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* Mailing lists: [https://lists.fedoraproject.org/admin/lists/mirror-admin.lists.fedoraproject.org/ mirror-admins ] ** NOTE 2017-03-21 New list location ** | * Mailing lists: [https://lists.fedoraproject.org/admin/lists/mirror-admin.lists.fedoraproject.org/ mirror-admins ] ** NOTE 2017-03-21 New list location ** | ||
* | * Chat: [https://matrix.to/#/#admin:fedoraproject.org <code>#admin:fedoraproject.org</code> on Matrix] | ||
* Administrative changes: send email to <code>mirror-admin@lists.fedoraproject.org</code> | * Administrative changes: send email to <code>mirror-admin@lists.fedoraproject.org</code> | ||
Latest revision as of 21:17, 17 November 2023
Fedora is fortunate to have over 200 volunteers [1] globally, which helps distribute the Fedora software to end users. We greatly appreciate our mirror sites and their system administrators.
Please read the Fedora Export Compliance/Customs Information.
Communicating
- Mailing lists: mirror-admins ** NOTE 2017-03-21 New list location **
- Chat:
#admin:fedoraproject.org
on Matrix - Administrative changes: send email to
mirror-admin@lists.fedoraproject.org
Before you decide to become a mirror
What are the size estimates?
Please read the DIRECTORY_SIZES.txt text file carefully. If you can allocate the required amount of space for mirroring Fedora, read on.
How can someone become a public mirror?
Becoming an official public mirror is easy, and getting easier. All we request is that your site have sufficient bandwidth and disk space to handle the load.
Storage space
Each Fedora release can consume upwards of 250GB of disk space. As of the Fedora 26 release, the total space consumed on the master server, thus what a mirror could consume, is 1.5TB and growing. Older releases are periodically archived, so a 3-4TB volume would be most appropriate for a long-term mirror. This content is hardlinked; if you can't hardlink (e.g. you're on AFS), you'll need much more disk space. Actual space consumed is noted in DIRECTORY_SIZES.txt.
Bandwidth
Downloaders can consume as much bandwidth as you've got. Mirror sites have at least a 100Mbit/sec connection to the Internet, many have Gigabit/sec, 10 Gigabit/sec, or larger pipes. 100Mbit/sec is the minimum required for new mirrors in countries with adequate mirror coverage already. We can make exceptions for new mirrors in countries that have few mirrors. Connections to Internet2, National Lambda Rail, GEANET2, RedIRIS, or other such high speed research and educational networks are always appreciated.
How can someone make a private mirror?
Private mirrors are mirrors that reside entirely within an organization (company, school, etc.) and can only be accessed by members of that organization. They exist to speed up distributing Fedora within an organization, where local bandwidth costs are far less than going across the Internet.
Private mirrors behave similarly to public mirrors, with a few exceptions:
- Private mirrors are never listed in the MirrorManager publiclist pages.
- Private mirrors cannot pull from the master Fedora download servers. They must pull from another listed public mirror.
- Private mirrors must include IP netblocks in their MirrorManager configuration. This allows your network-local users to be automatically redirected to your mirror. You may list IP netblocks (e.g. 18.0.0.0/8), or if your network is NAT'd, the hostname of your NAT gateway.
- Private mirrors are not crawled by the MirrorManager web crawler. Therefore:
- Private mirrors must run report_mirror to inform the MirrorManager database of their content. If you don't run report_mirror, your clients will not be automatically redirected.
MirrorManager: the Fedora Mirror Management system
The MirrorManager2 software keeps track of all the mirrors without requiring a lot of manual text file editing. Fedora's instance of this application is at https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mirrormanager
Mirror Status
MirrorManager keeps track of all the mirrors with regular scans of the content of all mirrors. The content of the mirrors is scanned by the crawler which either scans/crawls the mirrors using HTTP or RSYNC. We strongly recommend providing a RSYNC URL (at least for our crawler) as crawling via RSYNC is much faster as it only requires a single network connection for each mirrored category. If only HTTP access for Fedora's mirror crawler is possible it is important to enable HTTP Keepalives to reduce the number of required network connections.
