I used to pick out mirrors manually and had servers very close to me, but I recently started using reflector to automate the process, but the mirrors it chooses is absolute dogshit and gives me really slow speeds.
What am I doing wrong?
I used to pick out mirrors manually and had servers very close to me, but I recently started using reflector to automate the process, but the mirrors it chooses is absolute dogshit and gives me really slow speeds.
What am I doing wrong?
Could you include what you’re currently using for the various reflector command-line switches? (e.g. --age --protocol --sort …)
Here’s whats in
/etc/xdg/reflector/reflector.conf
# Reflector configuration file for the systemd service. # # Empty lines and lines beginning with "#" are ignored. All other lines should # contain valid reflector command-line arguments. The lines are parsed with # Python's shlex modules so standard shell syntax should work. All arguments are # collected into a single argument list. # # See "reflector --help" for details. # Recommended Options # Set the output path where the mirrorlist will be saved (--save). --save /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist # Select the transfer protocol (--protocol). --protocol https # Select the country (--country). # Consult the list of available countries with "reflector --list-countries" and # select the countries nearest to you or the ones that you trust. For example: --country Bangladesh,India # Use only the most recently synchronized mirrors (--latest). --latest 5 # Sort the mirrors by synchronization time (--sort). --sort age
In my
reflector.conf
, I have--score 5
instead of--latest 5
. I don’t know how much this actually improves anything, but surely selecting by score is better than just using the most recently updated mirrors.i believe that is what will be used by reflector if it is enabled/started as a systemd service. but, i think, that’ll not be used if you’re just calling it on the command-line. in that latter case, i think you must supply (those) command-line switches on …the command-line. (maybe)
The systemd service is enabled, and when I did actually apply all these in the command line manually too before enabling the service.
ah. now armed with that extra information, i can only profess cluelessness. perhaps a “–verbose” option, well watched, would reveal something (maybe) good luck!
Been a while since I mucked with reflector, but you don’t seem to be prioritizing faster mirrors whatsoever. Try
--sort rate
instead. If that’s not fast enough I’d also increase your--latest
up to maybe 15 so that you have higher odds of a fast mirror being in the group of just-updated mirrors.