diff options
author | Roger Dingledine <arma@torproject.org> | 2004-12-17 00:03:40 +0000 |
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committer | Roger Dingledine <arma@torproject.org> | 2004-12-17 00:03:40 +0000 |
commit | 24af6f23765bd655d4e84b1291f76fca21a59770 (patch) | |
tree | edce981cc016e265116d51483de04fcf2ae4f4fe | |
parent | ee282fc167545140d081ed33879adaf900541dd0 (diff) | |
download | tor-24af6f23765bd655d4e84b1291f76fca21a59770.tar.gz tor-24af6f23765bd655d4e84b1291f76fca21a59770.zip |
lower the bandwidth requirements from 1MBit to 20KBytes
svn:r3157
-rw-r--r-- | doc/tor-doc.html | 23 |
1 files changed, 13 insertions, 10 deletions
diff --git a/doc/tor-doc.html b/doc/tor-doc.html index d17759a66d..1c35cf0a3c 100644 --- a/doc/tor-doc.html +++ b/doc/tor-doc.html @@ -103,10 +103,11 @@ your security</a>.</p> everybody is a <i>client</i>. This means you don't relay traffic for anybody but yourself.</p> -<p>If you have less than 1Mbit in both directions, you should stay -a client. Otherwise, please consider being a server, to help out the -network. (Currently each server uses 20-150 gigabytes of traffic -per month; but that may go up.)</p> +<p>If your computer doesn't have a routable IP address or you're using +a modem, you should stay a client. Otherwise, please consider being +a server, to help out the network. (Currently each server uses 20-150 +gigabytes of traffic per month, depending on its capacity and its rate +limiting configuration.)</p> <p>Note that you can be a server without allowing users to make connections from your computer to the outside world. This is called being @@ -114,8 +115,9 @@ a middleman server.</p> <p> Benefits of running a server include: <ul> -<li>Clients are generally limited to 100KB/s, whereas servers can inject -or receive as much traffic as they want. +<li>Clients are generally limited to 100KB/s (and in practice, sometimes +much less), whereas servers can inject or receive as much traffic as +they want. <li>You may get stronger anonymity, since your destination can't know whether connections relayed through your computer originated at your computer or not. @@ -219,12 +221,13 @@ service url</a>).</p> <h2>Configuring a server</h2> <p>We're looking for people with reasonably reliable Internet connections, -that have at least 1Mbit each way. Currently we don't use all of that, -but we want it available for burst traffic.</p> +that have at least 20 kilobytes/s each way. If you have more bandwidth +to offer, that's even better.</p> <p>To set up a Tor server, do the following steps after installing Tor. -(These instructions are Unix-centric; let us know if you get it working -on Windows.) +(These instructions are Unix-centric; if you're excited about working +with us to get a Tor server working on Windows, let us know and we'll +work with you to fix whatever bugs come up.) </p> <ul> |