I don't know the actual numbers for the Raspberry Pi 1, I was just quoting from Duncan: https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-relays/2016-December/011182.html
On 12/06/2016 03:00 PM, diffusae wrote:
Well, I can read and also now the translation from Bits to Bytes. But I am not sure about your value of the maximum network capacity.
That's the iperf3 measurement of a Raspberry Pi 1 Model B+:
[ ID] Interval Transfer Bandwidth Retr [ 4] 0.00-10.00 sec 83.6 MBytes 8.36 MBytes/sec 141 sender [ 4] 0.00-10.00 sec 83.1 MBytes 8.31 MBytes/sec receiver
Also arm shows me an average of 9 MB/s.
Maybe they have change the USB LAN chip?
Regards,
On 06.12.2016 19:20, Tristan wrote:
Again, bits or bytes. I can't believe I'm repeating myself, don't you people read?
The ORIGINAL (version 1) Raspberry Pi had a max of 1 MegaBYTE.
1 MegaBYTE = 8 megaBITS
Obviously other factors limit performance, but looking at just the maximum network capacity of a Raspberry Pi 1, it could handle 8Mbit/s.
On Dec 6, 2016 11:16 AM, "Rana" <ranaventures@gmail.com mailto:ranaventures@gmail.com> wrote:
-----Original Message----- From: tor-relays [mailto:tor-relays-bounces@lists.torproject.org <mailto:tor-relays-bounces@lists.torproject.org>] On Behalf Of pa011 Sent: Tuesday, December 06, 2016 1:24 AM To: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org <mailto:tor-relays@lists.torproject.org> Subject: Re: [tor-relays] Unwarranted discrimination of relays with dynamic IP > I would like to hear about ONE Raspi Tor operator who was allowed by DirAuths (or bwauths or whatever) to come even near 1 mbit/s bandwidth utilization > let me tell: https://atlas.torproject.org/#details/AA44C4BE3C90DCAAC09E5CD26150710AAA80D58B <https://atlas.torproject.org/#details/AA44C4BE3C90DCAAC09E5CD26150710AAA80D58B> https://atlas.torproject.org/#details/CA9A5D5C4688F04EEC1AF810B0FD348109FA17FB <https://atlas.torproject.org/#details/CA9A5D5C4688F04EEC1AF810B0FD348109FA17FB> are sharing the same dynamic IP on a Rasp2 -cut every 24 hours day rx | tx | total | avg. rate ------------------------+-------------+-------------+--------------- 05.12.2016 27,20 GiB | 28,39 GiB | 55,59 GiB | 5,40 Mbit/s that is slight above 1 Mbit/s :-) Best regards Paul ---------------------------- Wow nice bandwidth you are pushing through Paul! You mean two Raspi 2's sharing an Internet connection, each relaying 27 Gbytes per day at 5.4 Mbit/s on the average?? Total 10.8 Mbit/s?? Or 2.7 Mbit/s each? Definitely refutes the previously claimed 1 Mbit/s Tor limit on Raspi, and means that Raspi has nothing to do with the ridiculously low utilization of my relay, just as I thought. As a matter of fact this means that whoever is NOT running a relay on a Raspi (or two, or four of them) is wasting money, unless he has a computer lying about with nothing better to do. Also, what's the max memory and CPU utilization on your Raspi (I have read somewhere that Tor is only capable of utilizing 2 of the 4 CPU cores), and what kind of Internet connection do you have? BTW the $35 Raspi 3 has 33% more CPU power than your Raspi 2 and the same amount of memory. Rana _______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@lists.torproject.org <mailto:tor-relays@lists.torproject.org> https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays <https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays>
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