On Apr 11, 2012, at 05:51, Joshua Root wrote:

> On 2012-4-9 17:09 , Ryan Schmidt wrote:
>> 
>> What I'm trying to get across is that if we have an opportunity to reduce 
>> the number of tickets that get filed, that's of benefit to everyone, so why 
>> shouldn't we do it?
> 
> It's questionable that the patch will actually do that. (And you know as
> well as I that reducing the number of tickets filed is not in itself of
> benefit to everyone.)
> 
>> I agree it and a bit of a hack, but I cannot envision a situation in which 
>> it doesn't work correctly. If you can, please let me know.
> 
> The obvious failure case would be a correctly downloaded file that looks
> like HTML to file(1) but doesn't end in .htm[l].

Right, and I don't think any such file exists, at least not used as a MacPorts 
distfile.

> This simply hasn't been tested exhaustively, and it probably isn't
> practical to. That alone is a sufficient reason not to want it in the
> release.

I agree it would be hard or at least time-consuming to test all distfiles in 
all ports. We could simply put the patch into the release and see what happens 
when users use it. We didn't "exhaustively" test binaries either: we just 
turned them on one day, MacPorts started installing them for users, and a 
significant amount of Hell broke loose and then we had to deal with it and fix 
it. I anticipate significantly fewer problems as a result of my patch; I 
actually anticipate no problems at all.

>> Off the top of my head, here's an alternate solution: right before we ping 
>> servers to find which ones are nearby, look up the IP address of a hostname 
>> that we know doesn't exist (i.e. nonexistent.macports.org). If it returns an 
>> IP address, we know we're dealing with a broken DNS server. Then, see if any 
>> of the servers we're going to ping resolve to the same IP. If so, they 
>> should be removed from the list and treated as if they don't exist.
> 
> That and Jeff's idea of using known good DNS servers are certainly worth
> investigating.

Using known-good DNS servers is an interesting idea, and it would help for 
users on unrestricted networks that merely have broken/helpful DNS servers, 
like some home cable and DSL broadband connections and those using OpenDNS with 
its default settings.

To try to avoid these sloppy DNS servers I usually have Google's DNS servers 
8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 in my laptop's DNS settings. But I have encountered 
networks before where I was unable to get to certain sites, and had to remove 
these DNS settings and use the network's DNS servers instead.

The whole idea of many users globally using the same DNS servers -- Google DNS, 
OpenDNS, etc. -- is contrary to how DNS was intended to be used in the first 
place. But companies like these seem to be rewriting the book on DNS and making 
it work.

What about restricted networks: coffee shops, hotels, airports, airplanes, 
trains? On these you must often log in, or pay to access them, or at least 
agree to terms of use. If on any of these networks the restrictions are 
implemented entirely in DNS, using a known-good DNS to bypass them could work 
but could be considered a breach of the network's terms of use. And if the 
restrictions are more robust, then using a known-good DNS won't help; we'll 
still fail to fetch files until the user logs in.


_______________________________________________
macports-dev mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/macports-dev

Reply via email to