On September 21, 2020 4:33:38 PM PDT, kencf0...@riseup.net wrote:
>
>
>On 2020-09-20 23:35, dmz21 wrote:
>
>> Please check if it works when you select a ORPort above 1023.
>> It is a common problem with Tor on Linux: it cannot open ports below
>> 1024 when running as a non-root service.
>
>News to
>> What are the contents of /etc/resolv.conf ?
>
>127.0.0.1
>::1
That's the problem. The format of resolv.conf requires the string "nameserver"
before each ip. Try something like this:
# Up to three nameserver lines are allowed.
nameserver 127.0.0.1
nameserver ::1
#nameserver
--Sean
_
On March 9, 2020 3:55:38 AM PDT, "Станислав" wrote:
>hi.I start second instance of tor, but for some reason it stopped
>working.after updating the firmware on board pc engines apu2
>
>Mar 09 13:48:46.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 0% (starting): Starting
>Mar 09 13:49:03.000 [notice] Starting with gu
On December 24, 2019 10:31:43 PM EST, Kenneth Freeman
wrote:
>Messing around with my new computer I get this:
>
>[warn] /run/tor is not owned by this user, but by toranon (977).
>Perhaps you are running Tor as the wrong user?
>
>Duckduckgo displays hentai results. Go figure.
Sounds to me like a
On November 6, 2019 10:44:58 AM PST, David Strappazon
wrote:
>Hello everyone,
>
>i'm running a bridge on a raspberry Pi 3B+ on Kali Linux.
>
>Everything looks fine but after checking the logs i noticed that the
>service rebooted by itself in the middle on the night:
>
>Nov 06 03:51:09.000 [notice
On November 14, 2017 4:38:54 AM PST, Patrice wrote:
>Hi everyone,
>
>
>I`ve got an issue with my local IP address. I am running a relay about
>1
>year and since 3 or 4 weeks I can`t reach some websites like: ebay or
>ikea.
>
>All I get is this message:
>
>*
>*
>
>*Access Denied*
>You don`t have p
On October 3, 2017 11:02:55 PM PDT, Fr33d0m4all wrote:
>Hi,
>My Tor middle relay public IP address is victim of SSH brute force
>connections’ attempts and the attack is going on since two weeks ago.
>It’s not a problem, the server that is listening with SSH on the same
>IP address than my Tor rela
On January 31, 2017 12:17:00 AM PST, fr33d0m4all wrote:
>Hi,
>this is not really a Tor issue, but I'd like to know if there is
>someone
>else like me that is having problems upgrading his Tor installation to
>the latest version on its Raspberry (running Raspbian based on Debian
>Jessie):
Post
On Wed, Aug 24, 2016 at 05:33:43PM +0200, Jan Vidar Krey wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 24, 2016, at 16:43, Aeris wrote:
> > > 2) security is better
> >
> > Sorry to say that, but : no. It’s very weaker than plain old Debian
> > package.
> >
>
> This is a matter of perspective on the "security" definition
>> Hello,
>> I just started running my little 5 mbits mid relay on Pi3 on raspbian and
>> all seems to be dandy,
>> it picked traffic nicely, hovering around 700-800 total connections,
>> its not unusual to see it pushing full advertised bandwidth during peak
>> hours (with ~20-25% load on 1 core,
On July 28, 2016 2:50:40 PM EDT, ITechGeek wrote:
>On Thu, Jul 28, 2016 at 2:34 PM, Tristan
>wrote:
>
>> I really wish VPS services wouldn't use Google DNS by default. If not
>for
>> this e-mail, I would have been on Google's DNS for a while before I
>found
>> out.
>
>
>I actually haven't seen th
On Wed, Jul 20, 2016 at 11:20:33PM -0400, Me wrote:
> So what are we going to do when Green shuts down the Bridge Authority server
> next month? Will it have a serious effect, or will there be any apparent
> issues or slowdowns?
>
> Me
Please don't hijack an existing thread for a completely unrel
On Fri, Feb 26, 2016 at 04:03:14PM -0500, Steven Jones wrote:
> clearing the memory cache with a cron job cant hurt
Yes it can. There is no reason to clear the vm cache manually unless you
are testing cache-related code paths. The kernel will automatically
reclaim cache memory for program memory s
> > Check your firewall, and gateway port forwards if the server is
> > behind a NAT. If you're not sure where to start, post the output of
> > "sudo iptables -L"
> >
> > --Sean
> >
> I've made several iptables and saved them, I thought, however every
> time I reboot the VPS all my rules are gone
>> Dec 05 21:17:46.000 [notice] Your IP address seems to have changed
>> to 167.114.35.28 (METHOD=INTERFACE). Updating. Dec 05 21:17:46.000
>> [notice] Our IP Address has changed from 142.4.217.95 to
>> 167.114.35.28; rebuilding descriptor (source: METHOD=INTERFACE).
>> Dec 05 21:18:42.000 [notice
On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 12:40:19AM +, Tim Sammut wrote:
> I meant is it possible for a relay operator to detect if a snapshot of a
> running VM or VPS has been taken? Asked slightly differently, if I have
> a relay running as a VPS or VM, can I somehow detect if my provider took
> a snapshot of
On October 2, 2015 7:36:52 AM EDT, jensm1 wrote:
>I just stumbled over this
>(https://metrics.torproject.org/bandwidth-flags.html) graph at tor
>metrics, which shows advertised exit bandwidth to be around 40Gbit/s
>and
>consumed exit bandwidth around 20Gbit/s. This would mean that we have
>about t
On Sun, Sep 20, 2015 at 09:05:21PM +0100, Tor Stuff wrote:
> I am running tor on a new Ubuntu 14.04.3 LTS system. I have restarted tor a
> couple of times with
>
> service tor restart
>
> I noticed when I start arm that it is telling me that
>
> The torrc differs from what tor's using. You c
On September 6, 2015 12:59:52 PM EDT, Billy Humphreys
wrote:
>
>-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>Hash: SHA256
>
>Hi,
>I got a new Tor relay running on my server.
>https://atlas.torproject.org/#details/9CBD228738FBB0293A348680DF241B606069E2F9
>is it's details.
>However, I have been having issu
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