Mirroring FreeBSDJunKuriyamakuriyama@FreeBSD.orgValentinoVaschettologo@FreeBSD.orgDanielLangdl@leo.orgKenSmithkensmith@FreeBSD.org
&tm-attrib.freebsd;
&tm-attrib.cvsup;
&tm-attrib.general;
$FreeBSD$$FreeBSD$An in-progress article on how to mirror FreeBSD, aimed at
hub administrators.We are not accepting new mirrors at this time.Contact InformationThe Mirror System Coordinators can be reached through email
at mirror-admin@FreeBSD.org. There is also
a &a.hubs;.Requirements for FreeBSD mirrorsDisk Space
Disk space is one of the most important requirements.
Depending on the set of releases, architectures,
and degree of completeness you want to mirror, a huge
amount of disk space may be consumed. Also keep in mind
that official mirrors are probably required to be
complete. The CVS repository and the web pages should
always be mirrored completely. Also note that the
numbers stated here are reflecting the current
state (at &rel2.current;-RELEASE/&rel.current;-RELEASE). Further development and
releases will only increase the required amount.
Also make sure to keep some (ca. 10-20%) extra space
around just to be sure.
Here are some approximate figures:
Full FTP Distribution: 1.0 TBCVS repository: 5.4 GBCTM deltas: 3.2 GBWeb pages: 463 MB
The current disk usage of FTP Distribution can be found at
ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/dir.sizes.
Network Connection/Bandwidth
Of course, you need to be connected to the Internet.
The required bandwidth depends on your intended use
of the mirror. If you just want to mirror some
parts of FreeBSD for local use at your site/intranet,
the demand may be much smaller than if you want to
make the files publicly available. If you intend
to become an official mirror, the bandwidth required will be even higher. We can only give rough
estimates here:
Local site, no public access: basically no minimum,
but < 2 Mbps could make syncing too slow.Unofficial public site: 34 Mbps is probably a good start.Official site: > 100 Mbps is recommended, and your host
should be connected as close as possible to your border router.System Requirements, CPU, RAM
One thing this depends on the expected number of clients,
which is determined by the server's policy. It is
also affected by the types of services you want to offer.
Plain FTP or HTTP services may not require a huge
amount of resources. Watch out if you provide
rsync. This can have a huge
impact on CPU and memory requirements as it is
considered a memory hog.
The following
are just examples to give you a very rough hint.
For a moderately visited site that offers
Rsync, you might
consider a current CPU with around 800MHz - 1 GHz,
and at least 512MB RAM. This is probably the
minimum you want for an official
site.
For a frequently used site you definitely need
more RAM (consider 2GB as a good start)
and possibly more CPU, which could also mean
that you need to go for a SMP system.
You also want to consider a fast disk subsystem.
Operations on the CVS repository require a fast
disk subsystem (RAID is highly advised). A SCSI
controller that has a cache of its own can also
speed up things since most of these services incur a
large number of small modifications to the disk.
Services to offer
Every mirror site is required to have a set of core services
available. In addition to these required services, there are
a number of optional services that
server administrators may choose to offer. This section explains
which services you can provide and how to go about implementing them.
FTP (required for FTP fileset)
This is one of the most basic services, and
it is required for each mirror offering public
FTP distributions. FTP access must be
anonymous, and no upload/download ratios
are allowed (a ridiculous thing anyway).
Upload capability is not required (and must
never be allowed for the FreeBSD file space).
Also the FreeBSD archive should be available under
the path /pub/FreeBSD.
There is a lot of software available which
can be set up to allow anonymous FTP
(in alphabetical order)./usr/libexec/ftpd: FreeBSD's own ftpd
can be used. Be sure to read &man.ftpd.8;.ftp/ncftpd: A commercial package,
free for educational use.ftp/oftpd: An ftpd designed with
security as a main focus.ftp/proftpd: A modular and very flexible ftpd.ftp/pure-ftpd: Another ftpd developed with
security in mind.ftp/twoftpd: As above.ftp/vsftpd: The very secure ftpd.ftp/wu-ftpd: The ftpd from Washington
University. It has become infamous, because of the huge
amount of security issues that have been found in it.
If you do choose to use this software be sure to
keep it up to date.
FreeBSD's ftpd, proftpd,
wu-ftpd and maybe ncftpd
are among the most commonly used FTPds.
The others do not have a large userbase among mirror sites. One
thing to consider is that you may need flexibility in limiting
how many simultaneous connections are allowed, thus limiting how
much network bandwidth and system resources are consumed.
