mirror of
https://github.com/jessfraz/dockerfiles.git
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add tor-relay;
Signed-off-by: Jessica Frazelle <acidburn@docker.com>
This commit is contained in:
parent
ea928deadb
commit
4c050b6ea1
42
tor-relay/Dockerfile
Normal file
42
tor-relay/Dockerfile
Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,42 @@
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# run a tor relay in a container
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#
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# Bridge relay:
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# docker run -d \
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# --restart always \
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# -v /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime \
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# -p 9001:9001 \
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# --name tor-relay \
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# jess/tor-relay -f /etc/tor/torrc.bridge
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#
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# Exit relay:
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# docker run -d \
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# --restart always \
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# -v /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime \
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# -p 9001:9001 \
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# --name tor-relay \
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# jess/tor-relay -f /etc/tor/torrc.exit
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#
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FROM alpine:latest
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MAINTAINER Jessica Frazelle <jess@docker.com>
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# Note: Tor is only in testing repo -> http://pkgs.alpinelinux.org/packages?package=emacs&repo=all&arch=x86_64
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RUN apk update && apk add \
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tor \
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--update-cache --repository http://dl-3.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/testing/ \
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&& rm -rf /var/cache/apk/*
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# default port to used for incoming Tor connections
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# can be changed by changing 'ORPort' in torrc
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EXPOSE 9001
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# copy in our torrc files
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COPY torrc.bridge /etc/tor/torrc.bridge
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COPY torrc.middle /etc/tor/torrc.middle
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COPY torrc.exit /etc/tor/torrc.exit
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# make sure files are owned by tor user
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RUN chown -R tor /etc/tor
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USER tor
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ENTRYPOINT [ "tor" ]
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192
tor-relay/torrc.bridge
Normal file
192
tor-relay/torrc.bridge
Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,192 @@
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## Configuration file for a typical Tor user
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## Last updated 2 September 2014 for Tor 0.2.6.1-alpha.
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## (may or may not work for much older or much newer versions of Tor.)
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##
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## Lines that begin with "## " try to explain what's going on. Lines
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## that begin with just "#" are disabled commands: you can enable them
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## by removing the "#" symbol.
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##
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## See 'man tor', or https://www.torproject.org/docs/tor-manual.html,
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## for more options you can use in this file.
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##
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## Tor will look for this file in various places based on your platform:
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## https://www.torproject.org/docs/faq#torrc
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## Tor opens a socks proxy on port 9050 by default -- even if you don't
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## configure one below. Set "SocksPort 0" if you plan to run Tor only
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## as a relay, and not make any local application connections yourself.
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#SocksPort 9050 # Default: Bind to localhost:9050 for local connections.
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#SocksPort 192.168.0.1:9100 # Bind to this address:port too.
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## Entry policies to allow/deny SOCKS requests based on IP address.
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## First entry that matches wins. If no SocksPolicy is set, we accept
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## all (and only) requests that reach a SocksPort. Untrusted users who
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## can access your SocksPort may be able to learn about the connections
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## you make.
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#SocksPolicy accept 192.168.0.0/16
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#SocksPolicy reject *
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## Logs go to stdout at level "notice" unless redirected by something
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## else, like one of the below lines. You can have as many Log lines as
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## you want.
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##
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## We advise using "notice" in most cases, since anything more verbose
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## may provide sensitive information to an attacker who obtains the logs.
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##
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## Send all messages of level 'notice' or higher to /var/log/tor/notices.log
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#Log notice file /var/log/tor/notices.log
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## Send every possible message to /var/log/tor/debug.log
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#Log debug file /var/log/tor/debug.log
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## Use the system log instead of Tor's logfiles
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#Log notice syslog
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## To send all messages to stderr:
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#Log debug stderr
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## Uncomment this to start the process in the background... or use
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## --runasdaemon 1 on the command line. This is ignored on Windows;
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## see the FAQ entry if you want Tor to run as an NT service.
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#RunAsDaemon 1
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## The directory for keeping all the keys/etc. By default, we store
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## things in $HOME/.tor on Unix, and in Application Data\tor on Windows.
