Hi, On 12 Apr 2020, at 10:10, Mario Costa <mario.costa@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Tor also assumes your connection is full duplex. (That is, there are separate limits of 10 MB/s up and 10 MB/s down.) You should set rate to the highest sustained bandwidth you're happy for Tor to use. Tor could use that much bandwidth for seconds or hours. That bandwidth should be lower than your connection bandwidth. (The minimum of your upload and download.)
Where are you seeing this observed bandwidth? Tor reports its observed bandwidth over the busiest 10 second period each day. 60% of the rate is actually a pretty high load, because Tor is a low-latency network. (Once utilisation gets over around 10%, latency starts increasing.) If your connection is a high latency connection, Tor may send bandwidth to lower-latency connections. You can read a similar thread here:
4000 seems pretty normal. There are only around 6000 relays. Check your tor, kernel, and router logs for TCP warnings?
Tor will compensate for a burst by having a few slow seconds afterwards. Set the burst to the highest speed you ever want the relay to use over 1-2 seconds. The burst should be equal to or lower than your connection speed. (In your case, the lowest of your upload and download speed.)
If you want Tor to use more bandwidth, try setting rate and burst to 10 Mbps. That way, you won't be causing congestion or packet drops. You may have to wait for a few weeks or months for your bandwidth to stabilise. T |
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