2011-03-28 20:21 keltezéssel, Gökşin Akdeniz írta:
Fetching snapshot generated at Mon Mar 28 02:04:59 CEST 2011:
'here is a long word of letters and numbers' 18% of 64 MB 341 kBps
02m38s
Here (or at 67%, or at.. but never reach 100%) stall the download. :(
What can I do to solve this problem?
On Sun, Mar 27, 2011 at 3:46 PM, wrote:
> Chris Brennan wrote:
>
>> ... the list does not 'mail-back' your e-mail ...
>> i.e. you do not see your own post until someone replies to it.
>
> ... unless you go to the subscription page and select the option
> to be sent your own posts :)
...which li
> Fetching snapshot generated at Mon Mar 28 02:04:59 CEST 2011:
> 'here is a long word of letters and numbers' 18% of 64 MB 341 kBps
> 02m38s
>
> Here (or at 67%, or at.. but never reach 100%) stall the download. :(
> What can I do to solve this problem?
>
It looks like a network trouble. If port
Gökşin Akdeniz writes:
>> So my question is: can I have a mirror of a FreeBSD server on my public
>> server that run already a Debian operating system?
> Instead of working with packages, I suggest working with ports. As you
> have already installed a base system, you can install anything with p
Chris Brennan wrote:
> ... the list does not 'mail-back' your e-mail ...
> i.e. you do not see your own post until someone replies to it.
... unless you go to the subscription page and select the option
to be sent your own posts :)
___
freebsd-question
>
> So my question is: can I have a mirror of a FreeBSD server on my public
> server that run already a Debian operating system?
>
You can keep a mirror of a FreeBSD server but storage and bandwith
consumption depends on what you want to "mirror". I guess you will
consume all your bandwith with
On Sun, Mar 27, 2011 at 4:27 PM, Csanyi Pal wrote:
Chris Brennan writes:
>
> > 2011/3/27 Paul Chany
>
> > This same piece of mail, you sent a few hours ago frrom this very same
> > e-mail address with a different name
>
> Yes, because when I sent the mail first time using my gmail address,
Chris Brennan writes:
> 2011/3/27 Paul Chany
> This same piece of mail, you sent a few hours ago frrom this very same
> e-mail address with a different name
Yes, because when I sent the mail first time using my gmail address, I
get not the mail back from the list so I was wonder what coul
data from server stall.
>
> So the solution that I see in my case is to have my own FreeBSD mirror
> server that I can use only me on my LAN. This mirror server should run
> on my public Debian server. Why only me should use this server? Because
> my ISP package allow to me only 4G
can't even if I select a nearby server. In Hungary the FreeBSD server
doesn't have my recent release, in Slovenia does but the internet
connection is probably slow because using sysinstall the state of
downloading data from server stall.
So the solution that I see in my case is to have my o
can't even if I select a nearby server. In Hungary the FreeBSD server
doesn't have my recent release, in Slovenia does but the internet
connection is probably slow because using sysinstall the state of
downloading data from server stall.
So the solution that I see in my case is to have my o
Relay access denied
> (state 14).
-- Forwarded message --
From: Cheng Renquan
Date: Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 10:34 AM
Subject: The FreeBSD mirror in Singapore seems have problem,
To: hostmas...@sg.freebsd.org
Hi,
The FreeBSD mirror in Singapore seems have problem,
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_
Well, for what it's worth, I was doing some inverse traceroutes
yesterday, and it does appear that Indian ISPs take quite a tortuous
route from point to point. A traceroute from one Indian ISP (Net4India,
the only one I could even reach, which is already a bit worrisome) went
from India to Singapor
Subhro writes:
> You got it wrong. *I* being old hands at FreeBSD, don't require their
> help. But if I install FBSD on my little sisters PC, she would be
> requiring some help. If I am around, thats not a problem. But if I am
> not, the first place she would go to is the ISP, which i very much
Anthony Atkielski wrote:
RW writes:
Most UK ISPs wont even touch Linux. If I'd tried to ask my ISP to setup
FreeBSD, I'd have to go through an Indian call-centre where I'd get asked
which versions of Windows and Internet Explorer I'm using.
Why do you need an ISP's help to set up FreeBSD, a
On Saturday 16 April 2005 01:52, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
> RW writes:
> > Most UK ISPs wont even touch Linux. If I'd tried to ask my ISP to setup
> > FreeBSD, I'd have to go through an Indian call-centre where I'd get asked
> > which versions of Windows and Internet Explorer I'm using.
