Dave posted on Wed, 20 Jan 2016 11:33:41 +0000 as excerpted: > Is there any way to tell or see "live" which server Pan is pulling from? > > I have a "free" ISP news server and a pay server from which I buy blocks > of data as backup/fills and it might be nice to see how much is coming > from the pay server.
Do you have your fill server set as "fallback" in the servers configuration? (If you have more than two servers, you can actually set more than the primary/fallback by editing servers.xml directly, and pan will behave accordingly, but the simplified GUI just has the two levels.) That's the main thing. With servers at the same level, servers that have significantly less messages will naturally tend to move ahead faster as they'll skip messages they don't have, which will mean that you just normally get the messages from them that they have available, because their fetch process will get to them first, while the fill server is stuck back a ways because it has more messages to pull. But server rank makes that explicit, and won't pull from a fallback server until all primary servers are checked for the message. So the first thing to do if you want to be sure to get all you can from your primary server and save the bandwidth on the fallback, is set them as such in the server configuration. Beyond that, it has been awhile since I did binaries on multi-server (or for that matter, at all, tho I do have a 1000 GB block account that I use occasionally), but from looking just now on the single-server text I'm doing, the log doesn't contain server information, only actions. But the bandwidth indicator to the left in the status bar, should show per-server activity if you hover over it. Beyond that, I seem to remember a couple other ways it was tracked, but I've not done multi- server or binaries in long enough I don't remember the details, and what I do remember, I can't be sure whether it's current pan, or the old C- based pan from about a decade ago, that worked quite differently in terms of multi-server. Hopefully someone who does multi-server and/or binaries a bit more regularly will followup with more detail. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman _______________________________________________ Pan-users mailing list Pan-users@nongnu.org https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/pan-users