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#DataDirectory /var/lib/tor
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## The port on which Tor will listen for local connections from Tor
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## controller applications, as documented in control-spec.txt.
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#ControlPort 9051
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## If you enable the controlport, be sure to enable one of these
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## authentication methods, to prevent attackers from accessing it.
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#HashedControlPassword 16:872860B76453A77D60CA2BB8C1A7042072093276A3D701AD684053EC4C
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#CookieAuthentication 1
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############### This section is just for location-hidden services ###
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## Once you have configured a hidden service, you can look at the
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## contents of the file ".../hidden_service/hostname" for the address
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## to tell people.
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##
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## HiddenServicePort x y:z says to redirect requests on port x to the
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## address y:z.
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#HiddenServiceDir /var/lib/tor/hidden_service/
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#HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:80
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#HiddenServiceDir /var/lib/tor/other_hidden_service/
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#HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:80
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#HiddenServicePort 22 127.0.0.1:22
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################ This section is just for relays #####################
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#
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## See https://www.torproject.org/docs/tor-doc-relay for details.
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## Required: what port to advertise for incoming Tor connections.
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ORPort 9001
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## If you want to listen on a port other than the one advertised in
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## ORPort (e.g. to advertise 443 but bind to 9090), you can do it as
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## follows. You'll need to do ipchains or other port forwarding
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## yourself to make this work.
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#ORPort 443 NoListen
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#ORPort 127.0.0.1:9090 NoAdvertise
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## The IP address or full DNS name for incoming connections to your
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## relay. Leave commented out and Tor will guess.
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#Address noname.example.com
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## If you have multiple network interfaces, you can specify one for
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## outgoing traffic to use.
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# OutboundBindAddress 10.0.0.5
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## A handle for your relay, so people don't have to refer to it by key.
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Nickname hacktheplanet
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## Define these to limit how much relayed traffic you will allow. Your
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## own traffic is still unthrottled. Note that RelayBandwidthRate must
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## be at least 20 kilobytes per second.
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## Note that units for these config options are bytes (per second), not
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## bits (per second), and that prefixes are binary prefixes, i.e. 2^10,
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## 2^20, etc.
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#RelayBandwidthRate 100 KBytes # Throttle traffic to 100KB/s (800Kbps)
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#RelayBandwidthBurst 200 KBytes # But allow bursts up to 200KB (1600Kb)
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## Use these to restrict the maximum traffic per day, week, or month.
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## Note that this threshold applies separately to sent and received bytes,
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## not to their sum: setting "4 GB" may allow up to 8 GB total before
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## hibernating.
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##
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## Set a maximum of 4 gigabytes each way per period.
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#AccountingMax 4 GBytes
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## Each period starts daily at midnight (AccountingMax is per day)
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#AccountingStart day 00:00
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## Each period starts on the 3rd of the month at 15:00 (AccountingMax
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## is per month)
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#AccountingStart month 3 15:00
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## Administrative contact information for this relay or bridge. This line
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## can be used to contact you if your relay or bridge is misconfigured or
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## something else goes wrong. Note that we archive and publish all
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## descriptors containing these lines and that Google indexes them, so
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## spammers might also collect them. You may want to obscure the fact that
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## it's an email address and/or generate a new address for this purpose.
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#ContactInfo Random Person <nobody AT example dot com>
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## You might also include your PGP or GPG fingerprint if you have one:
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ContactInfo ${CONTACT_GPG_FINGERPRINT} ${CONTACT_NAME} ${CONTACT_EMAIL}
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## Uncomment this to mirror directory information for others. Please do
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## if you have enough bandwidth.
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#DirPort 9030 # what port to advertise for directory connections
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## If you want to listen on a port other than the one advertised in
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## DirPort (e.g. to advertise 80 but bind to 9091), you can do it as
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## follows. below too. You'll need to do ipchains or other port
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## forwarding yourself to make this work.
