I wondered if that might be the case. These are spare internet connections that 
we have for free, so we don't really want to put any resources into them as we 
don't actually use them. The one in my office we do have hooked up to a postal 
machine and cellular gateway and use for testing purposes, but the ones in our 
other buildings we don't use. I actually just upgraded the one in my office 
(curtesy of Goodwill for $4) from a v8 WRT54G (one of the crippled almost no 
RAM or ROM space) to the Belkin with 32MB of RAM which matches the Linksys 
e1200's RAM. I have both of them set for something like 32000 connections and I 
observed the one yesterday was sitting around 3000 connections with CPU and RAM 
resources still available. (I believe I read on DD-WRT's site somewhere that 
with 16MB of RAM it can support 32000 connections, though I've no first-hand 
experience with this, other than what I'm running now.)

If I get the chance to head to the other building where I have the other relay 
connected, I'll try connecting it directly to the internet and see how that 
affects the usage. (pf is set to not allow any connections besides ORport, 
DirPort, SSH, 80, and 443, so it should be fairly secure. Though I've not 
tested my rules to redirect 80 and 443 to DirPort and ORPort as my router was 
doing that for me.) On that note, if I plug directly in, I will also get an 
IPv6 address. Do I need to do anything besides set "IPv6Exit 1" to use it as an 
IPv6 exit? (Do I need to set the IPv6 OR port. It is not a static IP address 
and I don't know how often it will be forced to change.)

--
John McDonnell

-----Original Message-----
From: tor-relays [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
teor
Sent: Monday, January 8, 2018 5:14 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [tor-relays] Nyx reported speed


> On 9 Jan 2018, at 05:56, John D. McDonnell <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> I'd appreciate any tips and pointers you can send my way. And if the
> consumer routers are the issue, I can move my one exit relay to one of
> the other connections I have and not use it at the location (or just
> run one that's slower) where I do use this backup internet connection.
> (It's handy to have a network that's not part of our internal network
> for testing.)

In our experience, most consumer routers don't support the 6000 simultaneous 
connections that Tor uses. I'd encourage you to try a different router, or an 
alternate connection, and see how that goes.

T
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