> A large-scale operator (with more than 20 exit relays) was wondering about > the effects of the newer tor versions and the MyFamily configuration option.
I don't think that "newer tor versions" had any MyFamily related changes that impact concurrent connections > After setting up the MyFamily saw a 50% drop on the number connections > and the usage of the relay bandwidth; > This person would like to push more bandwidth and would like to find out > how to better achieve this scenario; things that might help with increasing bandwidth usage: * run a more open exit policy * tune DNS performance * add IPv6 connectivity + enable IPv6 exiting * run more tor instances * don't use crowded /16 subnets * choose well connected ASes * use faster hardware > The person also asked if it's possible to run FreeBSD/OpenBSD in a > embedded SoC (like Raspberry, or BeagleBone) - yes! it is possible, and some > people do it :) OpenBSD is probably not the best choice if you are trying to increase bandwidth usage > Open Questions> Who run the relays with the family fingerprint > B740BCECC4A9569232CDD45C0E1330BA0D030D33 ? This question is surprising to me since Zwiebelfreunde - presumably present at the meeting - provide IP addresses to the operator of that family and Markus is also on this list. https://apps.db.ripe.net/db-web-ui/#/lookup?source=ripe&key=185.220.101.0%20-%20185.220.101.127&type=inetnum btw: there is no such thing as a "family fingerprint". -- https://twitter.com/nusenu_ https://mastodon.social/@nusenu
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