Anyone that has a very specific guide available to setting up a relay? I was thinking of doing this since I'm a firm believer in anonymity, I use TOR myself so might as well help the network and I have decent internet connection that is quite unused most of the time (100 Mbps down/10Mbps up).
I was trying to follow up on that help section on the official site but it wasn't enough. There's a possibility the relay didn't work because of my router but I have opened the rights ports, tested by putting some limits and just testing some settings but not avail.
On 11 Jul 2011, at 11:41, Lalle Bralle noizic85@gmail.com wrote:
Anyone that has a very specific guide available to setting up a relay? I was thinking of doing this since I'm a firm believer in anonymity, I use TOR myself so might as well help the network and I have decent internet connection that is quite unused most of the time (100 Mbps down/10Mbps up).
I was trying to follow up on that help section on the official site but it wasn't enough. There's a possibility the relay didn't work because of my router but I have opened the rights ports, tested by putting some limits and just testing some settings but not avail.
Are there any error messages in the log?
On 2011-07-11 13:16, Runa Sandvik wrote:
On 11 Jul 2011, at 11:41, Lalle Bralle noizic85@gmail.com wrote:
Anyone that has a very specific guide available to setting up a relay? I was thinking of doing this since I'm a firm believer in anonymity, I use TOR myself so might as well help the network and I have decent internet connection that is quite unused most of the time (100 Mbps down/10Mbps up).
I was trying to follow up on that help section on the official site but it wasn't enough. There's a possibility the relay didn't work because of my router but I have opened the rights ports, tested by putting some limits and just testing some settings but not avail.
Are there any error messages in the log?
This is what it says: jul 11 15:46:53.903 [Warning] Controller gave us config lines that didn't validate: Servers must be able to freely connect to the rest of the Internet, so they must not set Reachable*Addresses or FascistFirewall. jul 11 15:46:54.661 [Notice] Tor has successfully opened a circuit. Looks like client functionality is working. jul 11 15:46:54.661 [Notice] Bootstrapped 100%: Done.
If you are behind a router that is doing NAT and you think that is the problem, I can suggest two things to try to resolve that.
1) Connect the computer that is running Tor directly to the Internet. See if it gets a publicly reachable address that way, i.e., not 192.168.xxx.yyy and see if it works that way. If it does then
2) Configure your router to tell it that the computer running Tor is the DMZ.
If those work then the problem probably is NAT in the router. In either case your computer running Tor is directly facing the internet so if you want leave it as DMZ make sure it is well secured and firewalled.
On 7/11/2011 3:41 AM, Lalle Bralle wrote:
Anyone that has a very specific guide available to setting up a relay? I was thinking of doing this since I'm a firm believer in anonymity, I use TOR myself so might as well help the network and I have decent internet connection that is quite unused most of the time (100 Mbps down/10Mbps up).
I was trying to follow up on that help section on the official site but it wasn't enough. There's a possibility the relay didn't work because of my router but I have opened the rights ports, tested by putting some limits and just testing some settings but not avail.
tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays
On Monday 11 July 2011 11:47:57 Softail wrote:
If you are behind a router that is doing NAT and you think that is the problem, I can suggest two things to try to resolve that.
- Connect the computer that is running Tor directly to the Internet.
See if it gets a publicly reachable address that way, i.e., not 192.168.xxx.yyy and see if it works that way. If it does then
- Configure your router to tell it that the computer running Tor is the
DMZ.
If those work then the problem probably is NAT in the router. In either case your computer running Tor is directly facing the internet so if you want leave it as DMZ make sure it is well secured and firewalled.
I run Tor behind NAT and have no problem. I set up the router to forward Tor's ports to the box running Tor. I don't have ReachableAddresses or FascistFirewall set to anything.
cmeclax
On 2011-07-11 18:03, cmeclax-sazri wrote:
On Monday 11 July 2011 11:47:57 Softail wrote:
If you are behind a router that is doing NAT and you think that is the problem, I can suggest two things to try to resolve that.
- Connect the computer that is running Tor directly to the Internet.
See if it gets a publicly reachable address that way, i.e., not 192.168.xxx.yyy and see if it works that way. If it does then
- Configure your router to tell it that the computer running Tor is the
DMZ.
If those work then the problem probably is NAT in the router. In either case your computer running Tor is directly facing the internet so if you want leave it as DMZ make sure it is well secured and firewalled.
I run Tor behind NAT and have no problem. I set up the router to forward Tor's ports to the box running Tor. I don't have ReachableAddresses or FascistFirewall set to anything.
cmeclax _______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays
What model is your router? I own a DGL-4300 Wireless 108G Gaming router.
I run TOR behind a PfSense Firewall with NAT, and also have no problems. I just forwared the needed Ports (9001, 9030) to the Tor-Box...
Am 12.07.2011 02:50, schrieb cmeclax-sazri:
On Monday 11 July 2011 13:04:33 Max wrote:
What model is your router? I own a DGL-4300 Wireless 108G Gaming router.
It's a Linksys running DD-WRT. _______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list tor-relays@lists.torproject.org https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays
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