Re: [tor-relays] Relay-Bandwith

2013-11-09 Thread Jobiwan Kenobi
If you have 50 down and 10 up, then the 10 is your number. The lower of the two. As a relay, all data you receive, you send out again. So you have 1280 KB of potential relay capacity. Your ISP probably has a FUP you may violate if you constantly use up all your bandwidth. You could set your

Re: [tor-relays] Relay-Bandwith

2013-11-09 Thread Andy Isaacson
On Sat, Nov 09, 2013 at 07:59:45PM +0100, Oliver Schönefeld wrote: > my ISP is offering 50 Mbps downstream 10 Mbps up, so i thought i'd > share 20 Mbps max and 15 Mbps avg (respectively 2560 KBps max and 1920 > KBps avg) in a inner tor-relay. > so i put the latter vaues in the bandwith-limits tab o

Re: [tor-relays] Relay-Bandwith

2013-11-09 Thread David Serrano
On 2013-11-09 19:59:45 (+0100), Oliver Schönefeld wrote: > > my ISP is offering 50 Mbps downstream 10 Mbps up, so i thought i'd share 20 > Mbps max and 15 Mbps avg (respectively 2560 KBps max and 1920 KBps avg) in a > inner tor-relay. If I'm not mistaken, you should stick to 10 Mbps. You're a r

[tor-relays] Relay-Bandwith

2013-11-09 Thread Oliver Schönefeld
hey folks i'm having some issues with my bandwidth... my ISP is offering 50 Mbps downstream 10 Mbps up, so i thought i'd share 20 Mbps max and 15 Mbps avg (respectively 2560 KBps max and 1920 KBps avg) in a inner tor-relay. so i put the latter vaues in the bandwith-limits tab of the sharing opti