Remember, a relay has to download and upload as well, so your 100Mbps link would really only be able to _relay_ at 50Mbps anyway.
On Oct 12, 2016 4:17 AM, "Farid Joubbi" <jou...@kth.se> wrote: > The hardware in your raspberry is way too weak to be able to push 100 > Mbit/s. > > My guess is that Atlas will show somewhere just below 1 MByte for your > relay. > > > I have tried to find cost effective hardware for a relay that is able to > push around 100 Mbit/s. All the options I have looked at turned out to be a > bit too expensive for my taste (and wallet). Either the initial cost or the > energy usage is too high for such hardware for my purposes. > > > ------------------------------ > *From:* tor-relays <tor-relays-boun...@lists.torproject.org> on behalf of > Volker Mink <volker.m...@gmx.de> > *Sent:* 12 October 2016 09:09 > *To:* tor-relays@lists.torproject.org > *Subject:* Re: [tor-relays] RPi Relay Maximum Speed > > So the best would be to use two raspis or your old gaming-workstation - > depends on the costs for energy > > *Gesendet:* Mittwoch, 12. Oktober 2016 um 07:55 Uhr > *Von:* "Roman Mamedov" <r...@romanrm.net> > *An:* Manny <fel...@posteo.de> > *Cc:* "Tor relays" <tor-relays@lists.torproject.org> > *Betreff:* Re: [tor-relays] RPi Relay Maximum Speed > On Wed, 12 Oct 2016 07:18:56 +0200 > Manny <fel...@posteo.de> wrote: > > > I have a 1gbit symmetric connection at home and would like to donate > > 100mbit with my raspberry pi 3 model b. Since it has a 100mbit Network > > Interface, I'm limited to that anyways. > > > > What Settings do I Need in my torcc to get the Maximum Speed? At the > > Moment I entered 12 Mbytes - which Shows up at 96 mb/s in Arm - is that > > correct and my understanding of things is just the opposite? > > Max Speed, I think, should be 12.7mb/s for a 100mbit Connection? > > mb is not a thing that exists; > Mb is megabits: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megabit > MB is megabytes: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megabyte > > What you entered in torrc is currently correct. But since your board has a > 100 > Mbit interface anyway, it would be better if you just omit the bandwidth > limit > line entirely. > > Also, actually hit anything remotely close to 100 Mbit, you'll absolutely > have > to run two instances of Tor. The Raspberry Pi 3 has 4 CPU cores, but each > core > on its own is not very fast. One copy of Tor only uses about 1 to 1.3 > cores, > so to fully utilize your hardware you need more than one. Ideally you'd > set up > four, but the Tor network will only accept two running from the same IPv4 > address. It appears that these days there's a built-in script for that, see > "man tor-instance-create". > > -- > With respect, > Roman > _______________________________________________ > tor-relays mailing list > tor-relays@lists.torproject.org > https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays > > _______________________________________________ > tor-relays mailing list > tor-relays@lists.torproject.org > https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays > >
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