Thank you all for your answers. so if i can't control on the access to my Exit-Relay i can control on the access to my SSH which used to run this Exir-Relay.
On Wed, Apr 25, 2018 at 6:14 PM, Matt Traudt <pas...@torproject.org> wrote: > On 4/25/18 10:55, dave` dave wrote: > > im using VMware Ubuntu 16.04 using SSH. > > im running Exit-Relay and i want to control who can connect to my > > Exit-Relay, is there a way to do that- though the Exit-Relay settings, > > or the SSH settings? > > and there will be an even better way: if i can say who is the specific > > ip that can connect to me. > > Thank You! > > > > You CAN NOT control who uses your exit relay in circuits. > > You CAN control who is allowed to SSH into the machine running the exit > relay. > > The fact the machine has Tor installed and running on it is completely > unrelated. You can control who can SSH into your machine whether or not > you're running Tor, or a web server, or a Minecraft sever, or whatever > else. Therefore you will find a lot of advice on the Internet if you > search this topic and you don't necessarily need to seek out Tor relay > operators (or nginx web masters, or Minecraft kids, or whatever). > > You can use things like > > - a strict firewall > - strong SSH passwords > - SSH keys > - other SSH configuration options > - a non-standard SSH port > - fail2ban > > (Yes, some of these things are a essentially "rate limiting login > attempts" instead of literally "control who can even attempt to log in". > I think they are still worth mentioning.) > > Hope that helps. > > Matt > _______________________________________________ > 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