On Tue, Sep 7, 2010 at 1:19 PM, Ken Chase <ken@sizone.org> wrote:
So i guess im new at internets as my colleagues told me because I havent gone around to 30-40 systems I control (minus customer self-managed gear) and installed a restrictive robots.txt everywhere to make the web less useful to everyone.
Does that really mean that a big outfit like yahoo should be expected to download stuff at high speed off my customers servers? For varying values of 'high speed', ~500K/s (4Mbps+) for a 3 gig file is kinda... a bit harsh. Especially for an exe a user left exposed in a webdir, thats possibly (C) software and shouldnt have been there (now removed by customer, some kinda OS boot cd/toolset thingy).
The large search engines like Google, Bing, and Yahoo do try to be good netizens, and not have multiple crawlers hitting a given machine at the same time, and they put delays between each request, to be nice to the CPU load and bandwidth of the machines; but I don't think any of the crawlers explicitly make efforts to slow down single-file-fetches. Ordinarily, the transfer speed doesn't matter as much for a single URL fetch, as it lasts a very short period of time, and then the crawler waits before doing another fetch from the same machine/same site, reducing the load on the machine being crawled. I doubt any of them rate-limit down individual fetches, though, so you're likely to see more of an impact when serving up large single files like that. I *am* curious--what makes it any worse for a search engine like Google to fetch the file than any other random user on the Internet? In either case, the machine doing the fetch isn't going to rate-limit the fetch, so you're likely to see the same impact on the machine, and on the bandwidth.
Is this expected/my own fault or what?
Well...if you put a 3GB file out on the web, unprotected, you've got to figure at some point someone's going to stumble across it and download it to see what it is. If you don't want to be serving it, it's probably best to not put it up on an unprotected web server where people can get to it. ^_^; Speaking purely for myself in this manner, as a random user who sometimes sucks down random files left in unprotected directories, just to see what they are. Matt (now where did I put that antivirus software again...?)