>
> Why do
RW writes:
> Most UK ISPs wont even touch Linux. If I'd tried to ask my ISP to setup
> FreeBSD, I'd have to go through an Indian call-centre where I'd get asked
> which versions of Windows and Internet Explorer I'm using.
Why do you need an ISP's help to set up FreeBSD, anyway?
--
Anthony
___
On Thursday 14 April 2005 14:35, Subhro wrote:
> Good idea Brian. But the saddest part is as I have indicated above,
> Linux rules :-( and FreeBSD is for the heavy duty software
> professionals. The astonishing fact is that, my ISP BSNL, which is
> supposed to be the biggest ISP in India does not k
(B> > Therefore, the geographical proximity of two hosts within India does
(B> > not imply their proximity on the Internet.
(B>
(B> Is digging a ditch and laying fiber between them out of the question?
(B
(BQuite possibly so. Think about the population density.
(B
(BDigging a ditch any r
At 2005-04-14T23:16:17+05:30, Subhro wrote:
> >There are a few Indian shops which do sell inexpensive FreeBSD and
> >GNU/Linux CD-ROMs --- costing about USD 4.00 for three CDs.
>
> I didnt find any.
See http://www.roseindia.net/linux/free_bsd_5_3.shtml
Raghavendra.
--
N. Raghavendra <[EMAIL PR
Robert Huff writes:
> As I understand it, in India it's Not That Simple. Operations which
> take eight weeks and three signatures in the U. S. or U. K. can take
> years and dozens of signatures ... and if you run into a corrupt
> official, good luck.
If that's true, the only losers are the Indian
Anthony Atkielski writes:
> That has to change, and soon. There's no cure for a shortage of
> bandwidth except more bandwidth. Lay the fiber and light it.
As I understand it, in India it's Not That Simple. Operations
which take eight weeks and three signatures in the U. S. or
U. K.
N. Raghavendra writes:
> Traffic between two hosts located in India is usually routed through
> US or European networks.
Why??
> A `whois' lookup for 208.192.183.149, says that the address belongs to
> UUNET Technologies, Inc., VA, US. The address 134.159.128.42 belongs
> to Reach Networks HK L
Subhro writes:
> True, bust most Universities have things like 5 128K links tagged
> together. Put this down plain and simple, bandwidth is really really
> scarce in India.
That has to change, and soon. There's no cure for a shortage of
bandwidth except more bandwidth. Lay the fiber and light
104 ms in.beta.vip.in.yahoo.com [202.43.219.47]
Trace complete.
This completely remains inside India. Unless you purposefully introduce
some US/EU intervention in the routing tables, it works withut problems.
I think that would be the case also with a FreeBSD mirror in India.
This could be one
Subhro writes:
> We are changed per minute both by the Carrier company and the ISP.
Apparently Indian companies are working so hard to help China dominate
the IT world.
--
Anthony
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freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.o
Subhro writes:
> Good idea Brian. But the saddest part is as I have indicated above,
> Linux rules :-( and FreeBSD is for the heavy duty software
> professionals.
Starting burning some CDs and handing them out, and maybe that will
change (eventually). FreeBSD is real UN*X (except for the tradema
would be the case also with a FreeBSD mirror in India.
This could be one reason why there are no such mirrors. Another could
be the fact that very few Indians use UNIX, or its clones --- and
those who do mostly use GNU/Linux.
> Additionally, a mirror site in India could burn CDs locally and hand
&g
Robert Huff wrote:
Rob writes:
better, more economic internet connection.
I can't imagine that the big institutes in Kolkata, Chennai,
Bengalore, Mumbai etc. are connected via 56 kb/s modems and pay
exorbitant amounts for internet use
No ... but (based on comments made here and reading
Rob writes:
> But I suppose that big research institutes and universities have
> a better, more economic internet connection.
>
> I can't imagine that the big institutes in Kolkata, Chennai,
> Bengalore, Mumbai etc. are connected via 56 kb/s modems and pay
> exorbitant amounts for internet u
Rob wrote:
I guess this is typical for home connections in India.
True, bust most Universities have things like 5 128K links tagged
together. Put this down plain and simple, bandwidth is really really
scarce in India.
Of course, a Linux and/or BSD mirror should be
hosted by such a research in
Subhro wrote:
> Erik Trulsson wrote:
>
>> I would assume that like most other countries they
>> are charged per minute for the dialup connection
>> (by the phone company, not the ISP) even if they
>> don't get charged per megabyte. Downloading large
>> files will still be expensive then.
