Thanks for you replies. I did "sudo usermod -a -G debian-tor your_user_name" but I got no connection for minutes.
I had a lot of errors due to a lack of diskspace. Obvisly the logs had filled it up, so I commented the lines in the torrc that deal with logs. Then I restarted the hole pi. Now I can't reach it via Remotedesktop, only via Putty. An in the Putty-console nyx does nothing, not even giving me an error or simply returning to the prompt. I dont now if tor is running now, but I think that is no more my problem. yours digitalist Sent with ProtonMail Secure Email. ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Am Montag, 11. März 2019 20:50 schrieb ylms <t...@yl.ms>: > On 3/11/19 12:22 AM, teor wrote: > > > Have you tried reading tor's logs directly? > > (It looks like you are reading them through nyx.) > > Tor's logs should be at /var/log/tor/log , or a similar path. > > In Raspian logs are sent to system journal, so "sudo journalctl -f -u > tor.service" will show the logs, you can change the log level to "warn" > or "err" by setting "Log err syslog" (syslog is set in the standard > torrc delivered with the package I run on Raspian, which comes from the > official repository I think). > > Remark: > I added sources "deb http://deb.torproject.org/torproject.org stretch > main". > > Regards > yl > > 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