| On 04/18/2013 03:17 AM, Carsten Otto
      wrote:
 
      Yes.  Without mirrors, Eclipse users could not download Eclipse.On Thu, Jan 31, 2013 at 03:47:22PM +0100, Carsten Otto wrote:
 
        I stopped our rsync cronjob until the issue is resolved.
 
Nevertheless I'd love to have the following questions answered:
1) Do you want us to mirror your data? 
 
      On _our_ side, no.  We do not "care" because, if the project teams
    want users to download their bits, it will be quickly apparent that
    there is a problem and they will fix their permissions.
2) If so, do you care about errors on your side? 
 However, I do care about errors on _your_ side if _you_ care about
    errors on your side.  I was under the assumption that most mirrors
    simply sent errors to /dev/null since, as above, if there were
    permissions problems, the onus is on us to fix them.
 
 
 
 
 
      I've opened this bug:
    
    https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=4059813) If so, what do you do against that? How do you plan to react to
   notifications from the outside (e.g. me)?
 
 For now, the best I could do is a "reactive" system -- ie,
    periodically scan for Permissions errors in the rsyncd log and fix
    them.  This will not guarantee that mirrors will never get errors --
    but as mirrors get errors, they will be automagically fixed.
 
 Does that sound workable?
 
 Thanks for caring.  Really.
 
 Denis
 
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