I have setup a Tor Bridge for everyone and I am unsure how it gets published so I will post the info here so it can get put into the consensus. The bridge is 173.246.106.35:443 I hope this bridge will help more users access the network.
-- yetanothertoruser@riseup.net Bridges I run; * 173.246.106.35:443
On Sat, Oct 10, 2015 at 11:27:23PM -0400, Yet Another Tor User wrote:
I have setup a Tor Bridge for everyone and I am unsure how it gets published so I will post the info here so it can get put into the consensus. The bridge is 173.246.106.35:443 I hope this bridge will help more users access the network.
Hi Yet Another Tor User,
Thanks for running a bridge! Unfortunately this isn't the best way to publish the bridge's details. Ideally, the bridge's IP address and port number are not publicly available, making it difficult for network administrators to block the bridge.
By default the bridge publishes its details to a special directory authority (the Bridge Authority), this is a different server than the default directory authorities who vote on and publish the network consensus based on the public relays. Periodically, the bridge authority sends the details of the bridges it knows about to BridgeDB [0] (the Bridge Database), and users retrieve bridge from BridgeDB.
As the bridge operator, after you configure it you should not need to do anything. Publishing and distributing the details should happen automatically.
If you decide you don't want BridgeDB distributing your bridge details because you want some control over who uses your bridge, then you can add PublishServerDescriptor 0 in the torrc. This tells your bridge that it should not publish its details to the Bridge Authority (therefore BridgeDB never learns about it).
On a slightly different topic, you only mentioned the IP address and port of your bridge. Over the last few years pluggable transports [1] have become extremely important and useful. Have you considered running one (or more) of them? It will be great if you can configure obfs4 [2].
Pluggable transports are the best way tor can overcome censorship and network interference, so running a bridge with a pluggable transport is both important and very appreciated.
Thanks for running a bridge and let us know if you have any questions!
- Matt
[0] https://bridges.torproject.org/ [1] https://www.torproject.org/docs/pluggable-transports.html.en [2] https://github.com/Yawning/obfs4#installation
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