The crawler does not scan private mirrors and private mirrors have to run report_mirror
to tell MirrorManager that they are up to date.
rsync health checking
If you are allowing MirrorManager to perform a health check via rsync (generally preferred due to the cost of doing HTTP HEAD requests and such), please make sure that 38.145.60.3 has read access to the respective rsync targets.
Signing up
Fedora Account System
- You must have an account in the Fedora Account System (more info also at AccountSystem). Note that this uses the same backend as the CentOS Account System, so if you already have an account there you do not need to create a new one. You are not required to sign the Contributors License Agreement to merely mirror Fedora content, but you must do so if you wish to contribute to other aspects of Fedora.
- If a public mirror, you must send an email to
mirror-admin@lists.fedoraproject.org
introducing yourself, stating you would like to become a mirror, your IP address, your location (country), and your outbound bandwidth available for the mirror. Private mirrors are encouraged to send a similar note. - You must subscribe to mirror-adminto be notified of new releases.
Registering in MirrorManager
- Log into MirrorManager using your FAS account.
- Create a new Site (a site is a group of Hosts belonging to the same organization) by clicking on your user profile.
- Create a new Host, and sign up that host for the Categories of content you'll carry (under the formally optional section Categories Carrried), any other site administrators you want, your site's IP addresses used for our Access Control List, list of countries that are allowed to access your mirror, and the other details listed there if applicable to you.
- You may list your site's IP address ranges (Netblocks). Clients coming from an IP address within your netblock will be automatically redirected to your mirror for any content you carry.
- You may list your site's BGP Autonomous System Number (ASN). Clients on your ASN will be automatically redirected to your mirror for any content you carry. One way to lookup up your ASN is to query it from the routeviews.org DNS servers. It is like a PTR record lookup, but at a specific server. For example, to look up 143.166.1.1, type:
$ dig txt 1.1.166.143.asn.routeviews.org @archive.routeviews.org
- ;; ANSWER SECTION:
- 1.1.166.143.asn.routeviews.org. 86400 IN TXT "3614" "143.166.0.0" "16"
- Here, the answer is in the TXT record, the first value, 3614.
- For a mirror to get listed in the MirrorManager for the category of content you have selected to carry, you must add at least one URL via which the category of content on your mirror can be accessed (under Categories Carried). The URLs you add can be of type HTTP, HTTPS, and rsync. Fedora's MirrorManager instance does not support FTP URLs and therefore it is not possible to add a FTP URL anymore.
Mirroring
- Please use the quick-fedora-mirror zsh script if at all possible. This script uses rsync and some informational files on the mirrors to allow you to only sync those files you need and saves lots of time and file seeking. Note: make sure that the mirror you intend to use provides the fedora-buffet rsync module, as otherwise the script will not work.
- Please pull from one of the Tier 1 mirrors. Instead of using one of the Tier 1 servers, you may wish to pull from another fast mirror that's closer to you. Contact the respective mirror admins to be added to their ACL.
- You may exclude any content you desire, such as architectures or releases, using an EXCLUDES file or
--exclude
parameter.
Tools to avoid
Please don't use tools like 'lftp mirror' to mirror content from the master mirrors. It's places a heavy load on our master mirrors and is slow for both you and us. Please use quick-fedora-mirror instead.
Mirror Frequency
- If you are using quick-fedora-mirror you can sync as often as every 10minutes in a loop. If there is no new content the script should return almost immediately. Make sure to use locking so you are only running one instance at a time.
- If you are not using quick-fedora-mirror you should sync a few times a day and consider switching.
Running report_mirror (only private mirrors)
Note: quick-fedora-mirror can also check in for you and has no need of the report_mirror
package/conf. To enable it, set the correct values for CHECKIN_SITE
and CHECKIN_PASSWORD
variables. In most cases, setting CHECKIN_HOST
is not necessary. The following applies only if you are not using quick-fedora-mirror, and, as said above, you should consider switching.
