freebsd-update
Lars Engels
lars.engels at 0x20.net
Thu Jan 30 11:07:27 UTC 2014
Am 2014-01-29 22:51, schrieb Colin Percival:
> On 01/29/14 12:51, Lars Engels wrote:
>> On Sat, Jan 25, 2014 at 09:11:04AM -0600, Mark Felder wrote:
>>> On Sat, Jan 25, 2014, at 5:32, Lars Engels wrote:
>>>> Also using freebsd-update behind a proxy is really slow. Even with a
>>>> very fast internet connection (normally download rates ca. 3 MBytes
>>>> /
>>>> s) downloading all the tiny binary diff files took more than 8
>>>> hours.
>>>> Maybe freebsd-update's backend could create a tarball of all those
>>>> diffs and provide this?
>>>
>>> Even streaming the tar instead of waiting for the freebsd-update
>>> server
>>> to produce the tarball would be an improvement. I have no experience
>>> doing that over a WAN but I don't see why it would be unreliable.
>>
>> Colin, what do you think? Is it possible?
>
> Anything is *possible*, but given that the number of patches available
> is
> typically at least 10x the number being fetched this doesn't seem like
> it
> would be very efficient.
>
> FWIW, the performance problems with proxies are limited to HTTP proxies
> which don't speak HTTP/1.1.
Are you sure?
I just tried it manually with telnet:
# telnet proxyserver 8080
Trying <IP Address>...
Connected to proxyserver.
CONNECT www.heise.de:80 HTTP/1.1
Proxy-Authorization:Basic blahblahblahbase64
HTTP/1.1 200 Connection established
GET / HTTP/1.1
HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
IIUC the proxy itself supports HTTP/1.1 but not the webserver behind the
proxy?
That's the same proxy that takes hours to download the patches with
httpget.
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