Rsync (optional for FTP fileset)Rsync is often offered for access to the
contents of the FTP area of FreeBSD, so other mirror sites can use your system as their source. The
protocol is different from FTP in many ways.
It is much more
bandwidth friendly, as only differences between files
are transferred instead of whole files when they change.
Rsync does require a significant amount of memory for
each instance. The size depends on the size of
the synced module in terms of the number of directories and
files. Rsync can use rsh and
ssh (now default) as a transport,
or use its own protocol for stand-alone access
(this is the preferred method for public rsync servers).
Authentication, connection limits, and other restrictions
may be applied. There is just one software package
available:net/rsyncHTTP (required for web pages, optional for FTP fileset)
If you want to offer the FreeBSD web pages, you will need
to install a web server.
You may optionally offer the FTP fileset via HTTP.
The choice of web server software is left up to the mirror administrator.
Some of the most popular choices are:www/apache22:
Apache is the most widely
deployed web server on the Internet. It is used
extensively by the FreeBSD Project.www/thttpd:
If you are going to be serving a large amount of static content
you may find that using an application such as thttpd is more
efficient than Apache. It is
optimized for excellent performance on FreeBSD.www/boa:
Boa is another alternative to
thttpd and
Apache. It should provide
considerably better performance than
Apache for purely static
content. It does not, at the time of this writing,
contain the same set of optimizations for FreeBSD that
are found in thttpd.CVSup (desired for CVS repository)CVSup is a very efficient way of distributing files.
It works similar to rsync, but was specially designed for
use with CVS repositories. If you want to offer the
FreeBSD CVS repository, you really want to consider
offering it via CVSup. It is possible to offer
the CVS repository via AnonCVS, FTP,
rsync or HTTP, but
people would benefit much more from CVSup access.
CVSup was developed by &a.jdp.email;.
It is a bit tricky to install on non-FreeBSD platforms,
since it is written in Modula-3 and therefore requires
a Modula-3 environment. &a.jdp; has built a
stripped down version of M3 that is sufficient to
run CVSup, and can be installed much easier.
See Ezm3
for details. Related ports are:net/cvsup: The native CVSup port (client and server)
which requires lang/ezm3 now.net/cvsup-mirror: The CVSup mirror kit, which requires
net/cvsup-without-gui, and configures it mirror-ready. Some
site administrators may want a different setup though.
There are a few more like
net/cvsup-without-gui you might want to have
a look at. If you prefer a static binary package, take a look
here.
This page still refers to the S1G bug that was present
in CVSup. Maybe
John will set up a generic download-site to get
static binaries for various platforms.
It is possible to use CVSup to offer
any kind of fileset, not just CVS repositories,
but configuration can be complex.
CVSup is known to eat some CPU on both the server and the
client, since it needs to compare lots of files.
AnonCVS (optional for CVS repository)
If you have the CVS repository, you may want to offer
anonymous CVS access. A short warning first:
There is not much demand for it,
it requires some experience, and you need to know
what you are doing.
Generally there are two ways
to access a CVS repository remotely: via
pserver or via ssh
(we do not consider rsh).
For anonymous access, pserver is
very well suited, but some still offer ssh
access as well. There is a custom crafted
wrapper
in the CVS repository, to be used as a login-shell for the
anonymous ssh account. It does a chroot, and therefore
requires the CVS repository to be available under the
anonymous user's home-directory. This may not be possible
for all sites. If you just offer pserver
this restriction does not apply, but you may run with
more security risks. You do not need to install any special
software, since &man.cvs.1; comes with
FreeBSD. You need to enable access via inetd,
so add an entry into your /etc/inetd.conf
like this:
cvspserver stream tcp nowait root /usr/bin/cvs cvs -f -l -R -T /anoncvstmp --allow-root=/home/ncvs pserver
See the manpage for details of the options. Also see the CVS info
page about additional ways to make sure access is read-only.
It is advised that you create an unprivileged account,
preferably called anoncvs.
Also you need to create a file passwd
in your /home/ncvs/CVSROOT and assign a
CVS password (empty or anoncvs) to that user.
The directory /anoncvstmp is a special
purpose memory based file system. It is not required but
advised since &man.cvs.1; creates a shadow directory
structure in your /tmp which is
not used after the operation but slows things
dramatically if real disk operations are required.
Here is an excerpt from /etc/fstab,
how to set up such a MFS:
/dev/da0s1b /anoncvstmp mfs rw,-s=786432,-b=4096,-f=512,-i=560,-c=3,-m=0,nosuid 0 0
This is (of course) tuned a lot, and was suggested by &a.jdp.email;.
