On Thu, 05 Jan 2012 23:21:44 -0500
Steve Snyder wrote:
> Can someone tell how being a bridge compares to being a regular exit
> node in terms of traffic?
The difference is vast. Exit nodes will use all configured bandwidth.
Bridges, depending how many users you attract, are more variable in
usa
Can someone tell how being a bridge compares to being a regular exit
node in terms of traffic?
I can see how there would less traffic as a bridge since the node isn't
advertised. On the other hand, there are many fewer bridges than
regulat nodes so maybe the traffic on a given bridge is great
No, there no reason to set MyFamily when you only admin a single node.
That said, I just followed the link you referenced, and it leaves my
scratching head a little. The description of NodeFamily is:
"The Tor servers, defined by their identity fingerprints or nicknames,
constitute a "family"
(I'm quite new here, but...)
If you only run 1 node, is there any reason to set the Family? My
reading of https://www.torproject.org/docs/tor-manual.html.en
(MyFamily, NodeFamily) suggests that it's not relevant for the 1-node
case.
Thanks,
Greg
2012/1/5 Tor Relays at brwyatt.net :
> Probably jus
Probably just misconfigured. If there are emails attached to the nodes you
could try mailing them directly about it.
brwyatt
On Fri, 6 Jan 2012 01:29:42 +0100, "Aurel W." wrote:
> Hi,
>
> when I browse through the list of relays I find many router names,
> which correlate in some way, but which
> is there a reason...
Probably because they didn't realize that they should. If there's
contact information available then feel free to ask them to set it.
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Hi,
when I browse through the list of relays I find many router names,
which correlate in some way, but which don't specify a family in their
descriptors.
Just to name a few:
* 2* c5VycfOP
* 3* c516a
* Caldron, Caldron2, Caldron3
* BlgTOR2, BlgTOR
* DwarfHappy, DwarfSleepy, DwarfSneezy, DwarfDope