after a few hours, still hibernating, and still wondering why I lost Stable, Guard and Named all at the same time (see atlas graph)... weird.
2014-10-11 6:03 GMT-04:00 Blaise Gagnon <quebecf...@gmail.com>: > no reason for my node to be hibernating, no caps... > > 2014-10-11 3:31 GMT-04:00 Lunar <lu...@torproject.org>: > >> Blaise Gagnon: >> > and ... what is "hibernating" ? >> >> See AccountingMax and related options in tor manpage: >> >> AccountingMax N bytes|KBytes|MBytes|GBytes|KBits|MBits|GBits|TBytes >> Never send more than the specified number of bytes in a >> given accounting period, or receive more than that number >> in the period. For example, with AccountingMax set to 1 >> GByte, a server could send 900 MBytes and receive 800 >> MBytes and continue running. It will only hibernate once >> one of the two reaches 1 GByte. When the number of bytes >> gets low, Tor will stop accepting new connections and >> circuits. When the number of bytes is exhausted, Tor will >> hibernate until some time in the next accounting period. >> To prevent all servers from waking at the same time, Tor >> will also wait until a random point in each period before >> waking up. If you have bandwidth cost issues, enabling >> hibernation is preferable to setting a low bandwidth, >> since it provides users with a collection of fast servers >> that are up some of the time, which is more useful than a >> set of slow servers that are always "available". >> >> -- >> Lunar <lu...@torproject.org> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> tor-relays mailing list >> tor-relays@lists.torproject.org >> https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays >> >> >
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