[tor-commits] [metrics-web/master] Add links to the remaining anchors.

karsten at torproject.org karsten at torproject.org
Wed Nov 2 09:22:45 UTC 2011


commit d5a5fa311385bb4b0f8572a13f41b26fca0473cf
Author: Karsten Loesing <karsten.loesing at gmx.net>
Date:   Wed Nov 2 10:17:07 2011 +0100

    Add links to the remaining anchors.
---
 web/WEB-INF/data.jsp    |   14 +++++++++-----
 web/WEB-INF/formats.jsp |   30 +++++++++++++++++-------------
 web/WEB-INF/papers.jsp  |    7 ++++---
 web/WEB-INF/tools.jsp   |   14 ++++++++------
 4 files changed, 38 insertions(+), 27 deletions(-)

diff --git a/web/WEB-INF/data.jsp b/web/WEB-INF/data.jsp
index 1cccf2c..8a062b0 100644
--- a/web/WEB-INF/data.jsp
+++ b/web/WEB-INF/data.jsp
@@ -33,7 +33,8 @@
         </ul>
         <br>
         <a name="relaydesc"></a>
-        <h3>Relay descriptor archives</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#relaydesc" class="anchor">Relay descriptor
+        archives</a></h3>
         <br>
         <p>The relay descriptor archives contain all documents that the
         directory authorities make available about the network of relays.
@@ -123,7 +124,8 @@
         </c:if>
         <br>
         <a name="bridgedesc"></a>
-        <h3>Bridge descriptor archives</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#bridgedesc" class="anchor">Bridge descriptor
+        archives</a></h3>
         <br>
         <p>The bridge descriptor archives contain similar documents as the
         relay descriptor archives, but for the non-public bridges. The
@@ -153,7 +155,8 @@
         <p></p>
         <br>
         <a name="bridgeassignments"></a>
-        <h3>Bridge pool assignments</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#bridgeassignments" class="anchor">Bridge pool
+        assignments</a></h3>
         <br>
         <p>BridgeDB periodically dumps the list of running bridges with
         information about the rings, subrings, and file buckets to which
@@ -175,7 +178,8 @@
         </table>
         <br>
         <a name="performance"></a>
-        <h3>Performance data</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#performance" class="anchor">Performance
+        data</a></h3>
         <br>
         <p>We are continuously measuring the performance of the Tor
         network by periodically requesting files of different sizes and
@@ -242,7 +246,7 @@
         </table>
         <br>
         <a name="exitlist"></a>
-        <h3>Exit lists</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#exitlist" class="anchor">Exit lists</a></h3>
         <br>
         <p>We are archiving the bulk exit lists used by
         <a href="https://check.torproject.org/">Tor Check</a>
diff --git a/web/WEB-INF/formats.jsp b/web/WEB-INF/formats.jsp
index 31078c0..bf2cb36 100644
--- a/web/WEB-INF/formats.jsp
+++ b/web/WEB-INF/formats.jsp
@@ -54,7 +54,8 @@ and is very likely more recent than the report.
 <br>
 
 <a name="serverdesc"></a>
-<h3>Server descriptors and network statuses</h3>
+<h3><a href="#serverdesc" class="anchor">Server descriptors and network
+statuses</a></h3>
 <br>
 <p>
 Relays in the Tor network report their capabilities by publishing server
@@ -257,7 +258,8 @@ addresses.</li>
 <br>
 
 <a name="bridgedesc"></a>
-<h3>Sanitized bridge descriptors</h3>
+<h3><a href="#bridgedesc" class="anchor">Sanitized bridge
+descriptors</a></h3>
 <br>
 Bridges in the Tor network publish server descriptors to the bridge
 authority which in turn generates a bridge network status.
@@ -351,7 +353,7 @@ For more details about this process, see the
 <br>
 
 <a name="bytehist"></a>
-<h3>Byte histories</h3>
+<h3><a href="#bytehist" class="anchor">Byte histories</a></h3>
 <br>
 <p>
 Relays include aggregate statistics in their descriptors that they upload
@@ -412,7 +414,7 @@ specification</a>.
 <br>
 
 <a name="dirreqstats"></a>
-<h3>Directory requests</h3>
+<h3><a href="#dirreqstats" class="anchor">Directory requests</a></h3>
 <br>
 <p>
 The directory authorities and directory mirrors report statistical data
@@ -485,7 +487,7 @@ specification</a>.
 <br>
 
 <a name="entrystats"></a>
-<h3>Connecting clients</h3>
+<h3><a href="#entrystats" class="anchor">Connecting clients</a></h3>
 <br>
 <p>
 Relays can be configured to report per-country statistics on directly
@@ -505,7 +507,7 @@ specification</a>.
 <br>
 
 <a name="bridgestats"></a>
-<h3>Bridge users</h3>
+<h3><a href="#bridgestats" class="anchor">Bridge users</a></h3>
 <br>
 <p>
 Bridges report statistics on connecting bridge clients in their extra-info
@@ -543,7 +545,7 @@ specification</a>.
 <br>
 
 <a name="cellstats"></a>
-<h3>Cell-queue statistics</h3>
+<h3><a href="#cellstats" class="anchor">Cell-queue statistics</a></h3>
 <br>
 <p>
 Relays can be configured to report aggregate statistics on their cell
@@ -578,7 +580,7 @@ specification</a>.
 <br>
 
