On Thu, 2013-06-13 at 10:30 -0600, Kevin Fenzi wrote: > On Thu, 13 Jun 2013 09:10:28 -0700 > Adam Williamson <awilliam@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On Thu, 2013-06-13 at 20:44 +0530, piruthiviraj natarajan wrote: > > > I used Arch Linux for a long time and there is an option in Arch > > > Linux for determining the mirrors which have synced the latest with > > > the mirror status. I would be happy to know if there is a service > > > for fedora like this https://www.archlinux.org/mirrors/status/ . > > We don't have anything like that off hand that I know of. > > Mirrors that don't check in as being up to date, or fail a crawler test > from mirrormanager are simply removed from the mirrorlists as stale. > > > I > > > checked some of the packages(sssd) in official [Fedora > > > mirrors](http://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/development/19/x86_64/os/Packages/s/) > > > which are lagging behind [kernel.org > > > mirrors](http://mirrors.kernel.org/fedora/updates/testing/19/x86_64/) > > > for fedora which was surprising. > > That is indeed suprising to me as dl.fedoraproject.org is our master > mirrors. ;) All the tier1 mirrors sync from it. > > What were you seeing more up to date on kernel.org? Note that the situation with sssd is a bit complex. The broken update was submitted for updates-testing on 06-12 at 12:01, and pushed to updates-testing on 06-12 at 12:41. It was then marked to be 'unpushed' - i.e. taken off the mirrors - on 06-13 at 01:28. A fixed sssd package was then added to the update and submitted for updates-testing on 06-13 at 10:56, and pushed to updates-testing on 06-13 at 15:53. I'm not sure whether unpushes require any manual action or if they happen automatically, but if the unpush actually happened, then there was a time when the 'most current' state of the mirrors would have an *older* sssd package than a 'less current' state of the mirrors - a 'less current' mirror would still have the broken update, but a 'more current' mirror would have had it removed. It's not _always_ the case that the mirror with a higher-versioned package is the more up to date. 99% of the time, but not always. -- Adam Williamson Fedora QA Community Monkey IRC: adamw | Twitter: AdamW_Fedora | identi.ca: adamwfedora http://www.happyassassin.net -- test mailing list test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/test