Thanks for running a relay Torzilla.
If you do decide to get a Raspberry Pi, the step-by-step middle relay setup tutorial here might be useful:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1bf_D_j1O-9ckTS9DY8ngIdiFwHta6Q5Uj_5dvOia...
If you want to set it up as a hidden bridge, you'll need to slightly modify things, but it should help you get started at least :)
Good luck!
Chris On 7 Oct 2014 14:57, "Tor Zilla" torzilla11@hotmail.com wrote:
Hi Julien,
Thanks a lot for your reply.
I got your point now..
You are right. I am using a DSL connection and my IP keeps changing often....
What i am going to do is setup a bridge instead of a non exit relay and watch how much i can contribute to the community.
If all goes well i will buy a Raspberry Pi and setup that up permanently as that's a cost effective way ;)
I am also thinking of making a stand alone Pi Onion Router so that all traffic is anonymous but that's a small project which i will work on once this bridge thing works..
Thanks again, Torzilla11
===============================================================================
Date: Tue, 7 Oct 2014 14:31:54 +0200 From: julien.robin28@free.fr To: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org Subject: Re: [tor-relays] Less Traffic on my relay
Hi, and welcome ;)
With a very tiny bandwidth dedicated to your Tor Relay, the consensus
weight of your relay will be very tiny (so may be nobody will be using it, because Tor Users have too great chances to take another bigger one).
If, moreover, the relay has a lot of big down times (hours), it's
disappearing of the consensus list everytime, making nobody can find it for several hours after you start it again.
The Tor Network is promoting more and more very fast relays in order to
make the network faster for users (fast relays : like 10MB/s) by giving big consensus weight bonus for big machines, and that's making tiny relays less and less used on the network.
But, there is a hope :
With a DSL connexion (100KB/s Upload max) you can get some usefull
traffic (some gigabytes per week) by setting a hidden bridge.
If the IP Address of the connexion is changing time to time, it's really
good for a hidden bridge.
For me, it's on a 24/7 Raspberry Pi (in order to be silent and cheap
powered ! Very low power consumption)
Good luck !
----- Mail original ----- De: "Tor Zilla" torzilla11@hotmail.com À: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org Envoyé: Mardi 7 Octobre 2014 13:20:18 Objet: [tor-relays] Less Traffic on my relay
Hi All,
I am a noob to the Tor community and its fun serving Tor as one of the
relays. I am planning to setup multiple relays however before i jump into anything further i setup one machine as a non exit relay to test how much traffic i can route.. Not to forget i also read the article on torproject.org which mentions the life cycle of a relay.. Now its the 4th day of my relay and the traffic is almost nothing but as per the article i must see an increase in traffic on day 4.. The machine is ON for almost an hour now and the traffic is too less.
Received : 3.62MB Sent : 1.6MB
My dedicated bandwidth to Tor is 60 KB/s.. Do i need to keep the machine
on 24/7 because as of now its just ON for 3 to 4 hours.. Assuming that the traffic is low on the entire Tor network is this kind of traffic normal or something is wrong on my side..? Your help will me much appreciated..
Thanks and Regards, Torzilla11
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