Mirrorbits is a geographical download redirector written in Go for distributing files efficiently across a set of mirrors. It offers a simple and economic way to create a Content Delivery Network layer using a pure software stack. It is primarily designed for the distribution of large-scale Open-Source projects with a lot of traffic.
- Blazing fast, can reach 8K QPS on a single laptop
- Easy to deploy and maintain, everything is packed in a single binary
- Automatic synchronization with the mirrors over rsync or FTP
- Response can be either JSON or HTTP redirect
- Support partial repositories
- Complete checksum / size control
- Realtime monitoring and reports
- Disable misbehaving mirrors without human intervention
- Realtime decision making based on location, AS number and defined rules
- Smart load-balancing over multiple mirrors in the same area to avoid hotspots
- Ability to adjust the weight of each mirror
- Limit access to a country, region or ASN for any mirror
- Clustering (multiple mirrorbits instances)
- High-availability using redis-sentinel
- Automatically fix timezone offsets for broken mirrors
- Realtime statistics per file / mirror / date
- Realtime reconfiguration
- Seamless binary upgrade (aka zero downtime upgrade)
- Mirmon support
- Full IPv6 support
- If-Modified-Since (RFC-7232) support
- more...
Yes! Mirrorbits has served billions of files already and is known to be running in production at:
- CarbonROM
- Chaos Computer Club to distribute media
- Jellyfin since April 2021
- Jenkins to distribute Jenkins releases since February 2020
- Kodi (previously XBMC) since July 2015
- LineageOS (previously CyanogenMod) since January 2017
- MariaDB to distribute packages (deb/rpm) for Linux distributions since December 2021
- OSMC
- VideoLAN to distribute VLC media player since April 2014
- Endless OS
- MSYS2 to distribute packages since June 2021
Yet some things might change before the 1.0 release. If you intend to deploy Mirrorbits in a production system it is advised to notify the author first so we can help you to make any transition as seamless as possible!
Previous projects which have used Mirrorbits:
- Go 1.11 or later
- Protobuf (protoc)
- Redis 3.2 or later (with persistence enabled)
- GeoIP2 databases from Maxmind (preferably updated regularly)
Optional:
- redis-sentinel (for high-availability support)
Before upgrading to the latest version, please check this guide.
You can either get a prebuilt version or choose to build it yourself.
A docker "quick start" can be found on the wiki.
Go >= 1.11:
$ git clone https://github.com/etix/mirrorbits.git
$ cd mirrorbits
$ sudo make install
Go < 1.11:
$ go get -u github.com/etix/mirrorbits
$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/etix/mirrorbits
$ sudo make install
The resulting executable should now live in your /usr/local/bin directory. You can also specify a PREFIX
or DESTDIR
if necessary:
sudo make install PREFIX=/usr
A sample configuration file can be found here.
Mirrorbits is a self-contained application and can act, at the same time, as the server and the cli.
To run the server:
mirrorbits daemon
Additional options can be found with mirrorbits -help
.
To run the cli:
mirrorbits help
Add a mirror:
mirrorbits add -ftp="ftp://ftp.mirrors.example/myproject/" -http="http://ftp.mirrors.example/myproject/" mirrors.example
Enable the mirror:
mirrorbits enable mirrors.example
By appending ?mirrorlist
to any file served by mirrorbits, you'll be able to get some useful realtime informations about the given file. You can see a live example here.
Mirror statistics are available by querying mirrorbits with the ?mirrorstats
argument. You can see a live example here.
Multiple instances of mirrorbits can be started simultaneously on different servers, discovery of other nodes should be automatic as long as all the instances are connected to the same redis server. In addition to the clustering it is advised to use redis-sentinel to monitor the database and gracefully handle failover.
Mirrorbits has a mode called seamless binary upgrade to upgrade the server executable at runtime without service disruption. Once the binary has been replaced on the filesystem just issue the following command in the cli:
mirrorbits upgrade
- When configured in redirect mode, Mirrorbits can easily serve client requests directly but it is usually recommended to set it behind a reverse proxy like nginx. In this case take care to pass the IP address of the client within a X-Forwarded-For header:
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
- It is advised to never cache requests intended for Mirrorbits since each request is supposed to be unique, caching the result might have unexpected consequences.
The best place to discuss about mirrorbits is to join the #VideoLAN IRC channel on Libera.chat. For the latest news, you can follow @mirrorbits on Twitter.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.