Hi,

> On 9 Aug 2019, at 23:25, Rob Jansen <rob.g.jan...@nrl.navy.mil> wrote:
> 
>> On Aug 6, 2019, at 5:31 PM, Rob Jansen <rob.g.jan...@nrl.navy.mil> wrote:
>> 
>> Over the last 2 days I tested my speedtest on 4 test relays and verified 
>> that it does in fact increase relays' advertised bandwidth on Tor metrics.
>> 
>> Today, I started running the speedtest on all relays in the network. So far, 
>> I have finished about 100 relays (and counting). I expect that the 
>> advertised bandwidths reported by metrics will increase over the next few 
>> days.
> 
> Update: the measurement finished around 0100 UTC on 2019-08-09. I attempted 
> to measure each relay that appeared in the latest consensus over time. Due to 
> relay churn, this resulted in more measurements than the number of relays in 
> a single consensus.
> 
> I attempted 7001 measurements:
> - 4867 relays were successfully measured for 20 seconds each.
> - 2134 relays timed out while trying to build the 10 speedtest circuits.
> 
> The measurement should be reflected in most server descriptors of 
> successfully measured relays within 36 hours, at about 1300 UTC on 2019-08-10.

It looks like the measurement has increased advertised bandwidths:

Middle: 69%
Exit: 72%
Guard: 53%
Exit and Guard: 28%

https://metrics.torproject.org/bandwidth-flags.html

The growth is mainly in the top 10% of relays:

https://metrics.torproject.org/advbwdist-perc.html?start=2019-05-14&end=2019-08-12&p=100&p=95&p=90&p=75&p=50&p=25

The IPv6 stats are similar:

Guards with IPv6 ORPort:  47%
Exits with IPv6 ORPort: 42%
Exits with IPv6Exit: 39%

https://metrics.torproject.org/advbw-ipv6.html

We don't have stats for consumed bandwidth yet, they should arrive
in the next 3-5 days.

T 
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