From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: Received: (qmail 22964 invoked by alias); 9 Mar 2003 06:31:22 -0000 Mailing-List: contact overseers-help@sources.redhat.com; run by ezmlm Precedence: bulk List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: , Sender: overseers-owner@sources.redhat.com Received: (qmail 22949 invoked from network); 9 Mar 2003 06:31:20 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO duracef.shout.net) (204.253.184.12) by 172.16.49.205 with SMTP; 9 Mar 2003 06:31:20 -0000 Received: (from mec@localhost) by duracef.shout.net (8.11.6/8.11.6) id h296VHJ12877; Sun, 9 Mar 2003 00:31:17 -0600 Date: Sun, 09 Mar 2003 06:31:00 -0000 From: Michael Elizabeth Chastain Message-Id: <200303090631.h296VHJ12877@duracef.shout.net> To: jason-gcclist@molenda.com, rschiele@uni-mannheim.de Subject: Re: cvs corrruption in gcc/unroll.c Cc: cvs-hackers@gnu.org, gcc@gcc.gnu.org, hp@bitrange.com, overseers@gcc.gnu.org X-SW-Source: 2003-q1/txt/msg00371.txt.bz2 First, an explanation of why anonymous cvs on subversions has been slow/broken for the past few days. This is from the front page of savannah.gnu.org: Latest News Server exhausted, mldonkey clients charged yeupou - Fri 03/07/03 at 05:27 - 3 messages The Savannah server is currently exhausted because hundred of mldonkey clients are trying to download differents files as servers-list or motd (server.met, motd.html, motd.conf, peers.ocl). Despite the fact that we now fordib access to this kind of data, it still creates tons of http connections and generates lot of CPU usage. mldonkey is a p2p program developed as a savannah project. A recent release of mldonkey contained savannah URL's for its configuration files, so myriads of mldonkey users are pounding the servers for its configuration files. (Literally: one 'myriad' is 10,000, and they are seeing about 100,000 connections per day from mldonkey users). I'm just mentioning this because it's relevant news and nobody else has mentioned it yet. I don't want to start a big off-topic thread about it. My armchair guess, as an outside amateur kind of guy, is that gcc.gnu.org is fine and that subversions.gnu.org is suffering some thrashing-induced corruption. Michael C