[tor-relays] Fast Exit Node Operators - ISP in US

s7r s7r at sky-ip.org
Mon Nov 24 10:06:38 UTC 2014


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If the only limit is consumed monthly traffic, and not the bandwidth
your relays consumes daily (e.g. you use your VPS only for Tor) it is
not recommended  to use RelayBandwidthRate. Better use AccountingMax,
and your relay will work at full speed until it hits the accounting
limit, then go into hibernation. It will wake up at a random time in
the next accounting period.

As the Tor manual says, it's better to have a fast relay available
some of the time instead of having a slow relay available all the time.

Just use AccountingMax and do not forget there are other factors as
well which count in the speed of a relay, such as CPU, RAM, network -
a VPS (share resources machine) is unlikely to achieve maximum
resources usage. Give it a try with AccountingMax (so you are sure it
won't bypass the limit set by your provider and you don't have to pay
extra) and see what what speed it reaches.

On 11/24/2014 5:24 AM, Mirimir wrote:
> On 11/23/2014 11:05 AM, s7r wrote:
>> That is, because in almost all cases, providers allow unmetered 
>> incoming traffic to your server but keep count and accounting on 
>> outgoing traffic from your server, which is why the torrc setting
>> acts the way it does.
> 
> That would be great! I'll confirm with the provider.
> 
> I'm also wondering what to set for RelayBandwidthRate for an exit.
> I see some old threads on this list, and a question at Tor.SE, but
> find nothing that's clear and persuasive.
> 
> Assuming that the 1000 GB/mo limit applies to just outgoing
> traffic, throughput would need to average ca. 0.4 MB/sec. However,
> median advertised exit bandwidth from Tor Metrics is ca. 1 MB/sec,
> so it seems unlikely that an exit advertising 0.4 MB/sec would be
> used very heavily. And so actual usage would be far less than 0.4
> MB/sec.
> 
> Conversely, setting RelayBandwidthRate to 3 MB/sec would ultimately
> lead to heavy use. But with full utilization at 250 GB per day, the
> relay would hibernate after just four days. There must be some
> intermediate value that would bring average usage to 0.4 MB/sec.
> 
> What is the optimal RelayBandwidthRate for a 1000 GB/mo VPS? I'm 
> guessing that it's about 1 MB/sec.
> 
>> On 11/23/2014 7:58 PM, Seth wrote:
>>> On Sat, 22 Nov 2014 22:42:15 -0800, Mirimir
>>> <mirimir at riseup.net> wrote:
>> 
>>>> How much throughput do you get with your VPS, 1000 GB/mo or
>>>> 2000 GB/mo?
>> 
>>> The 1000 GB/mo applies to whichever value is greater, input or 
>>> output. So far the Tor node is pushing less than 1.5GB per
>>> day. Takes a while for traffic to ramp up apparently.
>> 
>>>> As I read comments in torrc, AccountingMax "applies
>>>> separately to sent and received bytes, not to their sum", and
>>>> so "setting '4 GB' may allow up to 8 GB total before
>>>> hibernating".
>> 
>>> Yes, others have raised this issue as well and I will look
>>> into it. _______________________________________________
>>> tor-relays mailing list tor-relays at lists.torproject.org 
>>> https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays
>>
>>> 
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