Great, and many thanks - that explains it: if the bursting-timespan is 1 sec only only I obviously can't see that bandwidth bursting with my resolution of 10 sec measurements.
‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ On Thursday, 22. August 2019 05:02, teor teor@riseup.net wrote:
Hi,
On 20 Aug 2019, at 20:23, petrarca@protonmail.ch wrote: I'm struggling a bit with the two config options for RelayBandwidthRate and RelayBandwidthBurst - what I currently have in my torrc config file is: ... RelayBandwidthRate 8 Mbit RelayBandwidthBurst 12 Mbit ... My assumption was that on average the Relay would consume 8 Mbps max. but over a shorter period of time also up to 12 Mbps in case needed. What I see (historical monitor data at 10 s intervals for the past 6 months) is that the bandwidth usage never exceeds 8 Mbps. I can also see the consumption to be levelled out at 8 Mbps for minutes or hours so it looks like there would be a need for more bandwidth.
Yes the Tor network does need more bandwidth, particularly for exits.
My question: why can't I see the bandwidth usage going above 8 Mbps and making use of the allowed burst? Btw, I'm typically using the latest stable tor, currently the relay is on 0.4.0.5.
The burst is over a very short period of time. I think it's about 1 second.
The rate is averaged is over a slightly longer period of time, and includes any burst bandwidth. That is, if the bandwidth burst to 12 Mbps in the last second, the bandwidth in this second will be 4 Mbps. The lower bandwidth in the next second keeps the average to 8 Mbps.
T
teor
tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays