What about sf.net. Their list group sucks but they seem to have some bandwidth.
Gary -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, July 19, 2004 7:54 PM To: Dan Kohn Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [RDJ] Is it broken? -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Dan Kohn writes: > Would the Apache folks get upset if you let the SARE people store their > scripts on spamassassin.apache.org and then just let everyone have at > them? Isn't that the purpose of the Apache mirrors? I would think it > would be fine as long as the SARE rules are released under the Apache > license. As far as I know, as long as it's ASF-licensed (ie. covered by a CLA), it can go on the SpamAssassin.apache.org website. However, that's *not* mirrored, and heavy bandwidth usage is more acceptable there than on our previous sites -- but still not *that* acceptable :( I think a frequently-polled set of files would probably not fly there, not without some negotiating first. ;) (The mirrored portion of the ASF site is http://www.apache.org/dist/ , and that's only used for full releases that have been voted on and all sorts of procedure along those lines.) - --j. > Push is a lot more efficient, but it's also harder to implement on the > client side. I'm not convinced that push optimizes on the scarce > variable. > > - dan > -- > Dan Kohn <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > <http://www.dankohn.com/> <tel:+1-650-327-2600> > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Monday, July 19, 2004 16:55 > To: Gary Smith > Cc: Fred; Chris Santerre; Spamassassin-Talk (E-mail) > Subject: Re: [RDJ] Is it broken? > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > Hey guys -- > > suggestion: how's about sending out new versions as ZIP files via a > mailing list? ie. turn it from "pull" into "push"? > > if you provide a script, it should be possible to automate something > that > users can put into /etc/aliases, then subscribe that address to the "RDJ > list" -- and the updates get auto-installed as they're generated. > > It'd also be a handy way to spread the load of HTTP service; each mirror > host has an alias that extracts the files and puts them onto its mirror. > > - --j. > > Gary Smith writes: > > Damn, didn't know things were going that bad for you guys... > > > > I guess all that talk about letting us help you mirror to reduce the > load was missed somewhere in the stream of emails. Anyways, I have my > scripts set for: > > > > 0 6 * * * /root/cronjobs/mailstats.sh > > 45 5 * * * /etc/mail/spamassassin/my_rules_du_jour.sh > > > > And I'm still getting the error all weekend. Rate limited is broken > guys... > > > > So, yes I can just dump RDJ and copy the files to a central location > daily. It's not a problem. I just think you're going about it in a > complety odd way. Force the wget's to authenticate. Force rate > limiting based on performance and not denial, have a list of active > subscribers that aren't rate limited by IP. > > > > Gary > > > > > > ________________________________ > > > > From: Fred [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > Sent: Mon 7/19/2004 3:13 PM > > To: Chris Santerre; Spamassassin-Talk (E-mail) > > Subject: Re: [RDJ] Is it broken? > > > > Gary Smith wrote: > > > Even after the problem has been fixed with RDJ it will just mask the > > > fact that we cannot connect to the server. Basically, we will never > > > know that it failed because no update occured. > > > > True, however, in my cron scripts I am alerted of errors or output > from any > > script which is run. If you check the output of those scripts you > will see > > when things go bad. > > > > I'm a member of SARE and I'm all for the ratelimiter. we spend a > great > > deal of time and effort doing our thing and some admins are > irresponsible > > enough to set updates for once every 2 minutes. We have to protect > > ourselves, if people are going to abuse free services (AND YOU KNOW > THEY > > WILL) those people providing free services need to find ways to keep > > themselves in business or limit the abusers so it doesn't affect the > rest. > > > > This rate limiter is a wake up call for anyone doing more than 1 > update per > > day. Even if it is 5 seperate servers behind a proxy. This is free > stuff > > you are abusing, please stop abusing it and re-implement your method > of > > doing things. If you know that each of those 4-5 servers will > download the > > same files each day, wouldn't it be best to download to a central > location > > and then have your servers get it from there? It seems having all > servers > > download straight from us is the lazy approach. (the same lazy > approach > > that causes traffic congestion in all parts of my life), if people car > > pooled more, we would have more room on the roads, if people buy in > bulk, > > you don't have to revisit the same stores so often. If virus writers > used > > IRC more often, they would not have to flood the entire internet with > port > > scans looking for their zombies. In my book (and this is not directly > > towards anyone in specific) this is all due to being lazy. (it's > easier to > > flood internet with packets looking for zombies than to have the > zombies > > phone home?) (it's easier if you jump in your own car and drive > yourself to > > work versus waiting for someone else) We often value ease without > thinking > > of the consequences of our actions. For once, we have the ability to > force > > people to follow our restrictions and I'll fight to keep it in effect > (AS > > SOON AS WE GET THE BUGS WORKED OUT). > > > > RDJ to an central storage, then you could even have your servers run > RDJ on > > that location to check for updates. > > > > The problem was a few people made such bad mistakes that we have to > make > > changes which affect everyone. We don't like putting limits on things > like > > this and if it wasn't to protect our own butts we would not have done > it. > > > > SARE is run by donation from people and businesses combined. We have > a > > business that donated a shell account and bandwidth. If we abuse the > free > > donation, we'll be looking for a new home. If people setup mirrors, > then > > everyone can hammer the mirrors all they want, as long as it doesn't > > threaten our very existance. > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v1.2.4 (GNU/Linux) > Comment: Exmh CVS > > iD8DBQFA/F9JQTcbUG5Y7woRAgVaAKDa5l6bvD1OuSVii318yVqjxdULzwCgsGqV > gwCt2bj49AgHmFet5GGEKho= > =8pRW > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.4 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Exmh CVS iD8DBQFA/Ik1QTcbUG5Y7woRAvkxAKCQftm8dVrr4WzgQZ/jWAiJeLKA+gCeN9gp 6wjgLUVjLncPtdajtZlaIUg= =G46z -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
