Cool, that's four/five times as much as I've seen reported about the Pi 1, making it a lot more usefull. So I'm going to see if the Rapberry can beat the Banana (which isn't a given, it's 100Mhz slower and Tor doesn't really use the extra cores). But we'll see where it ends, I'd be content if I can get it to average above 20Mbit/s
AVee
On Thursday 09 April 2015 15:31:09 Andrew Smith wrote:
Hey
I had 2.0MB/s~ (according to "Advertised Bandwidth" on Atlas) running through my RPi2 for a while. Seems to do the job and considerably faster than the RPi1.
On 9 April 2015 at 14:55, I beatthebastards@inbox.com wrote:
Juris,
Is the reason so much is going through it that it is in a data centre? I thought Raspberry Pis would only let through so little that they were dragging the speed down. Have you put up anything on the web on it?
Robert
-----Original Message----- From: juris@torservers.net Sent: Thu, 09 Apr 2015 15:05:27 +0200 To: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org Subject: Re: [tor-relays] Tor relay on Rapsberry Pi 2
Hi AVee,
I'm running a Tor relay on a Banana Pi (1GHz Dualcore, Cortex-A7): https://globe.torproject.org/#/search/query=cherryjam
That's what vnstat says:
month rx | tx | total | avg. rate Feb '15 4.23 TiB | 4.36 TiB | 8.60 TiB | 30.52 Mbit/s Mar '15 5.33 TiB | 5.50 TiB | 10.83 TiB | 34.73 Mbit/s
The DC has a dedicated 100Mbit/s connection for my device.
So the Raspberry Pi2 should be able to push at least the same amount of traffic.
Juris Vetra https://www.torservers.net/
Am 09.04.2015 um 14:28 schrieb AVee:
Hi,
I happened to get my hands on a Raspberry Pi 2 and I was wondering if anyone already has any experience running Tor on the this. There is quite some info about running Tor on the original Raspberry Pi, and the performance seems to be a bit lacking. The Pi 2 however comes with higher clocked quad core Cortex-A7 which should bring an descend in increase in performance. So I'm curious about the throughput a Tor relay on the Pi 2 would achieve.
Did anyone here try running Tor on a Raspberry Pi 2 already? And if not, is there any way to test the achievable throughput without joining actually adding the relay to the Tor network (and having to go through the full life cycle)?
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