Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: tor
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:12881~>apt-cache policy tor
[11:16PM]
tor:
Installed: 0.1.2.19-2
Candidate: 0.1.2.19-2
Version table:
*** 0.1.2.19-2 0
500 http://us.archive.ubuntu.com hardy/universe Packages
100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:12882~>uname -a
[11:16PM]
Linux craft 2.6.24-19-generic #1 SMP Wed Jun 18 14:15:37 UTC 2008 x86_64
GNU/Linux
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:12883~>lsb_release -rd
[11:16PM]
Description: Ubuntu 8.04.1
Release: 8.04
----
So, after installing tor recently, I noticed I kept having to go "sudo
/etc/init.d/tor start" after a boot. I chalked it up to a
misconfiguration or error somewhere, and have put up with it for a
couple dozen reboots (I was busy with other problems) until I decided to
look into it this evening.
And it seems Tor isn't installed into any runlevel, at all, by default.
And nor can you can enable it via System->Administration->Services.
This seems suboptimal to me. It seems clear to me that:
# there is no reason one shouldn't be able to enale/disable Tor via Services,
so I think at a minimum that is warranted.
# Even better, run Tor by default (runlevel 2 or 3). Why not? In the default
client mode, it uses few resources. Running at boot gives it time to warm up
and test a few circuits by the time a user could log in and begin browsing
through it. It's convenient - if your applications use Tor (say, you've set
that in Preferences in Firefox, or via $http_proxy or by aliasing stuff to use
torify), they are going to use it every time, so there's no point in making it
opt-in, etc.
** Affects: tor (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided
Status: New
--
No obvious way to automatically run / does not run by default
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/246811
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