
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On 05/05/14 15:52, Dewangga wrote:
Hi there,
Is it possible if I just got national connectivity only and submit to mirror list? Like Fedora EPEL[1] & Fedora Linux[1] did.
Let me try to summarize your question : do you mean you want to add a mirror to the list, but with only connectivity in your country ? The crawler process we use to see if a mirror is current/up2date/gone is external to a specific country and would need access anyway, like the MirrorManager one used by Fedora. OTOH, the mirrorlist process we use returns mirrors in your country and/or nearby countries if no mirror is available in your country. the actual status can be seen here : http://mirror-status.centos.org/
- -- Fabian Arrotin gpg key: 56BEC54E | twitter: @arrfab
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Hi Fabian,
Yes, I just want to be listed, but I didn't have global internet access. But, the server can reach internet from inside to outside, and you can't access from outside the server (Internasional Connectivity).
How the mirrorlist checks the mirror? Crawl the timestamp.txt and some binary files to get the data? Or what? IMHO, the Fedora use "report_mirror" script that used to report from mirror server to mirrorlist server. I think it's more usefull than crawl the data from mirrorlist server to mirror server.
AFAIK, my mirror doesn't have international connectivity, but I can reach and synced the files (eg. Fedora Content) and report them using report_mirror script.
If you try to get mirror.rndc.or.id you will got timeout, but it was listed on EPEL & Fedora publiclist mirror (mirrorlist).
Could CentOS Mirror List have that permission? (Without internasional connectivity, the mirror maintainer still can be mirror the CentOS)
On 5/5/2014 21:13, Fabian Arrotin wrote:
On 05/05/14 15:52, Dewangga wrote:
Hi there,
Is it possible if I just got national connectivity only and submit to mirror list? Like Fedora EPEL[1] & Fedora Linux[1] did.
Let me try to summarize your question : do you mean you want to add a mirror to the list, but with only connectivity in your country ? The crawler process we use to see if a mirror is current/up2date/gone is external to a specific country and would need access anyway, like the MirrorManager one used by Fedora. OTOH, the mirrorlist process we use returns mirrors in your country and/or nearby countries if no mirror is available in your country. the actual status can be seen here : http://mirror-status.centos.org/
_______________________________________________ CentOS-mirror mailing list CentOS-mirror@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-mirror
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On 05/05/14 17:02, Dewangga wrote:
Hi Fabian,
Yes, I just want to be listed, but I didn't have global internet access. But, the server can reach internet from inside to outside, and you can't access from outside the server (Internasional Connectivity).
How the mirrorlist checks the mirror? Crawl the timestamp.txt and some binary files to get the data? Or what? IMHO, the Fedora use "report_mirror" script that used to report from mirror server to mirrorlist server. I think it's more usefull than crawl the data from mirrorlist server to mirror server.
The actual mirror crawler process would need access to your mirror to check validity so even if I add it to the mirror list, it would be marked as gone by the crawler process and so would be removed from the mirror list. The current status for all .id third-party mirrors is available here http://mirror-status.centos.org/#id and those ones are reachable from outside. I don't see a direct way of adding your mirror without it being marked as gone/dead/unreachable directly.
- -- Fabian Arrotin gpg key: 56BEC54E | twitter: @arrfab