On Sun, Dec 27, 2020 at 01:50:03PM +0100, RJ Hofmann wrote:
caused by a temporary failure of the raspberry I had to completely renew installation of my TOR relay nicknamed mosaik.
The new installtion is already up and running, but since I had no copies of keys and fingerprints the new relay is completely new in terms of consensus weight etc..
I wonder if it is helpful in any way to inform you about this change as to accelerate the relay???s ???reputation??? to make it fully functional for the community on the fast track.
No need to inform people -- the process is automated, and your new relay will go through the process of getting measured, having that measurement show up in the consensus weights, etc.
Thanks for running a relay!
--Roger
I wonder if a Raspberry PI is at all usefull with the current efforts to increase the Performance of the Tor network, since Tor does not scale beyond ~1,3 threads the Raspberry PI would heavily limit the speed with it's slow cores. And here it seems to be run on a consumer line at home, so best case 50 mbit/s upload. Wouldn't it be more usefull that such relays would be turned to bridges? I do currently leave 200 mbit/s buffer on all my relays to deal with spikes if somebody wants to download something and that with more than the usual 2-10 mbit/s you get via Tor.
RelayBandwidthRate 25 MB RelayBandwidthBurst 70 MB
In my mind Raspberry PI relays running at home (atleast if the connection is only 50mbit/s and not 100 mbit/s+) hinder efforts to speed up downloads via Tor but I don't have any data currently to back this claim. If not I could remove the limits on my relays I guess?