Hello,
I am interested in creating a private internal mirror for my company and its internal infrastructure. I have been following the guidelines here: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Infrastructure/Mirroring#How_can_someone_make_...
Please let me know what further I need to do to set this up correctly.
Thanks,
Jeremy Huntwork Network Operations Critical Mention 917.609.8731
On Wed, Jun 23, 2010 at 10:57:42AM -0700, Jeremy Huntwork wrote:
Hello,
I am interested in creating a private internal mirror for my company and its internal infrastructure. I have been following the guidelines here: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Infrastructure/Mirroring#How_can_someone_make_...
Please let me know what further I need to do to set this up correctly.
We would be pleased to have you as a private mirror.
Please see http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Infrastructure/Mirroring for guidance, and register your mirror in MirrorManager at https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mirrormanager. By doing so, you will appear on the yum mirror lists as soon as MM validates that your URLs are valid and the content is present. In particular, private mirrors should provide a network ASN or a set of public IP netblocks which should be served by your mirror. Clients from such networks will then be automatically directed to your mirror, but will fall back to other public mirrors should any problem arise reaching your mirror. Private mirrors must also run the report_mirror script after each rsync run, which tells MM which content you have that is up-to-date - MM does not crawl private mirrors.
Your mirror should rsync from one of the listed public mirrors offering rsync, listed at http://mirrors.fedoraproject.org/publiclist/. If you are on Internet2 or one of its high-speed educational or research network peers (NLR, GEANET2, RedIRIS, etc.), you should pull pull from another I2 site if possible.
Thanks again,
Matt Fedora Mirror Wrangler
mirror-admin@lists.fedoraproject.org