Thanks for the feedback, however, I now have a new problem. I rebooted the server my TOR Node lives on and I've got a non-system disk error so I think my partition table got corrupted.
If I can access the file system, is there any way to get what I need of the drive to retain my fingerprint?
If I can't access the file system is there any way to get what I need from "somewhere" to retain my fingerprint?
Matt Westfall President & CIO ECAN Solutions, Inc. Everything Computers and Networks 804.592.1672 http://ecansol.com
On Sun, May 26, 2019 at 2:58 AM torix@protonmail.com wrote:
Dear Matt,
I see you started your relay 22 days ago. I started one (Aramis67) within a day of yours, so they both should still be getting adjusted. Have you read about the lifecycle of a new relay?: https://blog.torproject.org/comment/54651 As your new relay gets better known, I think your consensus number will go up, but while I have used RelayBandwidthRate to gradually cap my home relay to about 1TB a month, I don't think you can force a new relay up faster with bigger limits.
I am running Aramis67 with no RelayBandwidthRate in the config: 15 ControlSocket /run/tor/control 16 ControlSocketsGroupWritable 1 17 CookieAuthentication 1 18 CookieAuthFile /run/tor/control.authcookie 19 CookieAuthFileGroupReadable 1 26 SOCKSPort 0 64 ControlPort 9051 91 ORPort 9001 92 ORPort [2a00:1dc0:caff:126::a5c9]:9001 187 ExitRelay 0
My consensus weight is currently 5730, so a good deal behind 8400, though my current connections numbers are about 1800 and 2000 in and out. Much of the consensus weight seems to be affected by how close you are/good connection you have to the authentication servers.
I expect that our relays will both generally go in the same direction.
--Torix
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‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ On Friday, May 24, 2019 3:13 PM, Matt Westfall mwestfall@ecansol.com wrote:
My tor node: https://metrics.torproject.org/rs.html#details/B1B10104EB72A1FBBF6687B05F191...
Doesn't ever go up above 8800 or so.
One thing I notice in Nyx is that my connections never go above about 2000 in and out connections.
I have advertised bandwidth of just shy of a gigabit in my config. I understand now that the "advertised bandwidth" is calculated based on observed traffic through the node, which while more reliable and avoids abuse, seems to be counter productive to a degree.
Ultimately what do I need to do to get more traffic through my node? Cause I have a 2Gbps fiber sitting here basically doing nothing so I was giving 1Gbps to tor :)
Config -------------- RunAsDaemon 1 ControlPort 9051 ORPort 9001 ORPORT [2001:559:c290::fffb]:9001 RelayBandwidthRate 45 MB # Throttle traffic to 100KB/s (800Kbps) RelayBandwidthBurst 50 MB # But allow bursts up to 200KB/s (1600Kbps) DirPort 9030 # ExitPolicy reject *:* # no exits allowed ExitPolicy reject6 *:*
Any suggestions appreciated.
Matt Westfall President & CIO ECAN Solutions, Inc. Everything Computers and Networks 804.592.1672
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