Again, bits or bytes? If the original Raspberry Pi can push 1MByte, that's 8Mbits, so you could get 4Mbits both ways.
On Dec 5, 2016 9:08 AM, "Duncan Guthrie" <dguth...@posteo.net> wrote: > On 04.12.2016 22:35, Tristan wrote: > >> Perhaps this IS in fact normal. I ran a Tor relay on a Raspberry Pi >> for a while. My speed was about 1Mbps max, similar to your 1.5Mbps. I >> saw minimal traffic, and the consensus weight never went above 20. >> >> I'm not running a relay at home anymore because of the slow speeds. >> The configuration guide mentions having at least 250KBytes or 2Mbps, >> and even relays that have 2Mbps probably won't see much traffic since >> there's plenty of faster middle relays. >> >> Keep in mind also that the Raspberry Pi (at least the first one anyway) > can only push around 1MB/s tops. The ethernet port is basically held on by > the equivalent of a piece of string! They're suitable for a small mail or > web server, or some sort of network probe, but not really for any large > application. > > Duncan > _______________________________________________ > tor-relays mailing list > tor-relays@lists.torproject.org > https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays >
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