Hey! So the server is technically a VPS, it is a slice of a larger server that is shared with 5 other people. Though I still have full root access. So the whole 10gb/s is not just for me, but from my tests I can at least get a few gigabit in real world speeds sustained.
CPU: 6x Xeon E5-2620v3 vCores RAM: 10GB I only get one IP address to myself by default. I could probably get more though if I feel it is worth it. On 14/08/16 15:27, s7r wrote: > Hey, > > That's neat! Thanks for contributing. > > How many CPU's / CPU cores does this new server have and does it use > AES-NI? How much RAM? Does it have multiple public IP addresses? > > Currently it's complicated for a single Tor process to saturate a 10Gb/s > line, because it's not yet able to use all CPU cores. > > What I would do if I had multiple public IP addresses: make 4-5 virtual > machines, with 1 CPU core each and reasonable RAM (say 8GB per virtual > machine) and run 4-5 different relays that would all combined come close > to saturate the 10Gb/s link. > > On 8/14/2016 5:09 PM, i3 wrote: >> Hi all, >> >> I've ran multiple Tor relays before but I have moved to a new server and >> would like some advice. >> >> My new server has 10Gb/s connection (I've observed it at 900MB/s to the >> drives) with plenty of CPU and RAM to complement. I typically use >> default configurations on my relays but I feel that to get the most out >> of this one I'll need to do some configuration to tweak it. >> >> Does anyone have advice on getting the most out of this server, in terms >> of speed? >> >> Thanks >> > > > _______________________________________________ > tor-relays mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays
_______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list [email protected] https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays
