On Samstag, 6. Juli 2024 20:34:37 CEST Alessandro Greco via tor-relays wrote: > I have some experience running a Tor relay, and I am now interested in > setting up another one. I plan to do this using my home internet > connection, which is an FTTH line with bandwidth up to 2 Gbps. I have read > that it is possible to run multiple relays on the same node, but I am > unsure how to configure this. The most important steps from "man tor-instance-create" systemctl stop tor <- if already running tor-instance-create 00 tor-instance-create 01 systemctl enable tor@00 systemctl enable tor@01 systemctl mask tor@default systemctl daemon-reload Configure torrc in /etc/tor/instances/* and then start individually or all together: systemctl start tor > Additionally, I am curious about what would > be most beneficial for the Tor network today: a highly resilient bridge or > multiple relays managed from the same node? If you set up a relay with residential IP, it would be very good if you set up a bridge specifically for Turkmenistan first. Use this torrc-example fron Gus: https://forum.torproject.org/t/tor-relays-help-turkmens-to-bypass-internet-censorship-run-an-obfs4-bridge/7002/8#torrc-example-6 Mail your bridge line to: frontdesk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx Unfortunately, this bridge is usually discovered after a few weeks and then you can reconfigure it. (Relay or bridge) Please note Gary's post! If your provider already has a Tor tag in the BGP database like mine, then most likely the entire AS of Turkmenistan is blocked. :-( https://bgp.tools/as/8422 -- ╰_╯ Ciao Marco! Debian GNU/Linux It's free software and it gives you freedom!
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