Hi,
Thanks for adding me to the list.
I setup a Tor Relay in Docker using this image: https://hub.docker.com/r/doudou34/tor-server
Its running, so how can I test it? When I try to access it using port 9001, I'm unable to connect. I have opened the port on my firewall to the public. Haven't done it on my router yet but I have Portainer running in Docker and have no problem accessing it.
Not a lot of instructions that I can find. I can post the torrc file but it's the same as the one on the docker page.
### /etc/torrc ### # see /etc/torrc/torrc.default and https://www.torproject.org/docs/tor-manual.html.en
# Server's public IP Address (usually automatic) #Address 10.10.10.10
# Port to advertise for incoming Tor connections. # common ports are 9001, 443 ORPort 9001
# Mirror directory information for others (optional) # common ports are 9030, 80 #DirPort 9030
# Run as a relay only (not as an exit node) ExitPolicy reject *:* # no exits allowed
# Set limits #RelayBandwidthRate 1024 KB # Throttle traffic to #RelayBandwidthBurst 2048 KB # But allow bursts up to #MaxMemInQueues 512 MB # Limit Memory usage to
# Run Tor as obfuscated bridge #ServerTransportPlugin obfs3 exec /usr/bin/obfsproxy managed #ServerTransportListenAddr obfs3 0.0.0.0:54444 #BridgeRelay 1
# Run Tor only as a server (no local applications) SocksPort 0
# Run Tor as a regular user (do not change this) User debian-tor DataDirectory /var/lib/tor
# If no Nickname or ContactInfo is set, docker-entrypoint will use # the environment variables to add Nickname/ContactInfo here #Nickname Tor4 # only use letters and numbers #ContactInfo email@example.org
I've only been using docker for a few days, so maybe its an issue there.
TIA