These two, right now, don't appear too unusual. One is 40 relays at 1Gbps and the other is 80 relays at 2Gbps? What am I missing?
Unfortunate there isn't a website that graphs / charts the aggregate changes by IP address range over time, not just individual relay changes over time and aggregate at a point in time I get the overall point that things change dynamically so maybe these were much more different at a different point in time? On Monday, March 10th, 2025 at 10:32 AM, boldsuck via tor-relays <[email protected]> wrote: > > > On Monday, 10 March 2025 15:34 boldsuck via tor-relays wrote: > > > The Tor network is a dynamic massive network and bandwidth contributions and > > overall consensus weight are constantly changing. When a larger operator > > (like NTH or RWTH Aachen) goes up or down everything changes. > > In addition, the Tor network team and DirAuth's may change consensus rules > > at any time. > > > 2 servers, all relays same config & uptime, but still have different > advertised > bandwidth ;-) > > https://metrics.torproject.org/rs.html#search/2a0b:f4c2:2:1:: > https://metrics.torproject.org/rs.html#search/2a0b:f4c2:2:: > > -- > ╰_╯ Ciao Marco! > > Debian GNU/Linux > > It's free software and it gives you > freedom!_______________________________________________ > tor-relays mailing list -- [email protected] > To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected] _______________________________________________ tor-relays mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]
