Hey,
I'm a computer / tech enthusiast with a passion for contributing and also computer servers, I'd like to become a mirror as I have a spare server that I have designed to be operating as a mirror, already providing mirrors for Arch, Ubuntu, and soon to be Debian too. The IP address for the mirror is 89.21.84.29 and 2a0f:6283:1100::29, available bandwidth is 1Gbps.
Disclaimer:
The information contained in this communication message from the sender is confidential. It is intended solely for the recipient and others who have been authorised to receive it. If you are not the recipient (or think you have been sent this in error) you shall notify the sender of the error and then remove the communication message with immediate effect. You are hereby notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or taking action in relation to the contents of this information is strictly prohibited and may be unlawful.
This message was scanned using an email filtering solution before being sent. All responses to this communication message will be scanned for any malicious contents, including attachments. Responding to this email means you accept that your responses are being scanned.
On Tue, Sep 02, 2025 at 12:37:25AM +0000, Marcus Naw | Mirror Service wrote:
Hey,
I'm a computer / tech enthusiast with a passion for contributing and also computer servers, I'd like to become a mirror as I have a spare server that I have designed to be operating as a mirror, already providing mirrors for Arch, Ubuntu, and soon to be Debian too. The IP address for the mirror is 89.21.84.29 and 2a0f:6283:1100::29, available bandwidth is 1Gbps.
Please use a tier 1 mirror[1] close to you; create an account in the MirrorManager[2]; register your mirror in our MirrorManager; enter your local netblocks in the mirror manager and as soon as you are listed in the database as up to date yum/dnf will be redirected to your mirror.
All this information can be found in more details in the wiki at:
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Infrastructure/Mirroring
Thanks for supporting Fedora. If you have any further questions do not hesitate to ask.
It would help us a lot if you could provide rsync access for our crawler. Our crawler checks the content of your mirror and using rsync requires only one network connection in contrast to crawling via HTTP which can take up one connection per directory/file on your mirror.
[1] https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Infrastructure/Mirroring/Tiering [2] https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Infrastructure/MirrorManager
mirror-admin@lists.fedoraproject.org