Hello Tor, hello world!
Below you'll find the highlights of Tor metrics team work done in March 2018.
On behalf of the Tor metrics team, Karsten
Wrote a first draft document containing approximately 2500 words with a graph specification of the relay users graph [1] and sent it Tor folks outside of the metrics team for an initial review. The relay users graph is our most popular graph and also one of the most complex ones. We'll be able to re-use parts of this specification, or link to it, from other graph specifications. All in all, we'll produce approximately 10 times as much text for all graphs and tables.
[1] https://metrics.torproject.org/userstats-relay-country.html
Discussed [2] which Java frameworks to include in the white paper about CollecTor's data processing.
[2] https://bugs.torproject.org/25644
Started providing metrics timeline events as Atom feed [3, 4].
[3] https://metrics.torproject.org/news.atom [4] https://bugs.torproject.org/23854
Added more explanations to the website why metrics are important and what we do to make sure they're safe [5].
[5] https://metrics.torproject.org/about.html
Released Onionoo protocol version 5.1 [6] which always adds a relay's own fingerprint to its "effective_family" and makes nickname fields "n" in summary documents and "nickname" in details documents required fields.
[6] https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-dev/2018-March/013012.html
Set up CollecTor's webstats module to sanitize web server logs [7] and modified metrics-web to process these logs [8] instead of the ones available on webstats.tp.o [9].
[7] https://metrics.torproject.org/collector.html#webstats [8] https://metrics.torproject.org/webstats-tb.html [9] https://webstats.torproject.org/