Description of problem: I have multiple "fast" repos (i.e. more than 3MB/s) and one "slow" repo (30kB/s or less). I have encountered periodic timeouts during parallel download (using "dnf upgrade" command). I had to re-run the command several times until all of the packages from the fast repos downloaded and then it continued at 30kB/s for the slow repo with no more timeouts. This wasn't the first time this happened to me, so I guess there may be bug in the "detector of stalled downloads". Version-Release number of selected component (if applicable): dnf-0.5.2-1 How reproducible: Always Steps to Reproduce: 1. Fast repos with multiple (or big) updates 2. Slow repo with at least one big update 3. dnf upgrade Actual results: Timeout for the slow repo with message that there are no more mirrors to try Expected results: No timeout Additional info: I think in cases there are multiple mirrors it can switch to another mirror, but in cases there are no more mirrors it should continue downloading even at the slow speed. There was an older dnf on the machine where I encountered the problem and I will also retry with the latest dnf (as more updates accumulates to trigger the condition), but by quick scanning the changelog it doesn't seem there was anything related fixed. So that's why I am reporting it.
Related to bug 1109189, CCing Tomas. Jaroslav, please retry with librepo-1.7.4-3 or newer and let us know if it still appears. Also, obtaining access to the slow repo would really help. Thanks!
I've just talked to Jaroslav and my first guess is that downloads from fast repositories consumes majority of bandwidth and thus the download from the slow repo falls under the 1000 bytes per second for 30sec and the connection is considered too slow and aborted. I am going to look at it more closely.
Thanks Tomas, please let us know if there is something to do on the DNF's side or feel free to move this to librepo.
Created attachment 922461 [details] Repo I think, this is the slow repo causing the problem. I got hardly 30kB/s in avg. in rush hour from it.
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