On 8/2/13 4:37 AM, Andrew Lewman wrote:
On Thu, 1 Aug 2013 14:11:38 -0700 "Shawn A. Miller" salexandermiller@gmail.com wrote:
I've been running a Tor bridge on the Amazon EC2 cloud computing platform (per instructions at https://cloud.torproject.org/) since July 27, and while the bridge is up and running according to the logs, there doesn't seem to be much traffic running through it, i.e., latest logs indicate Tor uptime is 2 days 12 hours with 2 circuits open; 6.6 MB sent and 45.75 MB received. Have I somehow managed to misconfigure the bridge or is this normal?
First, thanks for running a bridge. Second, this is normal. The determining factor of how much traffic you receive as a bridge is simply which bucket your bridge is placed in the BridgeDB. There are multiple buckets, some served via HTTPS, SMTPS, XMPP, and reserve buckets of bridges handed out by hand to trusted activists, or simply kept in reserve in case of emergency.
There's no way a bridge operator knows which bucket you're in.
Actually, there is (finally) a way to find out:
Search for bridge nickname or fingerprint and look for the bridge's pool assignment information. (Note that this information may not be entirely correct until we resolve #9264.)
However, a bridge's usefulness isn't determined by the number of bytes it pushes. We're currently working on resuming to hand out bridges in the reserved bucket to activists. So it's a good thing to have bridges in the reserved pool which do not push much traffic yet.
Best, Karsten