Eldalië via tor-relays:
Hello there.
I have been running my (non-exit) relay without issues for some
months. Recently I noticed that my ISP started to reset my IP a few
hours after the node gets the Guard flag, thus making it lose such a
flag (as well as Stable and HSDir). I am not sure if the Gu
Thanks. I thought about doing that, but I would rather not like to mix
Raspian bullseye and Debian bullseye-backports.
Is there a good reason against building armhf on deb.torproject.org?
Georg Koppen:
Right. One thing we recommended when talking to relay operators during
earlier EOL upgrade
Unfortunately I've had to shut down my home based tor relay because my
wife's employer is mis-categorising it as an exit node, instead of the
middle/guard that it really is. So, until she retires, in a few months,
that relay will now be silent after about 5-years running (all of which
her havi
Hey there, I am running a tor relay off an old samsung phone. When I first
started the relay, my observed bandwidth was around 4.5MB/s. It was running
for around 7 days and had the stable and HSdir flag. After a few problems
with IP6 and being overloaded (thought this was a problem on my end, not a
ilf:
Thanks. I thought about doing that, but I would rather not like to mix
Raspian bullseye and Debian bullseye-backports.
Is there a good reason against building armhf on deb.torproject.org?
Just resource constraints. We have a ticket for that work[1] but
de-prioritized it even further giv
On 8/2/22 20:58, Eldalië via tor-relays wrote:
Recently I noticed that my ISP started to reset my IP a few
hours after the node gets the Guard flag,
The Guard flag is given after a more or less constant time (or?) - so
I'd not see a conincidence here.
--
Toralf
andrew reid wrote:
> Hey there, I am running a tor relay off an old samsung phone. When I first
> started the relay, my observed bandwidth was around 4.5MB/s. It was running
> for around 7 days and had the stable and HSdir flag. After a few problems
> with IP6 and being overloaded (thought this w