Manjaro Pacman-mirrors

Pacman-mirrors

From Manjaro
Revision as of 17:04, 19 April 2017 by imported>Fhdk (→‎TL:DR)

Manjaro Pacman-Mirrors

A utility for generating and maintaining the systems mirrorlist.

Purpose

Manjaro uses pacman for system maintenance, updates and new installs. For pacman to function, a list of servers, or more commonly known as mirrors, with Manjaro software packages is required. As Manjaro has many mirrors all over the world it is feasible to use the mirrors closest to your location.

Use

For most functions, a working internet connection is required. From v4, Pacman-Mirrors will check if network is online. It is doing so by querying https://manjaro.org.The app is run by an ordinary user with superuser rights from the console and when no arguments are given it will display a usage description as if -h had been given.

$ sudo pacman-mirrors

Exactly how the app generates the mirrorlist is controlled by supplying arguments on the commandline.

Important After every change to your mirrorlist it is mandatory to run an update on your pacman database

$ sudo pacman -Syy

If you fail to do so, the issue/s which had you make change might not be solved.

Available arguments

All arguments can be viewed by unfolding this block

  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -g, --generate        Generate mirrorlist
  -m, --method {rank,random}
                        Generation method
  -b, --branch {stable,testing,unstable}
                        Branch name
  -c, --country COUNTRY
                        Comma separated list of countries,
                        from which mirrors will be used
  --geoip               Get current country using geolocation.
                        Ignored if '-c/--country' is supplied
  -d, --mirror_dir PATH
                        Mirrors list path
  -o, --output FILE     Output file
  -t, --timeout SECONDS
                        Maximum waiting time for server response
  --no-update           Don't generate mirrorlist if
                        'NoUpdate = True' in the configuration file
  -i, --interactive     Generate custom mirrorlist
  -v, --version         Print the pacman-mirrors version
  -q, --quiet           Quiet mode - less verbose output
  -f, --fasttrack DIGIT
                        A quick mirrorlist. Overrides -cim --geoip
  -l, --list            List all available countries
  --default             Default mirror file is used

Defaults

PacmanMirrors has some reasonable defaults

- Ranking mirrors with the fastest mirrors on top
- Using stable branch
- Using all mirrors

The -g or --generate argument is only for running pacman-mirrors with all defaults. If you are using other arguments eg.-b unstable the generate argument is not needed.

Country

Instead of pacman-mirrors probing all mirrors in all countries it is possible to supply a list of countries from which to use the mirrors.

$ sudo pacman-mirrors --country Germany,France,Austria

If a supplied country does not offer a mirrorserver the app quits with an error explaining why.

$ sudo pacman-mirrors --country Antarctica
usage: pacman-mirrors [-h] [-g] [-m {rank,random}]
                      [-b {stable,testing,unstable}] [-c COUNTRY] [--geoip]
                      [-d PATH] [-o FILE] [-t SECONDS] [--no-update] [-i] [-v]
                      [-q]
pacman-mirrors: error: Option '-c/--country' unknown country: 'Antarctica'.
Available countries are: Africa, Australia, Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Brasil,
Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, China, Colombia, Costa_Rica, Czech, Denmark, Ecuador,
France, Germany, Greece, Indonesia, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Netherlands,
Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Singapore, Sweden, Taiwan,
Turkey, United_Kingdom, United_States, Vietnam

Another option for the mirrors closest to your location is --geoip

$ sudo pacman-mirrors --geoip --quiet
:: Querying servers, this may take some time
=> Testing mirrors in France
:: Writing mirror list
:: Mirrorlist generated and saved to: /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist

Branch

Situations could exist, in which you want a not yet released to stable software, which contains a desired improvement or bugfix. For such situations it is possible to make a temporary switch to testing or unstable branch

$ sudo pacman-mirrors --branch testing

Syncronize your pacman database with the new mirror/branch combination and install whatever software needed from that branch.

$ sudo pacman -Syy some-software-package-you-need

After installation switch back

$ sudo pacman-mirrors --branch stable

Syncronize

$ sudo pacman -Syy

In such a situation, where you have pulled software from another branch, you must be prepared for messages from pacman or pamac about newer packages on the system. These messages can safely be ignored and they dissappear when the installed package(s) reaches stable branch

Your personal mirrorlist

If you, for various reasons, have a preference for specific mirrors, it is possible to create a personal mirrorlist. This is done by supplying interactive argument.

$ sudo pacman-mirrors --interactive

Pacman-mirrors will process the available mirrors and present you with a list in which you will select your desired mirrors. The resulting list will be saved to the system and used each time you run pacman-mirrors.

When you want to reset the list to default run

$ sudo pacman-mirrors --country all

Fasttrack

The following arguments -c -i -m --geoip will not work in conjunction with -f.

The smaller number of mirrors you choose for your mirrorlist, the possibility of getting a not so responsive mirror increases, since only the first n in the list are tested, not all of them. A reasonable number would be between 5 and 10.

FAQ

fasttrack

So, pacman-mirrors -f 2 takes the same time to create /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist as pacman-mirrors -f 20?

No. pacman-mirrors -f 2 will approx. be 10x faster than pacman-mirrors -f 20 since only 2 mirrors are probed versus 20 mirrors.

So, pacman-mirrors -f [n] always ranks ALL mirrors by response time (the same as -g does) and additionally takes up-to-date mirrors and writes only n mirrors to the mirrorlist?

No. pacman-mirrors -f [n] ranks on a sorted list with known up-to-date mirrors. Thus it is only the first n mirrors from this list which are actually probed. If you have a list of 30 mirrors which are up-to-date and use -f 5 only the top 5 mirrors are probed and then sorted after response time.

pacman-mirrors.conf

My branch changes itself

When pacman-mirrors is updated it is by convention that pacman replaces your pacman-mirrors.conf. Check if you have some of these files:

  • /etc/pacman-mirrors.conf.pacsave
  • /etc/pacman-mirrors.conf.pacnew
  • /etc/pacman-mirrors.conf.<date>.backup

You must manually merge changes/additions into your pacman-mirrors.conf.

TL:DR

Default mirrorlist

sudo pacman-mirrors -g

List available countries [#Country country]

sudo pacman-mirrors -l

Mirrors for your country

sudo pacman-mirrors --geoip

Mirrors for preferred countries

sudo pacman-mirrors -c Germany,France,Austria

5 Mirrors up-to-date on all branches

sudo pacman-mirrors -f 5

Temporarily switch to unstable #Branch

sudo pacman-mirrors -b unstable
sudo pacman -Syy

Switch back to stable branch

sudo pacman-mirrors -b stable
sudo pacman -Syy

Having fun handpicking mirrors and protocols

sudo pacman-mirrors -i --default

Forum posts

Pacman-mirrors in the forum

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