On Mon, 07 Jul 2014 21:31:02 +0100
kingqueen wrote:
> Hi, I'm running a Tor relay on a low cost dedicated server.
>
> The tor relay is named kingqueen and it's running on an Intel Atom N2700 dual
> core hyperthreaded CPU with 2gb of memory, in a data centre with a symmetric
> 100mbps connectio
Julien,
That is very useful and well explained.
Thank you.
Robert
>
> The problem with Tor is the "single-thread working" for
> encryption/relaying, so if you have a second CPU core available, may be
> you can open a second Tor instance in order to use the second core
> capacity.
>
> In fact,
Hi,
In effect this CPU usage is quite normal : a Tor Relay use a lot of CPU,
proportionally with amount of data passing trough the relay.
With an Intel Atom D510 I was above 40 Mbps, while CPU was giving everything.
The problem with Tor is the "single-thread working" for encryption/relaying, so
Hi, I'm running a Tor relay on a low cost dedicated server.
The tor relay is named kingqueen and it's running on an Intel Atom N2700 dual
core hyperthreaded CPU with 2gb of memory, in a data centre with a symmetric
100mbps connection.
I have found as time goes on and usage of my relay increases
>From what I read, I should be OK if I copy over the directory structure of
>/home/tor/.tor to /var/lib/tor
Can someone confirm?
-kali-
> On Monday, July 7, 2014 5:30 PM, Kali Tor wrote:
> > Hi all,
>
> When I installed tor for the first on an Ubuntu machine, ran it when logged
> in
> as
Hi all,
When I installed tor for the first on an Ubuntu machine, ran it when logged in
as normal user "tor" using the /etc/tor/torrc. However today I had to reboot
the node and when it came back ps showed that it was using a different torrc
/usr/sbin/tor --defaults-torrc /usr/share/tor/tor-servi