How to Mirror FreeBSD
Ok, now you know the requirements and how to offer
the services, but not how to get it. :-)
This section explains how to actually mirror
the various parts of FreeBSD, what tools to use,
and where to mirror from.
FTP
The FTP area is the largest amount of data that
needs to be mirrored. It includes the distribution
sets required for network installation, the
branches which are actually snapshots
of checked-out source trees, the ISO Images
to write CD-ROMs with the installation distribution,
a live file system, lots of packages, the ports tree,
distfiles, and a huge amount of packages. All of course
for various FreeBSD versions,
and various architectures.
With FTP mirror
You can use a FTP mirror
program to get the files. Some of the most commonly used are:ftp/mirrorftp/ftpmirrorftp/emirrorftp/speglaftp/omiftp/wgetftp/mirror was very popular, but seemed
to have some drawbacks, as it is written in &man.perl.1;,
and had real problems with mirroring large
directories like a FreeBSD site. There are rumors that
the current version has fixed this by allowing
a different algorithm for comparing
the directory structure to be specified.
In general FTP is not really good for mirroring. It transfers
the whole file if it has changed, and does
not create a single data stream which would benefit from
a large TCP congestion window.
With rsync
A better way to mirror the FTP area is rsync.
You can install the port net/rsync and then use
rsync to sync with your upstream host.
rsync is already mentioned
in .
Since rsync access is not
required, your preferred upstream site may not allow it.
You may need to hunt around a little bit to find a site
that allows rsync access.
Since the number of rsync
clients will have a significant impact on the server
machine, most admins impose limitations on their
server. For a mirror, you should ask the site maintainer
you are syncing from about their policy, and maybe
an exception for your host (since you are a mirror).
A command line to mirror FreeBSD might look like:&prompt.user; rsync -vaz --delete ftp4.de.FreeBSD.org::FreeBSD/ /pub/FreeBSD/Consult the documentation for rsync,
which is also available at
http://rsync.samba.org/,
about the various options to be used with rsync.
If you sync the whole module (unlike subdirectories),
be aware that the module-directory (here "FreeBSD")
will not be created, so you cannot omit the target directory.
Also you might
want to set up a script framework that calls such a command
via &man.cron.8;.
With CVSup
A few sites, including the one-and-only ftp-master.FreeBSD.org
even offer CVSup to mirror the contents of
the FTP space. You need to install a CVSup
client, preferably from the port net/cvsup.
(Also reread .)
A sample supfile suitable for ftp-master.FreeBSD.org
looks like this:
#
# FreeBSD archive supfile from master server
#
*default host=ftp-master.FreeBSD.org
*default base=/usr
*default prefix=/pub
#*default release=all
*default delete use-rel-suffix
*default umask=002
# If your network link is a T1 or faster, comment out the following line.
#*default compress
FreeBSD-archive release=all preserve
It seems CVSup would be the best
way to mirror the archive in terms of efficiency, but
it is only available from few sites.
Please have look at the CVSup documentation
like &man.cvsup.1; and consider using the
option. This reduces I/O operations by assuming the
recorded information about each file is correct.Mirroring the CVS repositoryThere are various ways to mirror the CVS repository.
CVSup is the most common method.Using CVSupCVSup is described in some
detail in and .
It is very easy to setup a
CVSup mirror. Installing
net/cvsup-mirror will
make sure all of the needed programs are installed and then
gather all the needed information to configure the mirror.
Please do not forget to consider the hint
mentioned in this note
above.
Using other methods
Using other methods than CVSup is
generally not recommended. We describe them in short here
anyway. Since most sites offer the CVS repository as
part of the FTP fileset under the path
/pub/FreeBSD/development/FreeBSD-CVS,
the following methods could be used.FTPRsyncHTTPAnonCVS cannot be used to mirror the CVS repository
since CVS does not allow you to access the repository
itself, only checked out versions of the modules.Mirroring the WWW pages
The best way is to check out the www
distribution from CVS. If you have a local mirror of the
CVS repository, it is as easy as:&prompt.user; cvs -d /home/ncvs co wwwand a cronjob, that calls cvs up -d -P
on a regular basis, maybe just after your repository was updated.
Of course, the files need to remain in a directory available
for public WWW access. The installation and configuration of a
web server is not discussed here.
If you do not have a local repository, you can use
CVSup to maintain an up to date copy
of the www pages. A sample supfile can be found in
/usr/share/examples/cvsup/www-supfile and
could look like this:
#
# WWW module supfile for FreeBSD
#
*default host=cvsup3.de.FreeBSD.org
*default base=/usr
*default prefix=/usr/local
*default release=cvs tag=.
*default delete use-rel-suffix
# If your network link is a T1 or faster, comment out the following line.
*default compress
# This collection retrieves the www/ tree of the FreeBSD repository
www
Using ftp/wget or other web-mirror tools is
not recommended.
Mirroring the FreeBSD documentation
Since the documentation is referenced a lot from the
web pages, it is recommended that you mirror the
FreeBSD documentation as well. However, this is not
as trivial as the www-pages alone.
First of all, you should get the doc sources,
again preferably via CVSup.
Here is a corresponding sample supfile:
#
# FreeBSD documentation supfile
#
*default host=cvsup3.de.FreeBSD.org
*default base=/usr
*default prefix=/usr/share
*default release=cvs tag=.
*default delete use-rel-suffix
# If your network link is a T1 or faster, comment out the following line.
#*default compress
# This will retrieve the entire doc branch of the FreeBSD repository.
# This includes the handbook, FAQ, and translations thereof.
doc-all
Then you need to install a couple of ports.
You are lucky, there is a meta-port:
textproc/docproj to do the work
for you. You need to set up some
environment variables, like
SGML_CATALOG_FILES.
Also have a look at your /etc/make.conf
(copy /usr/share/examples/etc/make.conf if
you do not have one), and look at the
DOC_LANG variable.
Now you are probably ready to run make
in your doc directory (/usr/share/doc
by default) and build the documentation.
Again you need to make it accessible for your web server
and make sure the links point to the right location.
The building of the documentation, as well as lots
of side issues, is documented itself in the
&os; Documentation
Project Primer.
Please read this piece of documentation, especially if you
have problems building the documentation.
How often should I mirror?
Every mirror should be updated on a regular
basis. You will certainly need some script
framework for it that will be called by
&man.cron.8;. Since nearly every admin
does this his own way, we cannot give
specific instructions. It could work
like this:
Put the command to run your mirroring application
in a script. Use of a plain /bin/sh
script is recommended.
Add some output redirections so diagnostic
messages are logged to a file.
Test if your script works. Check the logs.
Use &man.crontab.1; to add the script to the
appropriate user's &man.crontab.5;. This should be a
different user than what your FTP daemon runs as so that
if file permissions inside your FTP area are not
world-readable those files can not be accessed by anonymous
FTP. This is used to stage releases —
making sure all of the official mirror sites have all of the
necessary release files on release day.
Here are some recommended schedules:FTP fileset: dailyCVS repository: hourlyWWW pages: dailyWhere to mirror from
This is an important issue. So this section will
spend some effort to explain the backgrounds. We will say this
several times: under no circumstances should you mirror from
ftp.FreeBSD.org.
A few words about the organization
Mirrors are organized by country. All
official mirrors have a DNS entry of the form
ftpN.CC.FreeBSD.org.
CC (i.e. country code) is the
top level domain (TLD)
of the country where this mirror is located.
N is a number,
telling that the host would be the Nth
mirror in that country.
(Same applies to cvsupN.CC.FreeBSD.org,
wwwN.CC.FreeBSD.org, etc.)
There are mirrors with no CC part.
These are the mirror sites that are very well connected and
allow a large number of concurrent users.
ftp.FreeBSD.org is actually two machines, one currently
located in Denmark and the other in the United States.
It is NOT a master site and should never be
used to mirror from. Lots of online documentation leads
interactiveusers to
ftp.FreeBSD.org so automated mirroring
systems should find a different machine to mirror from.
Additionally there exists a hierarchy of mirrors, which
is described in terms of tiers.
The master sites are not referred to but can be
described as Tier-0. Mirrors
that mirror from these sites can be considered
Tier-1, mirrors of Tier-1-mirrors,
are Tier-2, etc.
Official sites are encouraged to be of a low tier,
but the lower the tier the higher the requirements in
terms as described in .
Also access to low-tier-mirrors may be restricted, and
access to master sites is definitely restricted.
The tier-hierarchy is not reflected
by DNS and generally not documented anywhere except
for the master sites. However, official mirrors with low numbers
like 1-4, are usually Tier-1
(this is just a rough hint, and there is no rule).
Ok, but where should I get the stuff now?
Under no circumstances should you mirror from ftp.FreeBSD.org.
The short answer is: from the
site that is closest to you in Internet terms, or gives you
the fastest access.
