hah, mine is -=severely=- under utilized......

NO CPU Load: https://puu.sh/EyX6N/81a5d5c76e.png

4 Mbps of throughput 2 Mbps each way or only ~ 20Mbps ea way: https://puu.sh/EyX7F/b7885ce635.png

Plenty of bandwidth: https://puu.sh/EyX9O/65334af451.png

Even to Germany: https://puu.sh/EyXbI/33cb46ac55.png

Even to Brazil: https://www.speedtest.net/result/8719378576

Even to London: https://puu.sh/EyXk4/f86e74e856.png

I realize that "false advertising of bandwidth to abuse the network protocols"  has impacted the "consensus weight" assigned to various nodes.

But there -definitely- needs to be a more intelligent system developed for determining this.

I just proved that I have 2 GIGABITS of bandwidth.... HUNDREDS to other countries, but there is 20 MegaBits flowing through my relay, lol.

Thanks,




Matt Westfall
President & CIO
ECAN Solutions, Inc.
Everything Computers and Networks
804.592.1672

------ Original Message ------
From: "teor" <teor@riseup.net>
To: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org
Sent: 10/22/2019 4:53:25 AM
Subject: Re: [tor-relays] New relay in USA: bridge or middle relay?

Hi,
 
On 8 Oct 2019, at 22:07, Isaac Grover, Aileron I.T. <igrover@aileronit.com> wrote:
 
Good morning from Wisconsin,
 
After reading about how middle relays in the USA go largely underutilized, and having quietly run my own middle relay for several years, would it be more beneficial to the network to launch several new bridges instead of more middle relays?
 
Good question.
 
Very few tor relays are actually under-utilised.
 
Many operators expect 100% utilisation, but low-latency protocols work
best around 10% utilisation. We're currently at 30%.
 
So feel free to deploy a middle, and if it's fast and stable enough,
it might become a guard.
 
Some bridges are kept in reserve. Others are handed out using less
popular methods. So feel free to deploy multiple bridges on the same
IP address or subnet.
 
T
 
--
teor
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