Pacoloco is a web server that acts if it was an Arch Linux pacman repository. Every time pacoloco server gets a request from user it downloads this file from real Arch Linux mirror and bypasses it to the user. Additionally pacoloco saves this file to local filesystem cache and serves it to the future users. It also allows to prefetch updates of the most recently used packages.
Fast internet is still a luxury in many parts of the world. There are many places where access to internet is expensive and slow due to geographical and economical reasons.
Now think about a situation when multiple pacman users connected via fast local network. Each of these users needs to download the same set of files. Pacoloco allows to minimize the Internet workload by caching pacman files content and serving it over fast local network.
Pacoloco does not mirror the whole Arch repository. It only downloads files needed by local users. You can think of pacoloco as a lazy Arch mirror.
Install pacoloco package from the official Arch repository.
Then start its systemd service: # systemctl start pacoloco
.
Pacoloco can be used with docker.
You can get a prebuilt image from GitHub's container registry (see also sidebar).
Currently the images are built for amd64
and ARM (arm64
, armv7
) architectures.
docker pull ghcr.io/anatol/pacoloco
Available tags are: latest
= git master and any git tags.
You can also build it yourself:
$ git clone https://github.com/anatol/pacoloco && cd pacoloco
$ docker build -t ghcr.io/anatol/pacoloco .
Run it like this:
$ docker run -p 9129:9129 \
-v /path/to/config/pacoloco.yaml:/etc/pacoloco.yaml \
-v /path/to/cache:/var/cache/pacoloco \
ghcr.io/anatol/pacoloco
You need to provide paths or volumes to store application data.
Alternatively, you can use docker-compose:
---
version: "3.8"
services:
pacoloco:
# if a specific user id is provided, you have to make sure
# the mounted directories have the same user id owner on host
# user: 1000:1000
container_name: pacoloco
# to pull the image from github's registry:
image: ghcr.io/anatol/pacoloco
# or replace it for for self-building with:
# build: https://github.com/anatol/pacoloco.git
ports:
- "9129:9129"
volumes:
- /path/to/cache:/var/cache/pacoloco
- /path/to/config/pacoloco.yaml:/etc/pacoloco.yaml
restart: unless-stopped
# to set time zone within the container for cron and log timestamps:
# environment:
# - TZ=Europe/Berlin
Optionally you can build the binary from sources using go build
command.
The server configuration is located at /etc/pacoloco.yaml
. Here is an example how the config file looks like:
address: 127.0.0.1
port: 9129
cache_dir: /var/cache/pacoloco
purge_files_after: 360000 # 360000 seconds or 100 hours, 0 to disable
download_timeout: 3600 # download will timeout after 3600 seconds
repos:
archlinux:
urls:
- http://mirror.lty.me/archlinux
- http://mirrors.kernel.org/archlinux
quarry:
url: http://pkgbuild.com/~anatolik/quarry/x86_64
sublime:
http_proxy: http://bar.company.com:8989 # Proxy could be enabled per-repo, shadowing the global `http_proxy` (see below)
url: https://download.sublimetext.com/arch/stable/x86_64
archlinux-reflector:
mirrorlist: /etc/pacman.d/reflector_mirrorlist # Be careful! Check that pacoloco URL is NOT included in that file!
http_proxy: http://foo.company.com:8989 # Enable this only if you have pacoloco running behind a proxy
user_agent: Pacoloco/1.2
prefetch: # optional section, add it if you want to enable prefetching
cron: 0 0 3 * * * * # standard cron expression (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cron#CRON_expression) to define how frequently prefetch, see https://github.com/gorhill/cronexpr#implementation for documentation.
ttl_unaccessed_in_days: 30 # defaults to 30, set it to a higher value than the number of consecutive days you don't update your systems
# It deletes and stop prefetch packages(and db links) when not downloaded after ttl_unaccessed_in_days days that it had been updated.
ttl_unupdated_in_days: 300 # defaults to 300, it deletes and stop prefetch packages which hadn't been either updated upstream or requested for ttl_unupdated_in_days.
cache_dir
is the cache directory, this location needs to read/writable by the server process.purge_files_after
specifies inactivity duration (in seconds) after which the file should be removed from the cache. This functionality uses unix "AccessTime" field to find out inactive files. Default value is0
that means never run the purging.address
is the servers listening address. When left empty, the server will start opening a listener on all available addresses. When any of the IPs is a public IP, it will make pacoloco available to the internet.port
is the server port.download_timeout
is a timeout (in seconds) for internet->cache downloads. If a remote server gets slow and file download takes longer than this will be terminated. Default value is0
that means no timeout.repos
is a list of repositories to mirror. Each repo needsname
and url of its Arch mirrors. Note that url can be specified either withurl
orurls
properties, one and only one can be used for each repo configuration. Each repo could have its ownhttp_proxy
, which would shadow the globalhttp_proxy
(see below).http_proxy
is only to be used if you have pacoloco running behind a proxyuser_agent
user agent used to fetch the files from repositories. Default value isPacoloco/1.2
.- The
prefetch
section allows to enable packages prefetching. Comment it out to disable it. - To test out if the cron value does what you'd expect to do, check cronexpr implementation or test it
- For what regards
mirrorlist
, be sure that pacoloco itself is NOT included in the chosenmirrorlist
file. It can be integrated with reflector too, either by changing reflector's output path or by including pacoloco directly for standard repos in/etc/pacman.conf
(e.g. adding aServer=...
entry or a custom mirrorlist file which includes only pacoloco URL).
With the example configured above http://YOURSERVER:9129/repo/archlinux
looks exactly like an Arch pacman mirror.
For example a request to http://YOURSERVER:9129/repo/archlinux/core/os/x86_64/openssh-8.2p1-3-x86_64.pkg.tar.zst
will be served with file content from http://mirror.lty.me/archlinux/core/os/x86_64/openssh-8.2p1-3-x86_64.pkg.tar.zst
Once the pacoloco server is up and running it is time to configure the user host. Modify user's /etc/pacman.conf
with
[core]
Include = /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist
[extra]
Include = /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist
[quarry]
Server = http://yourpacoloco:9129/repo/quarry
[sublime-text]
Server = http://yourpacoloco:9129/repo/sublime
And /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist
with
Server = http://yourpacoloco:9129/repo/archlinux/$repo/os/$arch
That's it. Since now pacman requests will be proxied through our pacoloco server.
pacoloco does not care about the architecture of your repo as it acts as a mere proxy.
Thus it can handle multiple different arches transparently. One way to do it is to add multiple
repositories with names foobar_$arch
e.g.:
repos:
archlinux_x86_64:
urls:
- http://mirror.lty.me/archlinux
- http://mirrors.kernel.org/archlinux
archlinux_armv7h:
url: http://mirror.archlinuxarm.org
archlinux_x86:
url: http://mirror.clarkson.edu/archlinux32
Then modify user's /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist
and add
For x86_64:
Server = http://yourpacoloco:9129/repo/archlinux_$arch/$repo/os/$arch
For armv7h:
Server = http://yourpacoloco:9129/repo/archlinux_$arch/$arch/$repo
For x86:
Server = http://yourpacoloco:9129/repo/archlinux_$arch/$arch/$repo
Please note that archlinux_$arch
is the repo name in pacoloco.yaml.
Huge thanks to all the people who contributed to this project! Pacoloco would not be able to become successful without your help.