On Wed, 04 Mar 2015 16:31:27 +0100 oseump <ose...@proxymail.eu> wrote: > With ORPort 443 Tor could not confirm the port was reachable even > though it was wide open to online port checkers and nmap -sT -O > localhost shows ports 22/tcp, 80/tcp, 443/tcp to be open.
Where are you running this from? You said a Raspberry Pi; Is this on a home/residential network? If so, my first inclination is that your ISP is blocking incoming connections on certain ports. I know this is common in my area with port 25, 80, and 443 to prevent customers from running servers. A netstat/nmap on localhost will confirm that Tor is listening on the port, but wont confirm the outside world can access it. You said you used "online port checkers" - double check this. Try running a simple http server on port 443 (you don't need to setup ssl necessarily, just run it at http://1.2.3.4:443) and seeing if you can connect from your mobile phone or something. I believe you when you said you checked, but sometimes online port checkers can be iffy and even your ISP might be doing some weird conditional filtering. I run my Tor relays on 443 and it worked without issue. > > And yet torstatus monitors show many relays displaying ports ORPOrt > 443 and DirPort 80 running on Linux. > > Yesterday I swapped the ports and within a moment ORPort 80 was > confirmed and server descriptor published. DirPort 443 fails to > confirm it is reachable. > > So what is it about port 443 on my little RP 2 that Tor dislikes? > >
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