My config for reflector is currently set as follows:

# Set the output path where the mirrorlist will be saved.
--save /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist

# Select the transfer protocol.
--protocol https

# Use only the most recently synchronized mirrors.
--latest 200

# Sort the mirrors by synchronization time.
--sort rate

# Return, at most, the following number of mirrors.
--number 20

# Print extra info.
--verbose

I have Reflector set to run as a Systemd service, so it will run when my computer boots.

The “issue” is that I update my system as soon as I boot. Since Reflector is sorting mirrors by their measured download rate, I wonder if downloading updates, or simply doing any action that downloads data, would interfere with those measurements and cause Reflector to choose mirrors that may not be the fastest. I could simply wait for Reflector to finish before using the computer, but it takes quite a while to sort through 200 mirrors.

Is this concern justified? If so, are there ways to mitigate it that don’t require me to wait for Reflector to finish? I’ve thought about setting it as a Pacman hook so that it runs after updating, but, then, that relies on me to perform an update for the mirrorlist to be refreshed, and that still leaves the concern of other actions eating up network bandwidth, thus skewing the measurements.

  • @forbiddenlake
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    429 days ago

    The list does change and mirrors do degrade. I once ran in to an issue where my chosen mirror was now incomplete and causing problems.

    Every boot or every day is overkill though imo. I do weekly.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
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      29 days ago

      Huh, TIL reflector actually ships with a weekly timer service - seems like a good default. I usually promote a university or large org mirror to the top after reflector runs. they’re rarely out of date for long.