From 50afadb74d1de2d2c03d569c237f171b88f7bc25 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andrew Lewman Date: Sun, 6 Jun 2010 20:02:37 -0400 Subject: Sample torrc as a bridge On Sun, 6 Jun 2010 19:59:56 -0400 Andrew Lewman wrote: > attached. let's try this again. From e95c44bc5af90d982e9d95d63e78b2fde67431ed Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andrew Lewman Date: Sun, 6 Jun 2010 19:56:16 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] Create a sample bridge configuration torrc. --- src/config/torrc.bridge.in | 171 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 171 insertions(+) create mode 100644 src/config/torrc.bridge.in (limited to 'src') diff --git a/src/config/torrc.bridge.in b/src/config/torrc.bridge.in new file mode 100644 index 000000000..6f1f68d09 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/config/torrc.bridge.in @@ -0,0 +1,171 @@ +## Configuration file for a typical Tor user +## Last updated 16 July 2009 for Tor 0.2.2.1-alpha. +## (May or may not work for much older or much newer versions of Tor.) +## +## Lines that begin with "## " try to explain what's going on. Lines +## that begin with just "#" are disabled commands: you can enable them +## by removing the "#" symbol. +## +## See 'man tor', or https://www.torproject.org/tor-manual.html, +## for more options you can use in this file. +## +## Tor will look for this file in various places based on your platform: +## https://wiki.torproject.org/noreply/TheOnionRouter/TorFAQ#torrc + + +## Replace this with "SocksPort 0" if you plan to run Tor only as a +## relay, and not make any local application connections yourself. +SocksPort 9050 # what port to open for local application connections +SocksListenAddress 127.0.0.1 # accept connections only from localhost +#SocksListenAddress 192.168.0.1:9100 # listen on this IP:port also + +## Entry policies to allow/deny SOCKS requests based on IP address. +## First entry that matches wins. If no SocksPolicy is set, we accept +## all (and only) requests from SocksListenAddress. +#SocksPolicy accept 192.168.0.0/16 +#SocksPolicy reject * + +## Logs go to stdout at level "notice" unless redirected by something +## else, like one of the below lines. You can have as many Log lines as +## you want. +## +## We advise using "notice" in most cases, since anything more verbose +## may provide sensitive information to an attacker who obtains the logs. +## +## Send all messages of level 'notice' or higher to @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/notices.log +#Log notice file @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/notices.log +## Send every possible message to @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/debug.log +#Log debug file @LOCALSTATEDIR@/log/tor/debug.log +## Use the system log instead of Tor's logfiles +#Log notice syslog +## To send all messages to stderr: +#Log debug stderr + +## Uncomment this to start the process in the background... or use +## --runasdaemon 1 on the command line. This is ignored on Windows; +## see the FAQ entry if you want Tor to run as an NT service. +#RunAsDaemon 1 + +## The directory for keeping all the keys/etc. By default, we store +## things in $HOME/.tor on Unix, and in Application Data\tor on Windows. +#DataDirectory @LOCALSTATEDIR@/lib/tor + +## The port on which Tor will listen for local connections from Tor +## controller applications, as documented in control-spec.txt. +ControlPort 9051 +## If you enable the controlport, be sure to enable one of these +## authentication methods, to prevent attackers from accessing it. +#HashedControlPassword 16:872860B76453A77D60CA2BB8C1A7042072093276A3D701AD684053EC4C +#CookieAuthentication 1 + +############### This section is just for location-hidden services ### + +## Once you have configured a hidden service, you can look at the +## contents of the file ".../hidden_service/hostname" for the address +## to tell people. +## +## HiddenServicePort x y:z says to redirect requests on port x to the +## address y:z. + +#HiddenServiceDir @LOCALSTATEDIR@/lib/tor/hidden_service/ +#HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:80 + +#HiddenServiceDir @LOCALSTATEDIR@/lib/tor/other_hidden_service/ +#HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:80 +#HiddenServicePort 22 127.0.0.1:22 + +################ This section is just for relays ##################### +# +## See https://www.torproject.org/docs/tor-doc-relay