On Mon, Mar 19, 2012 at 4:04 PM, Joe Schaefer <joe_schae...@yahoo.com> wrote: > > FWIW the ballpark figures we have today Roberto > > are roughly 12GB worth of release artifacts and > > about100TB / day worth of download traffic.
Thanks for the information. I'm working with Roberto to make sure all the right technical resources are aligned behind him, and that we have the resources to provide a great experience to your users. So, I'm here to help out, and validate everything to make sure we are prepared to handle AOO's peak load. Based on the file size data in the previous e-mail, and this bandwidth information, I believe we are talking about something around 700k download per day. Is that peak load, or is that sustained load? If it's sustained, do you have any ideas about what peak load would look like? If not, do you have any ideas about what sustained load would look like? And finally: would you have any objection to us using a mix of fixed mirrors, elastic file delivery services (like s3), and commercial CDN service to handle spikes in download gracefully and assure that global users get good download performance when local mirrors are overloaded or not available? I'm looking forward to working with all of you to make sure that users have a reliable and fast download source for the upcoming Apache Open Office release. Let me know if there's any questions I can answer for you, or anything else I can do to help. --Mark Ramm ==== This e- mail message is intended only for the named recipient(s) above. It may contain confidential and privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or copying of this e-mail and any attachment(s) is strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please immediately notify the sender by replying to this e-mail and delete the message and any attachment(s) from your system. Thank you.