Hi,
Every bridge is useful, and a possible chance for a tor user to circumvent censorship, you can't possibly know which bridges are already blocked for a user, so every bridge in the network counts - looking at your graphs, on average 50 people are connected to it, compared to other bridges, that's a lot of users - if you move your bridge, make sure to keep / back up the private signing keys, the bridge related data (it's a separate folder inside the DataDirectory) and if possible, the IP address it's running under, if you lose either of them, you will lose all your clients which trust and possibly rely on you, the bridge operator, to continue operations.
More information on moving tor nodes can be found here: https://2019.www.torproject.org/docs/faq.html.en#UpgradeOrMove
Regards, William
2021-03-07 10:35 GMT, a tor op atorop@protonmail.ch:
Hello
I was thinking of perhaps asking and checking if the list has some comments on thoughts I have.
I'm attaching a picture, hope that's not a problem, guess it's better than providing a URL to a file upload place (or maybe that's ok too?).
I've been running a TOR bridge node for some years and need to rebuild/move it.
For some time I wasn't sure how useful it was, whether or not it contributed in a useful way and I don't think it still has all the flags it could/should have?
So, for you around here with an even deeper experience of the network, looking at the stats, are there any particular insights that can be drawn from there? Is it a useful bridge, stats that could or should look differently, anything else?
BTW, there's a huge spike in connections on 9 Aug -20 (and there's been similar occasions earlier too) does that coincide with known attacks on the network or what?
I guess, should I want to continue providing service, that it's useful or possibly preferred to move over the keys/config (?) to indicate same admin (and for users if there's no noticeable interruption the move won't even be noticed I suppose).
TIA, a tor op