Dave,

I can go about setting up a web mirror, but i cannot offer a download mirror if we have to use ftp. Our security policies are not to allow ftp access. It's just one more thing to worry about if we open up our firewall. I hope you understand. Will it be a problem only offer the web mirror? We have a 10mbit/sec connection, but probably wouldn't want postgresql to take up more than 1mbit/sec on average. we also have several free gigabytes of disk.

Best Regards,

Brian Hirt

On Dec 24, 2003, at 4:46 PM, Dave Page wrote:

It's rumoured that Brian Hirt once said:
What type bandwidth can you
expect to use if you become a mirror (1meg/sec? more less?)

I honestly couldn't say, but I would suspect it would be a *lot* less than
that. Whilst PostgreSQL is popular, the type of application that it is
means that it will never get anything remotely like the level of downloads
of say, Mozilla or OpenOffice.
Also are
http mirrors acceptable?

Currently only to mirror the web content (this is mainly because the
mirror code expects an ftp mirror to use ftp and a web mirror to use http
- changing this would require a fair bit of recoding).
I would like to offer up one of our servers
on mobygames.com because I love postgresql and it would be a way to
help out a bit, but I don't really know enough about the requirements
right now.

Who should i talk to?

Me please. I'll need your server IP, and the IP of whatever boxes will be
used to rsync the content. For web mirrors you must be able to setup a
virtual host, for ftp, I alsoneed to know the path to the content (eg.
/pub/postgresql/)
However, there are already 7 US mirrors.

There's closer to 20, but most are not active :-(


Regards, Dave.




---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
TIP 9: the planner will ignore your desire to choose an index scan if your
     joining column's datatypes do not match

Reply via email to