You're right! I can't reach gentoo-portage's web server, too. Though I can ping the server:beatryder wrote:anello wrote:There is an update available for mediawiki, so its probably getting an update right now
That does not explain why gentoo-portage is also down, which is hosted on the same server. Those two sites are down more than.....
r@lhost root # ping -c3 gentoo-portage.com
PING gentoo-portage.com (72.10.70.138) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from ip-72-10-70-138.static.skiplink.net (72.10.70.138): icmp_seq=1 ttl=51 time=135 ms
64 bytes from ip-72-10-70-138.static.skiplink.net (72.10.70.138): icmp_seq=2 ttl=51 time=145 ms
64 bytes from ip-72-10-70-138.static.skiplink.net (72.10.70.138): icmp_seq=3 ttl=51 time=139 ms
--- gentoo-portage.com ping statistics ---
3 packets transmitted, 3 received, 0% packet loss, time 2000ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 135.035/140.037/145.416/4.246 ms
r@lhost root # ping -c3 gentoo-wiki.org
PING gentoo-wiki.org (72.10.70.138) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from ip-72-10-70-138.static.skiplink.net (72.10.70.138): icmp_seq=1 ttl=51 time=155 ms
64 bytes from ip-72-10-70-138.static.skiplink.net (72.10.70.138): icmp_seq=2 ttl=51 time=136 ms
64 bytes from ip-72-10-70-138.static.skiplink.net (72.10.70.138): icmp_seq=3 ttl=51 time=147 ms
--- gentoo-wiki.org ping statistics ---
3 packets transmitted, 3 received, 0% packet loss, time 1999ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 136.657/146.419/155.326/7.658 ms
I know. But I think that the wiki should really be an offical part of gentoo.Conan wrote:Neither of these sites are official gentoo sites. The answer you seek cannot be found here.
Given the quality of many of the articles on gentoo-wiki (and I should know because I've been spending time I should've been spending on assignments tidying them up), I totally disagree with this.krigav wrote:I know. But I think that the wiki should really be an offical part of gentoo.Conan wrote:Neither of these sites are official gentoo sites. The answer you seek cannot be found here.
Indeed. You won't see the wiki become official Gentoo documentation because there is no quality control.AllenJB wrote:[. . .]
These two things are mutually exclusive. Someone in the community wants to contribute, but it can't be done anonymously? Then you have to go through the proper contribution procedures. This takes time; only a select few have commit access to the documentation. And this is where a wiki would get in the way -- there's no point in a restricting access to something that's designed to be quickly, anonymously edited by a large number of contributors (like a wiki).AidanJT wrote:As long as you don't do something silly like making it anonymously editable, wiki's can quickly turn into a powerful resource. Plus it lets the community feel like they're involved in something useful.

Personally, I've never had any problems before, it's been very responsive every time I visited it, except for after that spambot attack, and then just now. I'm not denying any of the other problems associated with the wiki, as nightmorph pointed out, but I don't see downtime as a serious problem.omp wrote:From what I have seen, downtime is not uncommon for gentoo-wiki.com.
Yes, but until the mistake is spotted by someone who knows it's a mistake, then it's likely to be followed by poor clueless newbies who were just following documentation. You can not have these types of errors in official documentation, which is why the wiki will never be official.AidanJT wrote:It's not hard to revert an edit though.
Even if its not "official documentation", a wiki can be very useful. It is just as "accurate" as the forums.AllenJB wrote:Yes, but until the mistake is spotted by someone who knows it's a mistake, then it's likely to be followed by poor clueless newbies who were just following documentation. You can not have these types of errors in official documentation, which is why the wiki will never be official.

Not really, I can register with gentoo-wiki without going through a formal vetting procedure and start editing/creating pages with my identity, if I spam or otherwise abuse the service then I'll rightly be banned, it's damage limitation, it's like giving write permissions to authenticated users of an ftp, you'd be criminally negligent giving anonymous users write access to a production ftp and/or http server.nightmorph wrote:Indeed. You won't see the wiki become official Gentoo documentation because there is no quality control.AllenJB wrote:[. . .]These two things are mutually exclusive. Someone in the community wants to contribute, but it can't be done anonymously? Then you have to go through the proper contribution procedures. This takes time; only a select few have commit access to the documentation. And this is where a wiki would get in the way -- there's no point in a restricting access to something that's designed to be quickly, anonymously edited by a large number of contributors (like a wiki).AidanJT wrote:As long as you don't do something silly like making it anonymously editable, wiki's can quickly turn into a powerful resource. Plus it lets the community feel like they're involved in something useful.
juniper wrote:you experience political reality dilation when travelling at american political speeds. it's in einstein's formulas. it's not their fault.

gentoo-portage is way better than packages.gentoo.org. i say they should pull a switcheroo.beatryder wrote:anello wrote:There is an update available for mediawiki, so its probably getting an update right now
That does not explain why gentoo-portage is also down, which is hosted on the same server. Those two sites are down more than.....
banned from #gentoo since sept 2017Neddyseagoon wrote:The problem with leaving is that you can only do it once and it reduces your influence.


Thanks for your reply. I certainly know about the Google cache option - but for how long will it work?BigBrain wrote:By the way, you can still "reach" the wiki with google: just search for "gentoo-wiki" and the topic you want to read about. Don't use the direct links but the ones to the cached versions