MirrorManager includes a tool, report_mirror
which uploads to the mirror database for private mirrors that you completed a run and what content you've got. This is required for private mirrors. Private mirrors have to run report_mirror
after every rsync job completes.
dnf install mirrormanager2-client
or yum (in RHEL and CentOS):
yum install mirrormanager2-client
or get the files directly from the official Git repository:
git clone https://github.com/fedora-infra/mirrormanager2.git
You need both report_mirror and report_mirror.conf, and must edit report_mirror.conf to include the content you're carrying and the path to that content on your disk. Only private mirrors can use report_mirror.
Available content
The available content modules by rsync, and their point in the directory tree are:
Suggested rsync modules
rsync module | Description | path on master server | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
fedora-buffet | Fedora -- the whole buffet (all you can eat) | /pub | Please use this if you can, it provides the all current Fedora content, including pre-bitflip content. This is open to specific mirrors by request. Mirrors participating in our tiering should use this. Mirrors syncing both fedora-enchilada and fedora-archive should use this, as we can now hardlink across both of those trees under fedora-buffet0. |
fedora-enchilada | Fedora -- the whole enchilada | /pub/fedora | Please use this if you can, it provides the all current Fedora content, including pre-bitflip content. This is open to specific mirrors by request. Mirrors participating in our tiering should use this. |
fedora-epel | Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux | /pub/epel | Please use this to mirror EPEL |
fedora-archive | Historical Fedora releases | /pub/archive | Fedora Core 1-6 and Extras 3-6, and obsolete releases 7 and higher |
fedora-secondary | Fedora Secondary Arches | /pub/fedora-secondary | |
fedora-alt | Fedora Other | /pub/alt |
These other modules exist for legacy purposes, and should be avoided by current mirrors.
rsync module | Description | path on master server | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
fedora-linux-releases | Fedora Linux Releases | /pub/fedora/linux/releases | |
fedora-linux-development | Fedora Linux Development (Rawhide) | /pub/fedora/linux/development | |
fedora-linux-updates | Fedora Linux Updates | /pub/fedora/linux/updates |
Rsync Configuration (sample)
Larger mirrors, like kernel.org, have slightly custom front-ends to rsync (mainly so that they can have a single rsync instance and have multiple ip based vhost configuration files) That said what follows is a sample rsync configuration file for public syncing (this is not intended for private pre-bitflip mirroring)
[fedora] comment = Fedora - RedHat community project path = <path to your fedora directory> exclude = lost+found/ read only = true max connections = 100 lock file = /var/run/rsyncd-mirrors.lock uid = <user id (numeric, or textual) of an anonymous style user who should have read access> gid = <group id (numeric, or textual) of an anonymous style user who should have read access> transfer logging = yes timeout = 900 ignore nonreadable = yes dont compress = *.gz *.tgz *.zip *.z *.Z *.rpm *.deb *.bz2 refuse options = checksum
Things to explicitly note:
- The path above should be a full path to your fedora directory
- You should *really* want to leave this read-only
- Make sure your uid/gid are set to public users, not to the user that you run as your sync agent. If you set this to the user who does your syncs you will be inadvertently giving the public full pre-bitflip access.
- Make sure you have the 'refuse options' set to checksum, your server will be *MUCH* happier with this set, as it will prevent public users from performing a checksum run against you. This can be incredibly I/O abusive, so should not be available to the general public.
HTTPd Configuration
Keepalives
HTTP Keepalives should be enabled on your mirror server to speed up client downloads. By default, Fedora's Apache httpd package has keepalives disabled. They should be enabled, with a timeout of at least 2 seconds (the default of 15 seconds might be too high for a heavily loaded mirror server, but 2 seconds is sufficient and appropriate for yum).
