So an enclave node doesn't bypass exit nodes, or are exit nodes no longer the bottleneck they once were?
My hypothesis was that if a major service providers provided an exit enclave, traffic to them would bypass the exit node bottleneck. Given the distribution of internet traffic (the top 10 sites account for 20% of traffic to the top 1,000 sites http://tinyurl.com/3agt69j) tor could see some serious performance gains.
Thanks, -Zach Lym
On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 1:22 PM, Sebastian Hahn mail@sebastianhahn.net wrote:
On May 19, 2011, at 9:58 PM, Zach Lym wrote:
I have been running the LoadUI tests for over 2 hours, I don't think they produce a single TCP stream.
I geting almost no difference between out-proxy, enclave, and the hidden service versions of the site. The LoadUI 1.5 project file is here. if you care to check.
Does the majority of the network use an exit enclave if one is available?
Thanks, -Zach Lym
There should be no (big) difference in speed, because tor uses the exit enclave as the fourth hop. So you have a "normal" three-hop circuit which gets extended to the enclave.
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