for details. + +## Required: what port to advertise for incoming Tor connections. +ORPort 9001 +## If you want to listen on a port other than the one advertised +## in ORPort (e.g. to advertise 443 but bind to 9090), uncomment the +## line below too. You'll need to do ipchains or other port forwarding +## yourself to make this work. +#ORListenAddress 0.0.0.0:9090 + +## A handle for your relay, so people don't have to refer to it by key. +Nickname Unnamed + +## The IP address or full DNS name for your relay. Leave commented out +## and Tor will guess. +#Address noname.example.com + +## Define these to limit how much relayed traffic you will allow. Your +## own traffic is still unthrottled. Note that RelayBandwidthRate must +## be at least 20 KBytes. +#RelayBandwidthRate 100 KBytes # Throttle traffic to 100KB/s (800Kbps) +#RelayBandwidthBurst 200 KBytes # But allow bursts up to 200KB/s (1600Kbps) +RelayBandwidthBurst 10485760 +RelayBandwidthRate 5242880 + +## Use these to restrict the maximum traffic per day, week, or month. +## Note that this threshold applies to sent _and_ to received bytes, +## not to their sum: Setting "4 GBytes" may allow up to 8 GBytes +## total before hibernating. +## +## Set a maximum of 4 gigabytes each way per period. +#AccountingMax 4 GBytes +## Each period starts daily at midnight (AccountingMax is per day) +#AccountingStart day 00:00 +## Each period starts on the 3rd of the month at 15:00 (AccountingMax +## is per month) +#AccountingStart month 3 15:00 + +## Contact info to be published in the directory, so we can contact you +## if your relay is misconfigured or something else goes wrong. Google +## indexes this, so spammers might also collect it. +#ContactInfo Random Person +## You might also include your PGP or GPG fingerprint if you have one: +#ContactInfo 1234D/FFFFFFFF Random Person + +## Uncomment this to mirror directory information for others. Please do +## if you have enough bandwidth. +DirPort 9030 # what port to advertise for directory connections +## If you want to listen on a port other than the one advertised +## in DirPort (e.g. to advertise 80 but bind to 9091), uncomment the line +## below too. You'll need to do ipchains or other port forwarding yourself +## to make this work. +#DirListenAddress 0.0.0.0:9091 +## Uncomment to return an arbitrary blob of html on your DirPort. Now you +## can explain what Tor is if anybody wonders why your IP address is +## contacting them. See contrib/tor-exit-notice.html in Tor's source +## distribution for a sample. +#DirPortFrontPage @CONFDIR@/tor-exit-notice.html + +## Uncomment this if you run more than one Tor relay, and add the identity +## key fingerprint of each Tor relay you control, even if they're on +## different networks. You declare it here so Tor clients can avoid +## using more than one of your relays in a single circuit. See +## https://wiki.torproject.org/noreply/TheOnionRouter/TorFAQ#MultipleServers +#MyFamily $keyid,$keyid,... + +## A comma-separated list of exit policies. They're considered first +## to last, and the first match wins. If you want to _replace_ +## the default exit policy, end this with either a reject *:* or an +## accept *:*. Otherwise, you're _augmenting_ (prepending to) the +## default exit policy. Leave commented to just use the default, which is +## described in the man page or at +## https://www.torproject.org/documentation.html +## +## Look at https://www.torproject.org/faq-abuse.html#TypicalAbuses +## for issues you might encounter if you use the default exit policy. +## +## If certain IPs and ports are blocked externally, e.g. by your firewall, +## you should update your exit policy to reflect this -- otherwise Tor +## users will be told that those destinations are down. +## +#ExitPolicy accept *:6660-6667,reject *:* # allow irc ports but no more +#ExitPolicy accept *:119 # accept nntp as well as default exit policy +#ExitPolicy reject *:* # no exits allowed +# +## Bridge relays (or "bridges") are Tor relays that aren't listed in the +## main directory. Since there is no complete public list of them, even if an +## ISP is filtering connections to all the known Tor relays, they probably +## won't be able to block all the bridges. Also, websites won't treat you +## differently because they won't know you're running Tor. If you can +## be a real relay, please do; but if not, be a bridge! +BridgeRelay 1 +ExitPolicy reject *:* -- cgit v1.2.3