KeepAlive On KeepAliveTimeout 2 MaxKeepAliveRequests 100
Other http servers such as lighttpd have keepalives enabled by default.
Caching of metadata
We don't want caching proxy servers between our mirrors and our end user systems to cache our yum repository metadata. So, add explicit metadata handling. (Suggested by the OpenSUSE download redirector.)
<LocationMatch "\.(xml|xml\.gz|xml\.asc|sqlite)$"> Header set Cache-Control "must-revalidate" ExpiresActive On ExpiresDefault "now" </LocationMatch>
Content Types
ISO and RPM files should be served using MIME Content-Type: application/octet-stream. In Apache, this can be done inside a VirtualHost or similar section:
<VirtualHost *:80> AddType application/octet-stream .iso AddType application/octet-stream .rpm </VirtualHost>
Limiting Download Accelerators
Download accelerators will try to open the same file many times, and request chunks, hoping to download them in parallel. This can overload heavily loaded mirror servers, especially on release day. Here are some tricks to thwart such activities.
To limit connections to ISO dirs by some amount per IP:
<IfModule mod_limitipconn.c> MaxConnPerIP 6 </IfModule>
To block ranged requests as this is what download accelerators do indeed:
RewriteEngine on RewriteCond %{HTTP:Range} [0-9]$ RewriteRule \.iso$ / [F,L]
Similar things can be done with iptables and the recent module, which might give you a little more ability to control what is being done, either by limiting new connections or by dropping 50% of a users packets.
Logging Partial Content Downloads
Partial content can be logged correctly using apache:
# this includes actual counts of actual bytes received (%I) and # sent (%O); this requires the mod_logio module to be loaded. LogFormat "%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b \"%{Referer}i\" %I %O \"%{User-Agent}i\"" combined
Pre-bitflip mirroring
Several days before each public release, the content will be staged to the master mirror servers, but with restricted permissions on the directories (generally mode 0750), specifically, not world readable.
Mirror servers should have several different user/group accounts on their server, for running the different public services. Typically you find:
- HTTP server runs as user apache, group apache
- FTP server runs as user ftp, group ftp
- RSYNC server runs as user rsync, group rsync
- a user account for downloading content from the masters (e.g. user mirror, group mirror).
The user account used to download content from the masters must be not be the same as the HTTP, FTP, or RSYNC server accounts. This guarantees that content downloaded with permissions 0750 will not be made available via your public servers yet.
On the morning of the public release, the permissions on the directories on the master servers will change to 0755 - world readable. This is called the bitflip.
Mirrors may either rsync one more time to pick up these new permissions (but won't have to download all the data again), or preferably, can schedule a batch job to bitflip:
$ echo "chmod a+rx /pub/fedora/linux/releases/9" | at '14:45 UTC May 13 2008'
Serving content to other mirrors
Tier 1 mirrors will necessarily need to share content to Tier 2 mirrors before the bitflip. This is done by running another instance of the rsync daemon, on a different port (e.g. 874), with an Access Control List to prevent public downloads, running as a user in the same group as downloaded the content (e.g. group mirror). This could be user mirror, group mirror, who has group read/execute permissions on the still-private content.
Tier 1 mirrors have a tendency to use different authentication methods for granting access to these non-public downloads, they vary from maintaining IP based ACL's to assigning username/password combinations to mirrors wishing to sync from them. Each method has advantages / disadvantages, the IP list is 'simpler' from a mirrormanager perspective as mirrormanager can give you the list of IP's but from an automation standpoint can be more difficult (as rsync's configuration file does not allow that ACL list to be stored in a separate file). Username / passwords can be more versatile as sites mirroring can change IPs without notifying you, but it's easier for those credentials to leak out and get miss-used.
Other MirrorManager features
Statistics
MirrorManager tracks the number of accesses to the mirror list and breaks it down by country, architecture, and repository.
Mirror Maps
The map of all public mirrors is updated daily; if it doesn't display the correct data, please try again later.
Recognition
This product includes GeoLite data created by MaxMind.