Without quotas on ibiblio, and with the constantly "out of disk space" something needs to be done.
1. Private server, at home, at least in the US, would have very slow uplink. Our internet access choices are very limited, very slow (compared to many), and very expensive.
2. Most of our mirrors are not "ours" they are mirroring ibiblio. We do not have direct contact. There have been very few that have asked us to become a mirror. As such we do not have upload access for extensions.
I am most interested in any and all proposals.
I work for an Australia based hosting company, but our services are sort of boutique, I guess, and we don't really do much work that requires massive amounts of drive space. On top of that I do a bit of web dev and hosting on the side, too - If you can get me some stats to work with, I can see if I can pitch something to my boss, or make some arrangement with my own services to help, but I can't guarantee anything. At the very least, I could probably offer to mirror a couple of the smaller repositories (corepure64 and maybe the ARM repos?), but that would be on resources that have a 200GB transfer limit per month. (I think I saw in another thread 47G storage to hold everything, but no other stats really available? What would we be looking at if older versions are kept on ibiblio and frozen, and willing providers were to host individual repositories?).
Current 4.x is 20GB. That is with all older versions 1.x, 2.x, and 3.x to stay on ibiblio. Sorry, no bandwidth stats are available. Armv6 is already being hosted elsewhere, but I am sure that a mirror would be welcomed. Armv7 is currently using import with much progress and is functional on Google Code. The bulk is x86 and growing x86_64. It is going to be difficult with package management without a single master as ibiblio has provided. Each hosted platform would require a single site to have master status and our scripts would need to be run to generate the support files, indexes and trees, etc.
BTW I have sent one more email to ibiblio inquiring of the possibility of quotas. If that could have happen we could manage our own disk space.