Once the next phase is complete, I'll import all the data onto graphs so we
can see where problems are occuring. Is there a centralized database of what
tor nodes correspond to what countries? It would be interesting to see what
countries are the fastest, or where weird errors are concentrated. There's a
chance that some governments may be subtly making tor hard to use or that
some network routers have problems with certain sequences of connections or
something.
Ringo


On 12/17/06, Mike Perry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Thus spake Ringo Kamens ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):

> Thanks for that. It's interesting to have that data visualized.

Yeah, it's not quite as immediately relevant as exit scanning, but it
is a little more interesting with respect to studying the network as a
whole I think. What I'm really looking forward to is gathering some
statistics on most common peers during failure. I'm curious if those
OR_CONN_CLOSED are happening because certain nodes are
unreachable or partitioned from one another somehow, or if it is
something else. But I need better structure & object support for that
than perl can provide sanely, unfortunately.

I've gone back to scanning exits in the meantime. If anyone wants to
join me with a different wordlist.txt, set of filetypes and other ssh
hosts, it might be nice.

--
Mike Perry
Mad Computer Scientist
fscked.org evil labs

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