Fixed it! And I feel like I'm going crazy. If I'm reading the logs correctly, Tor is signaling readiness to systemd /1 hundredth of a second (0.01)/ past the 120s limit. I changed the limit to 300s in the tor@default.service file, and all is well.
Thanks Peter, you really steered me in the right direction. I should probably start checking logs first when something stops working...
On 06/11/2016 09:50 AM, SuperSluether wrote:
Ok maybe I spoke too soon. After running rpi-update and rebooting, it's still having trouble starting. I'll poke around and see if I can find anything. Worst case scenario, I don't have enough RAM and need to turn something off, which means I'm wasting everyone's time with this.
On 06/11/2016 09:35 AM, SuperSluether wrote:
I have the Raspberry Pi Model B 2, which has an ARM7 processor. As such, I am able to use the official Debian repository without issue. Current version of Tor is 0.2.7.6-1~d80.jessie+1. Systemd is at version 215-17+deb8u4.
I poked around in syslog, and found this:
systemd[1]: tor@default.service start operation timed out. Terminating.
After increasing the systemd timeout (from 90s to 300s) Tor is running properly. Thanks for the help! I'm guessing this happened because I just have too much running on this thing. (Plex Media Server, Deluge BitTorrent Client, Tor)
On 06/11/2016 03:13 AM, Peter Palfrader wrote:
On Fri, 10 Jun 2016, SuperSluether wrote:
After rebooting my Raspberry Pi for a few updates, Tor is not working properly. From the logs,
[warn] OpenSSL version from headers does not match the version we're running with. If you get weird crashes, that might be why. (Compiled with 100010bf: OpenSSL 1.0.1k 8 Jan 2015; running with 1000114f: OpenSSL 1.0.1t 3 May 2016).
Everything else in the log looks normal, but right after bootstrap 85% (finishing handshake with first hop) it says this:
[notice] Interrupt: we have stopped accepting new connections, and will shut down in 30 seconds. Interrupt again to exit now.
You did not say where you got your tor from. I assume you are using some version (or fork) of the debian package. Which one?
At a guess, your system is too slow to start tor within the default timeout of the systemd service. Try raising the timeout. (Which systemd version are you using?)