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Re: [tor-relays] Unused Tor exit nodes capacity



Hello everyone,

thanks for replying.
I did some further checks as you suggested.
In the meantime I removed MaxAdvertisedBandwidth since the default
should do.

I pinned the ExitNode in my Client and downloaded an Ubuntu image.
Download was between 800 kbyte/s and 1 Mbyte/s. Not great - but not bad.
When I start a wget on the machine directly it will be downloaded with
30 Mbyte/s. So I do not assume we are limited by the provider.

I checked and changed the ulimit.

Unfortunately no better results so far.
I did not yet set up an local resolver - does it make such a difference
? We use the provides DNS and 8.8.8.8.

Finally a set logfiles to debug and started greping for err:

Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [info] {EDGE} connection_edge_process_relay_cell():
617: end cell (misc error) for stream 7289. Removing stream.
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [info] {EDGE} connection_edge_process_relay_cell():
356: end cell (misc error) for stream 42558. Removing stream.
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [info] {EDGE} connection_edge_process_relay_cell():
491: end cell (misc error) for stream 36878. Removing stream.
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:50.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [info] {EDGE} connection_edge_process_relay_cell():
177: end cell (misc error) for stream 60286. Removing stream.
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [info] {EDGE} connection_edge_process_relay_cell():
374: end cell (misc error) for stream 60283. Removing stream.
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [info] {EDGE} connection_edge_process_relay_cell():
end cell (misc error) dropped, unknown stream.
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [info] {EDGE} connection_edge_process_relay_cell():
174: end cell (misc error) for stream 60289. Removing stream.
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [info] {EDGE} connection_edge_process_relay_cell():
384: end cell (misc error) for stream 60288. Removing stream.
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [info] {EDGE} connection_edge_process_relay_cell():
590: end cell (misc error) for stream 60285. Removing stream.
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [info] {EDGE} connection_edge_process_relay_cell():
587: end cell (misc error) for stream 60284. Removing stream.
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [info] {EDGE} connection_edge_process_relay_cell():
338: end cell (misc error) for stream 32126. Removing stream.
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [debug] {NET} tor_tls_read(): read returned r=-1, err=-2
Dec 15 22:55:51.000 [info] {EDGE} connection_edge_process_relay_cell():
676: end cell (misc error) for stream 60290. Removing stream.

I get very much of these. It does not look healthy to me.
Is this normal ?

Again many thanks for your help.

best regards

Dirk



On 14.12.2015 00:06, Tim Wilson-Brown - teor wrote:
>
>> On 14 Dec 2015, at 07:18, Dirk Eschbach <tor-relay.dirk@xxxxxxxxxx
>> <mailto:tor-relay.dirk@xxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
> ...
>> The big question now is:
>> Why do the machines do not have more throughput ?
>> Is the reason for this the way the distribution through the Tor network
>> works.
>> Moritz hinted it might have to do with the way the tor "bandwidth
>> scanners" measure the ability of a server to handle traffic.
>
> No, this is not the issue, your relay's own self-measured throughput
> is the issue. See below.
>
>> Can you explain me / point me to documentation where this process is
>> described and how this can be optimized.
>> What are the criteria for tor exit node server traffic distribution ?
>
> By consensus weight, which is determined by the bandwidth authorities.
> https://blog.torproject.org/blog/lifecycle-of-a-new-relay
> https://stem.torproject.org/tutorials/examples/votes_by_bandwidth_authorities.html
>
>> How do the clients choose the exit ?
>
> From those servers they believe exit to the address and port they
> want, randomly, weighted by the server's consensus weight.
>
> The details of bandwidth weight selection are in section 3.4.2 of the
> Directory Specification:
> https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/tree/dir-spec.txt
>
> "The bandwidth in a "w" line should be taken as the best estimate
>    of the router's actual capacity that the authority has.  For now,
>    this should be the lesser of the observed bandwidth and bandwidth
>    rate limit from the server descriptor.  It is given in kilobytes
>    per second, and capped at some arbitrary value (currently 10 MB/s).
>
>    The Measured= keyword on a "w" line vote is currently computed
>    by multiplying the previous published consensus bandwidth by the
>    ratio of the measured average node stream capacity to the network
>    average. If 3 or more authorities provide a Measured= keyword for
>    a router, the authorities produce a consensus containing a "w"
>    Bandwidth= keyword equal to the median of the Measured= votes."
>
> When I look at the bandwidth authority votes for DigiGesTor1e1, they say:
> w Bandwidth=9586 Measured=24200
> w Bandwidth=9586 Measured=15900
> w Bandwidth=9586 Measured=43500
> w Bandwidth=9586 Measured=19700
> w Bandwidth=9586 Measured=19200
>
> Those votes are in these large files:
> http://171.25.193.9:443/tor/status-vote/current/authority
> http://199.254.238.53/tor/status-vote/current/authority
> http://131.188.40.189/tor/status-vote/current/authority
> http://128.31.0.34:9131/tor/status-vote/current/authority
> http://154.35.175.225/tor/status-vote/current/authority
>
> So the bandwidth authorities have having no trouble measuring your
> relay, they think it should be 2x - 4x as fast.
> Your relay itself has't observed itself sustaining that performance
> over a 10-second interval, so it won't allow the directory authorities
> to assign it more bandwidth.
>
> Section 2.1.1 of the Directory Specification:
>
> ""bandwidth" bandwidth-avg bandwidth-burst bandwidth-observed NL
>
>        [Exactly once]
>
>        Estimated bandwidth for this router, in bytes per second.  The
>        "average" bandwidth is the volume per second that the OR is
> willing to
>        sustain over long periods; the "burst" bandwidth is the volume that
>        the OR is willing to sustain in very short intervals.  The
> "observed"
>        value is an estimate of the capacity this relay can handle.  The
>        relay remembers the max bandwidth sustained output over any ten
>        second period in the past day, and another sustained input.  The
>        "observed" value is the lesser of these two numbers."
>
> Please improve the throughput your relay can sustain over a 10-second
> period.
> Try some performance tuning steps, testing your relay with Tor client
> after each one.
> (See below.)
>
> Have you set a limit on MaxAdvertisedBandwidth in the torrc files?
>
>> Konsole output
>> top - 09:57:49 up 16 days, 11:57,  1 user,  load average: 1.14, 0.91,
>> 0.81
>> Tasks:244 total,  3 running,241 sleeping,  0 stopped,  0 zombie
>> %Cpu0  :12.5 us, 3.4 sy, 0.0 ni,79.7 id, 0.0 wa, 0.0 hi, 4.4 si, 0.0 st
>> %Cpu1  :15.9 us, 5.4 sy, 0.0 ni,74.3 id, 0.3 wa, 0.0 hi, 4.1 si, 0.0 st
>> %Cpu2  :14.3 us, 2.7 sy, 0.0 ni,77.0 id, 0.0 wa, 0.0 hi, 6.0 si, 0.0 st
>> %Cpu3  : 9.5 us, 3.4 sy, 0.0 ni,80.3 id, 0.0 wa, 0.0 hi, 6.8 si, 0.0 st
>> KiB Mem:   3877624 total, 2739880 used, 1137744 free,    1288 buffers
>> KiB Swap: 4026364 total,  364264 used, 3662100 free.   10752 cached Mem
>>
>> Looking at the network connection it is without any problem possible to
>> start big downloads without reducing TOR throughput.
>
> Have you tried doing a large download through your exit via a Tor
> client and seeing how fast that is?
> ExitNodes <fingerprint od your exit>
> StrictNodes 1
>
>> The servers are connected with 1 Gbit/s each.
>
> It looks like your Tor processes are neither CPU nor network-bound.
>
> Does your network connection drop packets or have large latency?
>
> How many file descriptors are the tor processes allowed to open?
> How many connections does each tor process have open at once?
> (There should be thousands per process on a busy relay.)
>
> https://gitweb.torproject.org/tor.git/tree/doc/TUNING
>
> Are there any performance-related messages in the Tor logs?
>
> Is your hardware / kernel / firewall / etc. capable of handling many
> connections?
>
> Does your provider rate-limit any kinds of traffic?
> Does your provider limit the number of open connections?
>
> Is your DNS resolver keeping up with the requests?
> Do you have a local caching DNS resolver on each machine?
>
> Tim
>
> Tim Wilson-Brown (teor)
>
> teor2345 at gmail dot com
> PGP 968F094B
>
> teor at blah dot im
> OTR CAD08081 9755866D 89E2A06F E3558B7F B5A9D14F
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> tor-relays mailing list
> tor-relays@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-relays


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