On 16/12/2019 10:30, Patrick Shaw wrote: > Hi, > > In the absence of any response I think we'll just return this to being a > firewalled private mirror for our own uses. It's no skin of my nose, but > I do however feel compelled to say that I find it pretty impolite to > remove our mirror and blacklist our IP with no form of communication or > reason. > > I also note than a number of Thailand based mirrors have been removed, > not only ours, from the mirror list, yet they still appear to be online > and working. There must be some reason for this. Just asking. > > Kind regards, > > Patrick > Hi Patrick, Probably missing the whole context, but as said I don't see your mirror referenced anywhere in our DB before, and can't find any mail on this mailing-list archive either (happy to be proved wrong) There is no problem being a private mirror either, but then of course not allowed in the ACL. All altarch mirrors are *also* public mirrors (so the way current mirror crawler consider a node current is by checking first the normal mirror content *and* only then altarch *if* flagged as altarch mirror too) So if you can/want to be official centos mirror for all, that can happen :) Also, the "impolite" sentence sounds rude, considering that mirror was never in our DB it seems -- Fabian Arrotin The CentOS Project | https://www.centos.org gpg key: 17F3B7A1 | twitter: @arrfab -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 833 bytes Desc: OpenPGP digital signature URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-mirror/attachments/20191216/8101107d/attachment-0006.sig>