![]() ![]() Rsync: failed to connect to : Connection refused (111) $ rsync -avvP rsync:///pub/linux/opensuse/distribution/10.2/iso/dvd/. Rsync error: error in rsync protocol data stream (code 12) at io.c(463) Rsync: connection unexpectedly closed (0 bytes received so far) $ rsync -avvP rsync:///opensuse/distribution/10.2/iso/dvd/. I tried using the said rsync package but I keep getting the following error for the mirror they used: Hopefully the next version of aria2 supports the features that will automate this. I know these extra steps are annoying, sorry. Note: we can just use a dot (".") at the end here since we simply want to continue the ISO with the same filename, in the current directory. Rsync -avvP rsync:///opensuse/distribution/10.2/iso/dvd/. Use rsync like this to download any missing chunks: This presupposes that you were downloading via metalink, and at some point (probably the end) you got an error. You can use a torrent and another torrent client (don't use aria2) and it will scan the file and fix errors. Since you have already downloaded the ISO, there are probably just a few small errors in the whole file, which causes the checksum to fail. The current version of aria2 doesn't support the advanced error correction that metalink allows (just the speed). My guess is that you are getting errors in the transfer due to errors in your connection or one of the mirrors is serving up bad data (more likely the first). I am downloading a DVD iso for SUSE (it is supposed to work better on my hardware) - what do you Still, it takes a long time to download and I wonder how much the fact that it doesn't match actually has to do with anything. Still, i have done this twice now, and each time independantly verified that the md5sum doesn't match up. When the download finishes it checks the file and always says 'checksum failed'. On torrents I get really low speeds (max 5KB/2, avg 1.5KB/s). the download proceeds well, and for some reason this is the only way i can get speeds that are practical for downloading a dvd iso. I am hacing a problem using aria2/metalinks. ![]() If only a small chunk of a download has errors, Metalink just re-downloads that part instead of the whole file. With Metalink, if the application you are downloading has a torrent, Metalink can use a torrent's partial file or chunk checksums to verify mirror downloads as well. If that happened with another file transfer method, you'd have to download the file again from another mirror. If there's an error in transfer, or if someone has maliciously replaced a good file with a bad one, the checksums won't match. Checksums are unique for every file, like a fingerprint. Metalink supports both MD5SUM and SHA1SUM checksums as well as PGP signatures, which are embedded in the. In effect, this increases reliability, as all listed servers would need to be down for the file to be unavailable.įiles downloaded with metalinks are automatically verified. But with Metalink, if one server goes down, the client software simply jumps to another mirror and resumes downloading from that point. If I were using a regular hyperlink to download and the server went down midway through the transfer, I would be left with an incomplete transfer that could either be resumed or not depending on the download client. For example, the metalink contains links to more than 50 HTTP and FTP servers and a torrent. In addition to HTTP and FTP mirrors and rsync, Metalink supports several P2P methods as well, including BitTorrent, ed2k, and magnet links. The file in turn contains locations of all the mirrors of the application you want to download. metalink file, which is a simple XML file. The Metalink standard replaces static URLs with a. ![]() It is in fact a framework for use by other download clients, and bundles traditional HTTP and FTP methods of downloading files along with BitTorrent. But Metalink isn't your run-of-the-mill download accelerator. Metalink is an open standard that claims to make downloading easier, faster, and more reliable by helping users extract the last drop of juice out of their connection. But thanks to Metalink I was able to sleep while my FC6 ISOs were downloading. When the Fedora project released Fedora Core 6 last month, for instance, even several dozen mirrors weren't enough to serve everyone, and torrent speeds weren't good enough because of a scarcity of seeders. Getting popular software off the Internet can sometimes be a struggle, even with all the mirrors and BitTorrent Samaritans out there. has a good article explaining Metalinks at titled Downloading bliss with Metalink (): ![]()
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