Greetings!



Here are my experiences, re: strange behaviour of Tor 0.2.0.2 & vidalia 0.0.12 
- see also the end of this mail for comments on Rogers mail posted not so long 
ago!



I was successfully running a Tor relay node on Win XP Pro SP2 for six days 
using 0.2.0.2-alpha (r10455) & Vidalia  0.0.12 with my bandwidth configured 
using Vidalia at:



Average Rate: 36 KB/s



Maximum Rate: 40 KB/s



Everything about the connection was working real good. My bandwidth rate was 
averaging 38/39 KB/s during this time. 



My dynamic connection maintained the same IP address during these six days. 
However, when I returned to my machine yesterday morning the connection 
appeared to have flatlined. It turns out that I could get no connection to the 
Internet so I re-started my router and re-connected to the net & was assigned a 
new IP address (nothing unusual there, after all it is a dynamic connection ;) 



What does seem odd, though, is that when I re-started Tor & it performed the 
bandwidth self-test it registered my upload bandwidth limit at 21 KB/s rather 
than the settings I'd configured originally using Vidalia. I've checked my Tor 
Bandwidth Usage this evening & bandwidth has indeed been used (consistent with 
a bandwidth rate of 22 KB/s).



Is there anything I can do to ensure my original bandwidth settings are used 
and not this lesser bandwidth rate? I've read the thread entitled "" & I'm 
wondering if this might be a similiar kind of problem. The only other 
possibility that I can think of is that my ISP British Telecommunications ( 
Bt-central-plus) has been limiting bandwidth usuage of late on the Bittorrent 
network & I'm wondering if they have done the same thing with my connection now 
that I've been running my Tor relay for just under a week. This might seem a 
little paranoid but not beyond the realm of possibility. Would it be worthwhile 
to run a bandwidth test using my current Tor settings & can anyone recommend me 
a Tor-friendly bandwidth test?





Any other suggestions/advice would be appreciated!



-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Well, I've just arrived at my email inbox & I've been reading the latest 
additions to the "Strange Behaviour" thread & in particular Roger's comments 
about vidalia. I'd just like to say that after I re-started my router & I was 
assigned a new IP address & re-started Tor, the Message Log was still listing 
my previous IP address as being the current IP address. I used the *Get 
Address* button in the vidalia Server settings and was presented with the 
prompt: "Vidalia was only able to find a private IP address for your server. 
Would you like to access an external service to determine your public IP 
address?" When I chose "Yes" my new public IP Address was displayed in the 
vidalia Server Settings pane but this new address wasn't acknowledged in the 
Message Log (I waited 10 minutes or so to see if a message of acknowledgment 
would appear - when I ran a Tor server on XP Pro briefly at the start of the 
year the Message Log would acknowledge a change of IP address, can't remember 
what
  version of Tor/Vidalia I was using at the time). When I repeated the process 
of using the "Get Address" button I found that I could toggle between the IP 
address that I'd been using for the previous six days and the newly assigned 
public IP address that was found when I said "Yes" to the "Would you like to 
access an external service to determine your public IP address?" When I say 
that I could toggle between the 2 IP addresses, what I mean is that this was 
possible just by clicking on the "Get Address" button, each time I did this it 
produced the old IP address, I repeated the action and it produced the new IP 
address, I repeated the action it produced the old IP address, ad infinitum! 
So, I chose the new IP address, re-started Tor & the new IP  address was 
acknowledged  in the  Message  Log  but still I had the reduced bandwidth rate. 
Strange indeed!





Regards,



Stephen 

Reply via email to