Those of you who have been around for a while may remember a time when
you used to be able to mount kernel.org directly as a partition on your
system using NFS (or even SMB/CIFS). The Wayback Machine shows that this
was still advertised some time in January 1998, but was removed by
the time the December 1998 copy was made.
Let’s face it — while kinda neat and convenient, offering a public
NFS/CIFS server was a Pretty Bad Idea, not only because both these
protocols are pretty terrible over high latency connections, but also
because of important security implications.
Well, 19 years later we’re thinking it’s time to terminate another
service that has important protocol and security implications — our
FTP servers. Our decision is driven by the following considerations:
The protocol is inefficient and requires adding awkward kludges to
firewalls and load-balancing daemons
FTP servers have no support for caching or accelerators, which has
significant performance impacts
Most software implementations have stagnated and see infrequent updates
All kernel.org FTP services will be shut down by the end of this year.
In hopes to minimise the potential disruption, we will be doing it in
two stages:
ftp://ftp.kernel.org/ service will be terminated on March 1, 2017
ftp://mirrors.kernel.org/ service will be terminated on December 1, 2017
If you have any concerns, please feel free to contact
ftpadmin@kernel.org (ah, the irony).
Source:: Linux Kernel