References for prior message:
1. http://linux.die.net/man/2/setrlimit
2. http://coldattic.info/shvedsky/pro/blogs/a-foo-walks-into-a-bar/posts/40
Best,
-Gordon M.
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Hi all,
I brought this up in tor-relay, where I'm keeping most of my relatively
easy/low key stuff on getting Tor to work real solidly on the Raspberry Pi.
However, the biggest problem I'm having right now (with the latest version) is
occasional visits from the OOM killer, usually right after
oming to market. Dual and
quad core will shortly be the norm. It'd be nice to have some stuff,
buildable to complete and properly dependent .debs so it's easily
absorbable by the rest of the Debian lineage, together by maybe mid
next year. My spare time is limited. But if that's d
On Sat, May 25, 2013, at 08:47 AM, Michele OrrĂ¹ wrote:
> 2013/5/16 Gordon Morehouse :
> > Just a quick question (apologies if it's a repeat) from a totally
> > Android-naive developer: is using Jython a possibility to speed the
> > availability of obfs3 on Android?
Symmetric cryptography (AES et al) key length - the 128, 256 etc bits
you are talking about - is not directly comparable to public/private
key cryptography, specifically RSA in this case. 1024 bits was
considered a good strong RSA key... in 1995.
On Fri, May 17, 2013, at 08:29 AM, David Voric
Hi there, I know a user in China with an Android device who is having
trouble with the GFW. I run private bridges for a couple friends in odd
places and recently upgraded to obfs3, but after inquiring on IRC this
morning I found that Android doesn't have obfs3 support yet:
17:17 < gamambel> gmore