[CentOS] Broken repo / mirrors?

Sat May 29 12:32:43 UTC 2010
Robert Heller <heller at deepsoft.com>

At Sat, 29 May 2010 01:53:47 -0400 (EDT) CentOS mailing list <centos at centos.org> wrote:

> 
> On Sat, 29 May 2010, David wrote:
> 
> > Now I'm able to update device-mapper on i386 machine, BTW please find
> > this post..
> >
> > "[CentOS] metadata cache corruption: cleared -> fixing in progress"
> 
> Thank you for pointing people at a solution that should 
> largely (mod residual mirror skew and local 'dinking' on yum 
> configurations) work at this point, David
> 
> The information relayed through the day in IRC and on the main 
> mailing list reflected what was known as it was known, what 
> was likely, and how it was being approached.
> 
> In back control channels, the CentOS team was studying the 
> matter, testing retrievals, passing updates to public facing 
> parts of the group, and updating findings and possible fixes 
> (and thus eta to convergences). This was available and passed 
> along to public facing team members as the earth rotated 
> through the day.  Let's consider it an unplanned trial shift 
> in approach toward more openness on matters which have 
> historically been less visible, and see how it worked out
> 
> 
> There were at most handful of 'non-insider' posters today 
> (Heller, Roth, Cox, Nichols, Charm) and I think three relevant 
> bugs, which bugs should all be addressed by now.  As one 
> person noted: 'The world was not coming to an end' but I see:
>  	16:58:06 UTC Heller
>  		"*ALL* of the public mirrors are broken"
> 
>  	later 01:39:51 UTC next UTC day:
>  		"*I* never claimed it was the end of the
>  	world.  Just noticed a problem and posted a question to the
>  	list about it"
> 
> <dryly>and this knowledge of ALL mirrors with just a dial-up 
> connection</>  That is sure not how I read his Chicken Little 
> assertion;  I see a cry of 'Wolf' and alarmism as a reward

Since it is not uncommon for me (on dialup) to experience all sorts of
network issues (duh), I get to watch as yum (which is not interurptable
and seems to assume that any network issues are always with the remote
side and never with the local side -- yum seems not to have been coded
with dialup in mind) downloads from each server in turn and seeing the
download fail.  *Usually* it fails on a few servers and eventually
completes the download on one.  When all of the public mirrors (on the
mirrorlist yum fetched) failed *with the same error* I figured that
something was wrong somewhere, so I reported it to the Centos list. 
*I* was not alarmed or thinking the world was coming to an end or
anything dire.  Just wanted to let people know there seemed to be a
problem. 

-- 
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