Hi,
> On 26 Feb 2016, at 05:15, torser...@datakanja.de wrote:
>
> * Next, i noticed a frequent (daily) behavior of the Tor server
>dropping traffic to around zero. Inspecting this, let me to
>understand, my provider was disconnecting me and reassigning a new
>IP on a daily basis, whi
Many ISPs change IP addresses on a regular basis. This seems to be the
center of your problem as the other issues can be worked out with a
little effort. To our advantage, IPSs are regularly requested by users
to assign a permanent IP address for game operators. Try calling your
ISP and aski
You can contact your ISP and ask for a static IP. It's possible they may
charge you for one, but it's also possible they may not. My ISP for example
allows me one static IP for free. I use that for my Tor relay, and it works
great.
On Thu, Feb 25, 2016 at 9:15 PM, wrote:
> Hello,
>
> i have been
That's just strange that your ISP would keep changing your IP address that
often. It seems to me that the daily change was the only major problem you
were facing.
On Feb 25, 2016 10:39 PM, wrote:
> Hello,
>
> i have been running a new relay for a short time period now and would
> like to bring to
Hello,
i have been running a new relay for a short time period now and would
like to bring to your attention the issues faced, that finally led me to
refrain from keeping this up any longer:
* Documentation was ok (on torproject.org) and the installation (using
deb on ubuntu) was easy.
*
On Thu, 25 Feb 2016 18:19:44 -0500
Stephen R Guglielmo wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have a VPS with 512 MB RAM. I run nothing on it except nginx and a Tor
> relay. The relay is an entry guard and moves about 20 MB/s. It seems that the
> kernel is killing the Tor process with "out of memory" errors. A
Hello,
I have a VPS with 512 MB RAM. I run nothing on it except nginx and a Tor relay.
The relay is an entry guard and moves about 20 MB/s. It seems that the kernel
is killing the Tor process with "out of memory" errors. Are there any tips for
mitigating this? I don't have the money right now t
Hey,
On 25/02/16 20:41, stea...@nym.mixmin.net wrote:
> I'll monitor things and see if anything changes, but I'm more
> concerned that my cronjob is not working. I also did a "service tor
> reload" to see, if anything changed and I still show 0.2.4.27 as my
> Tor version via the arm program.
A
Are you using the official Tor repository? The Tor version in the Ubuntu
repositories is still on version 2.6.10. I suppose your script still has
a problem though, since you're still running 2.4.27.
On 02/25/2016 01:41 PM, stea...@nym.mixmin.net wrote:
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On Thu, 25 Feb 2016 18:41:28 +0100, you wrote:
>
>
> > On 25 Feb 2016, at 18:30, stea...@nym.mixmin.net wrote:
> >
> > Signed PGP part
> > I just recently had my Stable Flag removed from my middle relay. It
> > appears that my stats have gotten better
> On 25 Feb 2016, at 18:30, stea...@nym.mixmin.net wrote:
>
> Signed PGP part
> I just recently had my Stable Flag removed from my middle relay. It
> appears that my stats have gotten better over the past few days, so
> it's not clear to me why the stable flag was removed. Can someone
> explain h
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I just recently had my Stable Flag removed from my middle relay. It
appears that my stats have gotten better over the past few days, so
it's not clear to me why the stable flag was removed. Can someone
explain how this flag is enabled or not enabled?
I meant your Opennic DNS Server :D
On Donnerstag, 25. Februar 2016, 10:22:35 Tristan wrote:
> According to the Tor manual, IPV4 DNS queries are cached by default, but
> the UseIVP4Cache option says this:
>
> NOTE: This option, along UseIPv6Cache and UseDNSCache, can harm your
> anonymity, and pro
I assume you mean the name resolutions. Yes, the resolutions are cached.
The history of queries is tracked implicitly by the resolver. I've set mine to
no more than 10 queries per second, so the 11th query from the same IP address
to the same TLD would be rejected.
On Thursday, February 25,
Hi ZEROF, Nyx isn't ready yet for users. It works, but is still very
much in development. It might be released around June, though that's
just a guess. I reserved the name 'nyx' in PyPI but pip won't work
until the release is ready.
Cheers! -Damian
On Thu, Feb 25, 2016 at 8:26 AM, ZEROF wrote:
Hi,
I use arm, but i wanted to test nyx and i have found install option "pip
install nyx", but install don't work, version 1.4.5. You can see logs:
https://paste.lugons.org/show/Ua6RdWzaMg8cI5cWsf0b/
;)
On 25 February 2016 at 03:10, Damian Johnson wrote:
> Hi wonderful relay operators. It's GS
According to the Tor manual, IPV4 DNS queries are cached by default, but
the UseIVP4Cache option says this:
NOTE: This option, along UseIPv6Cache and UseDNSCache, can harm your
anonymity, and probably won’t help performance as much as you might expect.
Use with care!
Not sure if it's on by defaul
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Are you caching the DNS queries?
Am 25. Februar 2016 13:47:04 MEZ, schrieb Steve Snyder :
>The OpenNIC servers may not be appropriate for use by a high-speed Tor
>exit relay.
>
>I run an OpenNIC DNS server, and my VPS vendor insisted that I
>rate-li
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You are welcome :D
Am 25. Februar 2016 04:49:48 MEZ, schrieb Tristan :
>They are default for Pulse Servers.
>
>Anyway, thanks elrippo for that link to the Open NIC Project! I've
>added
>their DNS servers to my exit relay, and I no longer see any log
The OpenNIC servers may not be appropriate for use by a high-speed Tor
exit relay.
I run an OpenNIC DNS server, and my VPS vendor insisted that I
rate-limit the server to avoid it being used as a DDOS vector. I'm
guessing that this is not an uncommon position to take for public DNS
servers.
Hi there to all!
Some time ago, in some meetings with our "collective" folks, we started to
implement OpenNIC based local DNS resolvers to be used by every TOR / CJDNS
host we manage!
http://goo.gl/2Yki6M
Not a good "policy" to use DNS services from "PRISM cousins"...
Props to all the TOR Commu
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