Greetings/Question - Was: RE: Have some consideration for users...
Jeffrey F. Bloss
jbloss at tampabay.rr.com
Sat Sep 3 02:43:05 UTC 2005
On Fri, 02 Sep 2005 22:00:53 -0400
Roger Dingledine <arma at mit.edu> wrote:
> > What IS the impact on the tor network if a node suddenly drops off
> > the face of the planet, or appears and disappears every half hour
> > or so for an 8 hour span? I'd assume since tor is "real time" the
> > node is simply routed around, correct? How fast are these things
> > compensated for?
>
> Tor servers publish an "uptime" in their server descriptor, which is
> the time they've been available/working at their current IP.
[snip]
Excellent information, thanks. I was clueless about how LongLivedPorts
worked.
See my reply to phobos if you're interested in more details of my (off
topic) problem.
> If servers die suddenly, Tor circuits that use them are broken. If
> somebody is using one of those circuits (e.g. for his irc connection),
> then it gets cut.
[...]
> The answer to your question is "If your node is always like this, then
> it's probably not worth while to run a Tor node. But if it's fine for
> most days and it has this behavior one afternoon a week, then it's
> useful to have it."
I don't plan on running anything unless it's solid. I'll wait a bit,
and if the problem persists even as an occasional thing I'll scrap the
idea until I can find a reliable provider.
Thanks again.
--
Hand Crafted on Fri. Sep 02, 2005 at 22:35
Outside of a dog, a book is a man's best friend.
Inside a dog, it's too dark to read.
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