On Mon, 2003-10-06 at 15:00, Krištof Petr wrote:
> Daniel J McDonald wrote:
> 
> >On Mon, 2003-10-06 at 07:42, Krištof Petr wrote:
> >  
> >
> >>Lionel Bouton wrote:
> >>
> >>    
> >>
> >>>The problem is that on the servers' side (main site and mirrors) 
> >>>you'll have to set up rsync servers instead of http servers. As a 
> >>>mirror admin this won't be good news for me...
> >>>
> >>>      
> >>>
> >>rsync server setup isnt hard. Simple example looks like:
> >>
> >># rsync server config
> >>#
> >>use chroot = no
> >>    
> >>
> >[...]
> >
> >But this is only the beginning.  You also have to set up new firewall
> >rules - probably on the box itself and on the front-end firewall
> >protecting the box.  And you might have to add load-balancer rules.  And
> >if you have virtual domains set up, it can become even more complex.
> >
> >Then, the clients have to open their firewalls for yet another port....
> >  
> >
> 
> rsync server can run on port 80. Clients can use standard http proxy, so 
> you need no additional setting.
> 
> Petr

Does rsync support http redirect codes ? If there are several servers
and I want to redirect requests to the "nearest" or "least used" server.
 
Yes rsync is great for many things, but it's not a miracle cure for
every IT problem. In theory, one could extend freshclam to support rsync
as a transfer method for updates, but a separate mirror system would
have to be set up. Some mirrors could provide both update methods, some
just one... but is the extra trouble worth it ? 

I've worked for companies where setting up a new http virtual servers is
easy, but getting management to approve installing a new "service" like
rsync takes more time.


Regards,

Miguel Dias

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