Am 01.12.2014 um 12:57 schrieb Pierre-Yves Chibon:
On Mon, Dec 01, 2014 at 12:38:24PM +0100, Reindl Harald wrote:
Am 01.12.2014 um 12:36 schrieb Alec Leamas:
On 01/12/14 12:29, Reindl Harald wrote:

Am 01.12.2014 um 12:26 schrieb Alec Leamas:

Lets face it: I envy those who can measure the usage from a download
counter or so. Can we have something similar?

no - you have no clue which mirror was used without explicit tracking in
YUM/DNF and given the noise about the recent Firefox changes you won't
even consider seriously tracking inside the distribution

additionally downloads are meaningless - many setups with more than one
machine have their local mirrors and a download can be 1, 10 or 50
installed instances

I hesitated when writing my initial message, didn't include this:

Feedback why this is impossible isn't really helpful here, most of us
are aware of the limitations. Given that we agree on the overall goals
(?), useful input is what can be done, and how

it is helpful because the fact it is impossible will shutdown that
discussion because - well, it's impossible

The question becomes, is any numbers better than no number?

In theory, we could get an idea of how much a package is downloaded. Mirror are
syncing all the content, so they introduce a baseline while user is what
introduce the variability.
So if we were to be able to gather logs from a) the main repos + b) some
volunteer repos, we could get a trend.
The number would of course not be exact as you mentioned but we could get an
idea, something like: we have 132 mirrors and my package was downloaded 133
times, which potentially means there is one user (me) using that package.
There might be more, but if no-one ever reports a bug and we see the number of
download is basically equal to the number of mirrors, we can get an impression
that this package isn't used by many people.

So we come back to the question: is any number better than no number at all?
Even to get a trend?

no number is in fact better than wrong numbers backed by nothing beause they lead in wrong conclusions - your 122/133 numbers could in reality also be 1000 users installed them from mirrors and your calculation is the best example for wrong assumptions

you don't have 132 downloads because 132 mirrors
in fact you have *zero* - mirrors are done with rsync

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