[tor-relays] A few questions about my setting up my first Tor relay.
Ferdi GULER
ferdiguler at outlook.com
Fri Apr 18 17:53:52 UTC 2014
Hi Robert,
I also suggest running Raspberry Pi as a Tor Relay. I got mine and works like a charm.
Ferdi
Date: Fri, 18 Apr 2014 13:03:43 -0400
From: rotorbudd at gmail.com
To: tor-relays at lists.torproject.org
Subject: Re: [tor-relays] A few questions about my setting up my first Tor relay.
I would second the Raspberry Pi as a Tor relay/bridge.Very low power consumption and no noise too boot!
On Fri, Apr 18, 2014 at 5:47 AM, Chris Whittleston <csw34 at cam.ac.uk> wrote:
Hey Robert,
Thanks for your interest in setting up a relay! I see you've already had some replies to your questions but let me add a slightly different suggestion - buying a Raspberry Pi for ~£25 and running your relay from there. This has the advantage of being extremely low in power requirements and doesn't need you to leave one of your other machines on all the time.
If you're curious about this option, I've written up some pretty detailed instructions here:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1bf_D_j1O-9ckTS9DY8ngIdiFwHta6Q5Uj_5dvOiavCQ/edit?usp=sharing
Good luck!
Chris
On 18 Apr 2014 07:21, "Robert Smith" <kittenjuggler at ymail.com> wrote:
Judging by the level of your
computer skills implied by the emails, those involved in
Tor have better things to do than help a guy like me. I think it is
important to the entire world that the internet links us together, and
Tor may be the most crucial part of that.
I have 3 machines as possible candidates for a Tor relay:
A)
A decent PC (around 6 years old) with Vista installed. It's been
unused for 2 years. I am willing to do a clean re-install of Vista or
even Linux (with help) to run it as a Tor relay, night and day.
B)
A MacBook Pro (4gb ram, Intel, Snow Leopard). Again, I am willing to
wipe it, and do a clean install of the OS and use it for a Tor relay,
night and day.
C) My personal laptop an Asus G74S (12gb ram, i7 quad core 2.2ghz, Win7 Home Premium 64bit), which I "sleep" most nights.
Modem: DSL from "Telus" (in
Victoria, BC, Canada) with 4 ports (I use 1 cable port to my personal
computer, 1 wireless port for my iPad or Android cell phone).
Questions:
1) If I run a Tor relay with that modem, are there any security risks to the other devices? I am no technical guru.
2)
If I run a Tor relay on either (or both the Vista PC and MacBook) of
the computers mentioned above, will it be mostly a "set it and forget
it" maintenance? I cannot devote much time (and definitely don't have
much expertise).
3) Will I compromise the anonimity of Tor users due to my lack of technical skills while running a Tor relay? I don't want
to do more damage than good.
4)
Can I throttle down the bandwidth on my Tor relay(s) when I need it for
my own personal machine? I don't want to disrupt the Tor net.
5)
Can
you suggest the best way to use my machine(s) to make a reliable,
maintenance free and secure Tor relay, requiring the least amount of
time? I am guessing it's the MacBook cabled to the DSL, running only
Tor relay software, and running only a normal relay.
6)
At this point is it worth my while, to attempt a Tor bridge or exit
relay or am I even capable of doing it properly? I have little
experience or expertise in networking and not much time.
Thanks for spending your valuable time reading my questions. I hope to make it pay off, in a long term Tor relay.
Rob Smith
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