 <a name="exitstats"></a>
-<h3>Exit-port statistics</h3>
+<h3><a href="#exitstats" class="anchor">Exit-port statistics</a></h3>
 <br>
 <p>
 Exit relays running Tor version 0.2.1.1-alpha or higher can be configured
@@ -600,7 +602,8 @@ specification</a>.
 <br>
 
 <a name="bidistats"></a>
-<h3>Bidirectional connection use</h3>
+<h3><a href="#bidistats" class="anchor">Bidirectional connection
+use</a></h3>
 <br>
 <p>
 Relays running Tor version 0.2.3.1-alpha or higher can be configured to
@@ -637,7 +640,7 @@ by relay <tt>zweifaltigkeit</tt>:</i>
 <br>
 
 <a name="torperf"></a>
-<h3>Torperf output files</h3>
+<h3><a href="#torperf" class="anchor">Torperf output files</a></h3>
 <br>
 <p>
 Torperf is a little tool that measures Tor's performance as users
@@ -711,7 +714,8 @@ file (reformatted and annotated with comments):</i>
 <br>
 
 <a name="bridgepool"></a>
-<h3>BridgeDB pool assignment files</h3>
+<h3><a href="#bridgepool" class="anchor">BridgeDB pool assignment
+files</a></h3>
 <br>
 <p>
 BridgeDB is the software that receives bridge network statuses containing
@@ -770,7 +774,7 @@ OR port or relay flag which is defined by <tt>port=$port</tt> and/or
 <br>
 
 <a name="gettor"></a>
-<h3>GetTor statistics file</h3>
+<h3><a href="#gettor" class="anchor">GetTor statistics file</a></h3>
 <br>
 <p>
 GetTor allows users to fetch the Tor software via email.
@@ -806,7 +810,7 @@ tor-im-browser-bundle_ru:0 tor-im-browser-bundle_zh_CN:0</tt>
 <br>
 
 <a name="exitlist">
-<h3>Tor Check exit lists</h3>
+<h3><a href="#exitlist" class="anchor">Tor Check exit lists</a></h3>
 <br>
 <p>
 <a href="https://www.torproject.org/tordnsel/dist/">TorDNSEL</a> is an
diff --git a/web/WEB-INF/papers.jsp b/web/WEB-INF/papers.jsp
index ba8eb9f..02710c9 100644
--- a/web/WEB-INF/papers.jsp
+++ b/web/WEB-INF/papers.jsp
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@
         Metrics Project.</p>
         <br>
         <a name="papers"></a>
-        <h3>Papers</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#papers" class="anchor">Papers</a></h3>
         <br>
         These papers summarize some of the results of of the Tor Metrics
         Project and have been accepted for publication at academic
@@ -37,7 +37,8 @@
         </ul>
         <br>
         <a name="techreports"></a>
-        <h3>Technical reports</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#techreports" class="anchor">Technical
+        reports</a></h3>
         <br>
         The technical reports listed here have been the first place to
         publish novel kinds of statistics on the Tor network. Some, but
@@ -101,7 +102,7 @@
         </ul>
         <br>
         <a name="blogposts"></a>
-        <h3>Blog posts</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#blogposts" class="anchor">Blog posts</a></h3>
         <br>
         The following blog posts are either the results of metrics
         research or describe new interesting research questions that can
diff --git a/web/WEB-INF/tools.jsp b/web/WEB-INF/tools.jsp
index f4fd539..d19b8af 100644
--- a/web/WEB-INF/tools.jsp
+++ b/web/WEB-INF/tools.jsp
@@ -26,7 +26,8 @@
         </ul>
         <br>
         <a name="metrics-db"></a>
-        <h3>Metrics data processor</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#metrics-db" class="anchor">Metrics data
+        processor</a></h3>
         <br>
         <p>The metrics data processor is a Java application that parses
         Tor's directory data and the data from various other Tor services,
@@ -41,7 +42,7 @@
         </ul>
         <br>
         <a name="metrics-web"></a>
-        <h3>Metrics website</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#metrics-web" class="anchor">Metrics website</a></h3>
         <br>
         <p>The metrics website software consists of a Java database
         importer and Tomcat application that makes Tor's directory data
@@ -58,7 +59,8 @@
         </ul>
         <br>
         <a name="dirarch"></a>
-        <h3>Directory-archive script</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#dirarch" class="anchor">Directory-archive
+        script</a></h3>
         <br>
         <p>The directory-archive script consists of a bunch of shell
         scripts that periodically download relay descriptors, sort them
@@ -78,7 +80,7 @@
         </ul>
         <br>
         <a name="torperf"></a>
-        <h3>Torperf</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#torperf" class="anchor">Torperf</a></h3>
         <br>
         <p>Torperf is a little tool that measures Tor's performance as
         users experience it. Torperf uses a trivial SOCKS client to
@@ -93,7 +95,7 @@
         </ul>
         <br>
         <a name="exonerator"></a>
-        <h3>ExoneraTor</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#exonerator" class="anchor">ExoneraTor</a></h3>
         <br>
         <p>ExoneraTor parses the relay descriptor archives to answer the
         question whether some IP address was a Tor relay. This script is
@@ -109,7 +111,7 @@
         </ul>
         <br>
         <a name="visitor"></a>
-        <h3>VisiTor</h3>
+        <h3><a href="#visitor" class="anchor">VisiTor</a></h3>
         <br>
         <p>VisiTor is a script that parses a web server log and the exit
         list archives to tell how many of the requests come from Tor



More information about the tor-commits mailing list