A massive uptick in traffic to Fedora’s package mirrors is causing problems for the Linux distribution.
Stephen Smoogen of Red Hat wrote a blog post today around 5+ million more EPEL-7 systems beginning in March.
The past three months now there has been a 5+ million surge in Fedora/EPEL traffic and it’s placed a strain on the systems.
It’s about doubling the number of unique IPs connecting to the mirror system.
In today’s blog post, Smoogen describes it as “I am not sure what changed in Amazon in March, but it has had a tremendous impact on parts of Fedora Infrastructure and the volunteer mirror systems which use it.”
With some extra publicity on the situation, hopefully whatever the underlying cause of the change in traffic pattern will hopefully be better handled now by Amazon.
The original article contains 221 words, the summary contains 135 words. Saved 39%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
A massive uptick in traffic to Fedora’s package mirrors is causing problems for the Linux distribution.
Stephen Smoogen of Red Hat wrote a blog post today around 5+ million more EPEL-7 systems beginning in March.
The past three months now there has been a 5+ million surge in Fedora/EPEL traffic and it’s placed a strain on the systems.
It’s about doubling the number of unique IPs connecting to the mirror system.
In today’s blog post, Smoogen describes it as “I am not sure what changed in Amazon in March, but it has had a tremendous impact on parts of Fedora Infrastructure and the volunteer mirror systems which use it.”
With some extra publicity on the situation, hopefully whatever the underlying cause of the change in traffic pattern will hopefully be better handled now by Amazon.
The original article contains 221 words, the summary contains 135 words. Saved 39%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!