Hi Roger,
Thank you for your answer, you and teor really helped me figure this out.
I set BW rate and burst to 10 MB/s and hope to get more traffic once the relay
becomes guard for enough clients. Being on a dynamic IP I guess that every time
the ISP changes my address and have to get a new gua
> Il giorno 14 apr 2020, alle ore 14:48, teor ha scritto:
>
> Hi,
>
>> On 12 Apr 2020, at 10:10, Mario Costa wrote:
>>
>> I’m running a guard relay from my home connection on a Raspberry Pi 4. My
>> internet connection is 1000/100 Mbps, and I thought I’d allocate half of the
>> upload bandw
[Hi Mario! I wrote this draft and then stopped half-through, and then
teor wrote a good response too. So I'm going to send it as-is, rather
than quietly delete it, in case it helps reinforce some of the points
that teor made.]
On Sat, Apr 11, 2020 at 02:55:59PM +0200, Mario Costa wrote:
> I???m ru
Hi Mario,
I'm having same trouble with raspberry pi 3b... I use Wi-Fi connection with
high throughput. My local connection can copy files up to 15MB/s to this RPi.
It is a USB adapter (mediatek MT7601). I'm asking myself that speed on tor
network shouldn't be more than 2 MB/s. I've limited the
Hi,
> On 12 Apr 2020, at 10:10, Mario Costa wrote:
>
> I’m running a guard relay from my home connection on a Raspberry Pi 4. My
> internet connection is 1000/100 Mbps, and I thought I’d allocate half of the
> upload bandwidth for the relay. Then I set RelayBandwidthRate to 10 MB/s,
> because
Hi list,
I’m running a guard relay from my home connection on a Raspberry Pi 4. My
internet connection is 1000/100 Mbps, and I thought I’d allocate half of the
upload bandwidth for the relay. Then I set RelayBandwidthRate to 10 MB/s,
because I thought that Tor would upload 5 MB/s and download 5