Matthias Redies: > I don't know if you have any sensitive data on your raspberry, but it > might make sense to create a SD-Card image, since tor will probably be > the only application and the hardware will be absolutely identical. This > would eliminate the loving care part and less people would give up. > > But I don't want to create more work than you already have. If you don't > have the time to create an image, maybe I will try do it myself.
That's actually not a bad idea, though there'd be a bit of editing and setup required. But yeah, might be that somebody else gets to it before me - but it's on my mind now. Thanks. -Gordon > > Am 01.08.13 17:29, schrieb Gordon Morehouse: >> Matthias Redies: >>> Ok that is good to know. Right know I will probably run it on 1-1.5 Mbps >>> and later on 3-4 Mbps. What is the maximum your raspberry is capable to >>> do? Please let me know if you publish your tutorial. >> I had it pushing about 1.5Mbps and crashing only about once a week >> before I started having TCP connect floods and had to take it offline >> until I could pay attention for a while. I'm still tuning it. It >> crashed much, much more often before some basic tuning, though. >> >> And my plan is to publish my results to the entire list, because at $35, >> Raspberry Pis can make *great* relays for slower home broadband, but >> they need a little tender loving care first. :) >> >> I hope to have something up in a week or two, I need to watch it for a >> while and continue to tweak, and maybe develop a solution for the TCP >> storms that can bring down a lot of consumer routers, before publishing >> for all. >> >> Best, >> -Gordon _______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays