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?

  • radicalpikachu@vlemmy.netOP
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    2 years ago

    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
    
    • festus
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      2 years ago

      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.

    • theophrastus@vlemmy.net
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      2 years ago

      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)

      • radicalpikachu@vlemmy.netOP
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        2 years ago

        The systemd service is enabled, and when I did actually apply all these in the command line manually too before enabling the service.

        • theophrastus@vlemmy.net
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          2 years ago

          ah. now armed with that extra information, i can only profess cluelessness. perhaps a “–verbose” option, well watched, would reveal something (maybe) good luck!