![]() This is my thoughts on your question, I’ll let someone else add their experience on the subject if necessary. > The RPi3 family is quite well suited, but the RPi Zero runs way > below its speed. Since the bridge is not used as much as a relay, this is the best solution for a Raspberry Pi 2. The RPi Zero is really limited depending on > which version of Linux you are running, it might even run with no > support at all for floating point arithmetic. The bottleneck will be the CPU rather than the bandwidth in this case.Įach bridge is very important and necessary for the proper functioning of the tor network, your new bridge will help many people to bypass the censorship. For me, the raspberry pi 2 will work without any problem if you are careful to set a bandwidth limit to avoid CPU overload. Again, this is a different case from yours.įor a bridge, this requires far fewer connections and bandwidth since connections are made based on demand and distribution mode (which distribution mode are you using ?). I have set limits of 2 MB/s but even so, from time to time you can have spikes in connections that make you overload. The CPU was blocking at 100% which was causing problems. To give you my experience about Raspberry Pi, I tried to run a middle relay on a raspberry pi 3B and given the number of connections and the bandwidth to manage, it was very often overloaded. ![]() Hello flags when you are running a bridge is normal, you won’t get any flags unlike the tor middle relays. ![]()
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