-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA512 tor_bri...@mail.md: > Gordon eo, > > On Tue, 13 Aug 2013 08:08:52 -0700, Gordon Morehouse > <gor...@morehouse.me> wrote: >> Currently on one of my bridges I run all three - the normal >> bridge protocol, obfs2 and obfs3 on different ports. > > > In the hope to help others with a Pi, here my experiences with > setting up obfs2 and obfs3.
[snip] Your pain might have been alleviated by using Pythonbrew (or pyenv?)[1] and virtualenv[2], too. On one of my non-Pi, straight Debian bridges, from torrc: ServerTransportPlugin obfs2,obfs3 exec /usr/bin/obfsproxy --managed The cool thing about Pythonbrew is that you can point other programs at the entry point script or the Python binary you want and it will run in the given virtualenv with whatever version of Python you like. This may be doable, and it's likely always going to be much more up to date for Python projects than $distro's binary (or source!) packages. It's also a lot more difficult than having binary Raspbian packages, and involves building Python from source on a Pi. [1] https://github.com/utahta/pythonbrew [2] http://www.virtualenv.org/en/latest/ - -Gordon -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iQEcBAEBCgAGBQJSCuA5AAoJED/jpRoe7/ujrlQH/j/6z2HXCca+kQynUOopntUz ZEfjggLnsQ112rI6UvHTs15QLl/zshDfTwNh6vLdDocOeENDBFR2+ZdBNfyawafw X5fKMkgwNb/1yNE5Bsx6pGS6wFAKAu7zjIVAunoeCL5iWRvkrf4e63FTRy2yXQB5 70RKGN115cuUn9SKteq3kSFvYn5KHiszYsOn4AZb+Rxg2+x7SqqxEVEEEI9ieT63 j30JrXfGBiNY+zJ7no8lQVd19tRSmpHJcTSyP76nBDfpwLXRDvn6ee6W47ljj0fn XOw11KY0FFwBnG4NqWPFOfn8IjqrxC0VaKV0RdnDecakfKGNMM0MY3q4YjbibGQ= =Ablo -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays