>Hi There
>This is a pretty interesting topic. I have been running a Rasp Pi 3 based 
>relay since August this year. By now, I am up to about 1,300 incomming and 
>outgoing connections, and a max of >about 21mbps. This is about 50% of the 
>max. upload speed. Consensus weight is between 3,000 and 6,000. The CPU is 
>running at 20% max. However, my local ISP disconnects me after 24 >to 36 
>hours. From my point of view this is the only disadvantage. 
> 
>For a home based relay, is that good, bad,  or just average? Is there a chance 
>for me to get a stable, or even guard flag? What are your experiances?
>Mike
 
 
My experience is bad, the relay is not taking off at all, I have consensus 
weight of 19 and am sending less than 20 MB every 6 hours despite having 
bandwidth measured by Tor of between 70 and 120 KB/s. The total up bandwidth I 
have in ISP connection is 1.5 mbps and this is probably the issue. I also run 
this on Pi 3. I did, however, get a stable flag after 5 days, and have had it 
since then. My IP is dynamic and did not change in these 5 days or in the 4 
days that passed since I got the Stable flag. My relay nickname is ZG0.
 
Based on your experience I think your are doing fabulously well for a home 
relay, and that what really counts is the ISP bandwidth, and the Stable flag 
does not have much to do with how much traffic you get. Moreover, your 20% cpu 
util confirms my opinion that Pi is the perfect, most cost efficient way to run 
a relay and that running it on a larger computer is a waste of resources and 
money (up to the point Raspi chokes which we are yet to discover :))
 
Moreover, clearly Pi’s cpu power will never be the bottleneck, only its memory 
size. You have a total of 1GB of memory on your Pi 3, what’s your memory 
utilization?  What’s the total traffic the Pi sends every 6 hours (reported in 
the Tor log file /var/log/tor/notices.log and, for the previous time window, in 
/var/log/tor/notices.log.1)?
 
What’s your relay’s nickname?
 
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