Thank you all so far, looks like Mikrotik is the name of the game - never heard about them :-(
I used to try this https://en.avm.de/products/fritzbox/fritzbox-7590/technical-data/ one with 512MB RAM and it couldn't stand the number of connection you can get on a 40Mbit/s line for more than a day. So i wonder if anything with less or same amount of RAM will be able to - or is this the wrong question? "..after it's configured properly..." is that a difficult task and are there good manuals or other help for those routers as I am not familiar with networking? > s7r <[email protected] mailto:[email protected] > hat am 12. Oktober 2018 um > 18:23 geschrieben: > > > Isaac Grover, Aileron I.T. wrote: > > > > Good morning, > > > > Both "cheap" and "useful" for running Tor nodes at home won't be > > found > > in big box retail ever, so I would take a look at the Mikrotik > > RB750Gr3 > > * it will do exactly what you want after it's configured > > properly. I > > > > used to have an RB1200 and recently upgraded to a CCR1009, both from > > Mikrotik, and have found them to be quite capable under heavy load. > > > > Make your day great, > > Isaac Grover, Senior I.T. Consultant > > Aileron I.T. - "Practical & Proactive I.T. Solutions" > > > > Office: 715-377-0440, Fax:715-690-1029, Web: www.aileronit.com > > > > > I also recommend going with MikroTik. They handle quite > > impressive under > heavy load and the price:performance ratio is very good, as opposite to > other brands. MikroTik also runs RouterOS (on linux kernel) that comes > with a management tool with graphical interface and it has been heavily > improved. > > > > _______________________________________________ > tor-relays mailing list > [email protected] mailto:[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
