• CubitOom@infosec.pub
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    24 days ago

    Oh wait, I think the point is that if you are trying to visit archlinux.org, then you can use the URLs in the mirrorlist instead. That part about the reflector tool threw me.

    Guess I’m lucky, I haven’t had any issues downloading ISOs or using the AUR. This is the first I’m hearing about the DDOS.

    • ISO@lemmy.zip
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      24 days ago

      reflector uses https://archlinux.org/mirrors/status/json/ to get mirror status info, and caches it under ~/.cache/Reflector/. So as long as that end-point works, reflector should work.

      I just grabbed a copy and pasted it at http://0x0.st/Ki3Y.json.

      Anyone can grab that JSON data and use file:// URLs so they are never out. e.g.

      curl -L https://archlinux.org/mirrors/status/json/ > /tmp/mirror_status.json
      # or if down, use pasted json
      curl -L http://0x0.st/Ki3Y.json > /tmp/mirror_status.json
      # and then
      reflector --url file:///tmp/mirror_status.json ...
      

      But, as you noted, this has been mostly a nothing-burger from a user perspective anyway. Other than the homepage being unavailable on occasion, everything else has been mostly available just fine as you can see from https://status.archlinux.org/.

      I didn’t notice https://gitlab.archlinux.org/ going down either.


      BTW, and as a general rule of thumb, NEVER take specific technical advice from these editors. They don’t actually know much, and this is me trying to be nice.

      Take for example:

      For AUR disruptions, it’s a bit of a pain if you’re not a regular git user, but you cloned packages directly from the GitHub Arch Linux mirror. To do this, use the command:

      See that link ;) At least he got the command below it correctly, somehow.