I just want to mirror from somewhere!
If you have no special intentions or
requirements, the statement in
applies. This means:
Check for those which provide fastest access
(number of hops, round-trip-times)
and offer the services you intend to
use (like rsync
or CVSup).
Contact the administrators of your chosen site stating your
request, and asking about their terms and
policies.
Set up your mirror as described above.
I am an official mirror, what is the right site for me?
In general the description in
still applies. Of course you may want to put some
weight on the fact that your upstream should be of
a low tier.
There are some other considerations about official
mirrors that are described in .
I want to access the master sites!
If you have good reasons and good prerequisites,
you may want and get access to one of the
master sites. Access to these sites is
generally restricted, and there are special policies
for access. If you are already an official
mirror, this certainly helps you getting access.
In any other case make sure your country really needs another mirror.
If it already has three or more, ask the zone administrator (hostmaster@CC.FreeBSD.org) or &a.hubs; first.
Whoever helped you become, an official
should have helped you gain access to an appropriate upstream
host, either one of the master sites or a suitable Tier-1
site. If not, you can send email to
mirror-admin@FreeBSD.org to request help with
that.
There are three master sites for the FTP fileset and
one for the CVS repository (the web pages and docs are
obtained from CVS, so there is no need for master).
ftp-master.FreeBSD.org
This is the master site for the FTP fileset.
ftp-master.FreeBSD.org provides
rsync and CVSup
access, in addition to FTP.
Refer to and
how to access
via these protocols.
Mirrors are also encouraged to allow rsync
access for the FTP contents, since they are
Tier-1-mirrors.
cvsup-master.FreeBSD.org
This is the master site for the CVS repository.
cvsup-master.FreeBSD.org provides
CVSup access only.
See for details.
To get access, you need to contact the &a.cvsup-master;.
Make sure you read the
FreeBSD CVSup Access Policy
first!
Set up the required authentication by following
these
instructions. Make sure you specify the server as
freefall.FreeBSD.org on the cvpasswd
command line, as described in this document,
even when you are contacting
cvsup-master.FreeBSD.orgOfficial Mirrors
Official mirrors are mirrors that
a) have a FreeBSD.org DNS entry
(usually a CNAME).
b) are listed as an official mirror in the FreeBSD
documentation (like handbook).
So far to distinguish official mirrors.
Official mirrors are not necessarily Tier-1-mirrors.
However you probably will not find a Tier-1-mirror,
that is not also official.
Special Requirements for official (tier-1) mirrors
It is not so easy to state requirements for all
official mirrors, since the project is sort of
tolerant here. It is more easy to say,
what official tier-1 mirrors
are required to. All other official mirrors
can consider this a big should.
The following applies mainly to the FTP fileset,
since a CVS repository should always be mirrored
completely, and the web pages are a case of
its own.
Tier-1 mirrors are required to:carry the complete filesetallow access to other mirror sitesprovide FTP and
rsync accessFurthermore, admins should be subscribed to the &a.hubs;.
See this link for details, how to subscribe.
It is very important for a hub administrator, especially
Tier-1 hub admins, to check the
release schedule
for the next FreeBSD release. This is important because it will tell you when the
next release is scheduled
to come out, and thus giving you time to prepare for the big spike of traffic which follows it.
It is also important that hub administrators try to keep their mirrors as up-to-date as
possible (again, even more crucial for Tier-1 mirrors). If Mirror1 does not update for a
while, lower tier mirrors will begin to mirror old data from Mirror1 and thus begins
a downward spiral... Keep your mirrors up to date!
How to become official then?
We are not accepting any new mirrors at this time.
Some statistics from mirror sites
Here are links to the stat pages of your favorite mirrors
(a.k.a. the only ones who feel like providing stats).
FTP site statisticsftp.is.FreeBSD.org - hostmaster@is.FreeBSD.org -
(Bandwidth) (FTP
processes) (HTTP processes)
ftp.cz.FreeBSD.org - cejkar@fit.vutbr.cz -
(Bandwidth)
(FTP processes)
(rsync processes)
ftp2.ru.FreeBSD.org - mirror@macomnet.ru -
(Bandwidth)
(HTTP and FTP users)
CVSup site statscvsup[23456].jp.FreeBSD.org - kuriyama@FreeBSD.org - (CVSup processes)cvsup.cz.FreeBSD.org - cejkar@fit.vutbr.cz -
(CVSup processes)cvsup4.ru.FreeBSD.org - maxim@FreeBSD.org -
(CVSup processes)