>
> We a
Erik Trulsson wrote:
I would assume that like most other countries they are charged per
minute for the dialup connection (by the phone company, not the ISP)
even if they don't get charged per megabyte. Downloading large files
will still be expensive then.
We are changed per minute both by the C
On Thu, Apr 14, 2005 at 09:13:21AM -0500, W. D. wrote:
> At 08:20 4/14/2005, Subhro, wrote:
> >Anthony Atkielski wrote:
> >
> >>All the more reason to have a mirror in India. The shorter the distance
> >>to cover, the faster the transfer is likely to be,
> >>
> >
> >This is definitely technically
At 08:20 4/14/2005, Subhro, wrote:
>Anthony Atkielski wrote:
>
>>All the more reason to have a mirror in India. The shorter the distance
>>to cover, the faster the transfer is likely to be,
>>
>
>This is definitely technically true but not practially as far as India
>is concern. The average bandw
Brian McCann wrote:
Another suggestion would be talk to a university or other large
school that may be able to afford the bandwidth, or get it at a
discounted rate. Heck, it's added publicity for them and they are
helping the open source community.
Good idea Brian. But the saddest part is a
Anthony Atkielski wrote:
All the more reason to have a mirror in India. The shorter the distance
to cover, the faster the transfer is likely to be,
This is definitely technically true but not practially as far as India
is concern. The average bandwidth available to individual is 56Kbps
(actual,
rote:
> Rob wrote:
>
> >Hi,
> >
> >I recommended FreeBSD to a friend of mine in India
> >and discovered to my great astonishment that there's
> >no mirror site in India, at least none is listed
> >on the official FreeBSD mirror site:
> >
> >
Subhro writes:
> Well the main issue is, bandwidth is very very costly in India. The
> amount of bandwidth that would cost 40 USD in US would cost around 350
> USD in India.
All the more reason to have a mirror in India. The shorter the distance
to cover, the faster the transfer is likely to be,
Rob wrote:
Hi,
I recommended FreeBSD to a friend of mine in India
and discovered to my great astonishment that there's
no mirror site in India, at least none is listed
on the official FreeBSD mirror site:
Yeh you are right.
http://www.freebsd.org/.../handbook/mirrors-ftp.html
I would
Hi,
I recommended FreeBSD to a friend of mine in India
and discovered to my great astonishment that there's
no mirror site in India, at least none is listed
on the official FreeBSD mirror site:
http://www.freebsd.org/.../handbook/mirrors-ftp.html
I would have expected several mirror
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/hubs/index.html
On Tue, 5 Apr 2005, Rakotomandimby (R12y) Mihamina wrote:
Hello,
We're the stuff of the free software department at the university of
Orléans (France)
We'd like to be a mirror of freee BSD (all arches, all branches)
What documentat
Hello,
We're the stuff of the free software department at the university of
Orléans (France)
We'd like to be a mirror of freee BSD (all arches, all branches)
What documentation would you recommend us to read about technical tips
and admnistrative request to the FreeBSD project team?
The serve
Ljubisa Radivojevic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
> I am in process of setuping a freebsd mirror
> Server is located in Serbia and Montenegro, Europe
>
> server is
> mirror.etf.bg.ac.yu
> it can be accessed via http, ftp and rsync
>
> directory is mirr
Hello,
I am in process of setuping a freebsd mirror
Server is located in Serbia and Montenegro, Europe
server is
mirror.etf.bg.ac.yu
it can be accessed via http, ftp and rsync
directory is mirror.etf.bg.ac.yu/freebsd
I've starting mirroring from ftp2.at.freebsd.org module FreeBSD, is th
On Tue, Mar 16, 2004 at 02:06:57PM +, Matthew Seaman wrote:
Date: Tue, 16 Mar 2004 14:06:57 +
From: Matthew Seaman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Lyubomir Russev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: FreeBSD mirror in Bulgaria
On Tue, Mar 16, 2004 at 11:20:14AM +02
On Tue, Mar 16, 2004 at 11:20:14AM +0200, Lyubomir Russev wrote:
> What criterias should be met and what should be done in order to establish
> FreeBSD mirror site in Bulgaria?
Give this document a read through:
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/hubs/index.html
Dear Sirs,
What criterias should be met and what should be done in order to establish
FreeBSD mirror site in Bulgaria?
Best Regards,
Lyubomir Russev, FreeBSD enthusiast,
Telecom Partners Network Ltd.
Sofia, Bulgaria
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FreeBSD Team:
First please let me thank for providing an excellent distribution. I
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