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#DirPort 80 NoListen
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#DirPort 127.0.0.1:9091 NoAdvertise
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## Uncomment to return an arbitrary blob of html on your DirPort. Now you
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## can explain what Tor is if anybody wonders why your IP address is
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## contacting them. See contrib/tor-exit-notice.html in Tor's source
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## distribution for a sample.
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#DirPortFrontPage /etc/tor/tor-exit-notice.html
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## Uncomment this if you run more than one Tor relay, and add the identity
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## key fingerprint of each Tor relay you control, even if they're on
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## different networks. You declare it here so Tor clients can avoid
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## using more than one of your relays in a single circuit. See
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## https://www.torproject.org/docs/faq#MultipleRelays
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## However, you should never include a bridge's fingerprint here, as it would
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## break its concealability and potentially reveal its IP/TCP address.
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#MyFamily $keyid,$keyid,...
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## A comma-separated list of exit policies. They're considered first
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## to last, and the first match wins. If you want to _replace_
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## the default exit policy, end this with either a reject *:* or an
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## accept *:*. Otherwise, you're _augmenting_ (prepending to) the
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## default exit policy. Leave commented to just use the default, which is
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## described in the man page or at
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## https://www.torproject.org/documentation.html
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##
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## Look at https://www.torproject.org/faq-abuse.html#TypicalAbuses
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## for issues you might encounter if you use the default exit policy.
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##
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## If certain IPs and ports are blocked externally, e.g. by your firewall,
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## you should update your exit policy to reflect this -- otherwise Tor
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## users will be told that those destinations are down.
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##
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## For security, by default Tor rejects connections to private (local)
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## networks, including to your public IP address. See the man page entry
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## for ExitPolicyRejectPrivate if you want to allow "exit enclaving".
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##
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#ExitPolicy accept *:6660-6667,reject *:* # allow irc ports but no more
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#ExitPolicy accept *:119 # accept nntp as well as default exit policy
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#ExitPolicy reject *:* # no exits allowed
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## Bridge relays (or "bridges") are Tor relays that aren't listed in the
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## main directory. Since there is no complete public list of them, even an
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## ISP that filters connections to all the known Tor relays probably
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## won't be able to block all the bridges. Also, websites won't treat you
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## differently because they won't know you're running Tor. If you can
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## be a real relay, please do; but if not, be a bridge!
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BridgeRelay 1
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## By default, Tor will advertise your bridge to users through various
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## mechanisms like https://bridges.torproject.org/. If you want to run
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## a private bridge, for example because you'll give out your bridge
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## address manually to your friends, uncomment this line:
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#PublishServerDescriptor 0
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264
tor-relay/torrc.exit
Normal file
264
tor-relay/torrc.exit
Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,264 @@
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## Configuration file for a typical Tor user
|
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## Last updated 2 September 2014 for Tor 0.2.6.1-alpha.
|
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## (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
|
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## that begin with just "#" are disabled commands: you can enable them
|
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## by removing the "#" symbol.
|
||||
##
|
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## See 'man tor', or https://www.torproject.org/docs/tor-manual.html,
|
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## for more options you can use in this file.
|
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##
|
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## Tor will look for this file in various places based on your platform:
|
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## https://www.torproject.org/docs/faq#torrc
|
||||
|
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## Tor opens a socks proxy on port 9050 by default -- even if you don't
|
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## configure one below. Set "SocksPort 0" if you plan to run Tor only
|
||||
## as a relay, and not make any local application connections yourself.
|
||||
#SocksPort 9050 # Default: Bind to localhost:9050 for local connections.
|
||||
#SocksPort 192.168.0.1:9100 # Bind to this address:port too.
|
||||
|
||||
## 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 that reach a SocksPort. Untrusted users who
|
||||
## can access your SocksPort may be able to learn about the connections
|
||||
## you make.
|
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#SocksPolicy accept 192.168.0.0/16
|
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#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 /var/log/tor/notices.log
|
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#Log notice file /var/log/tor/notices.log
|
||||
## Send every possible message to /var/log/tor/debug.log
|
||||
#Log debug file /var/log/tor/debug.log
|
||||
## Use the system log instead of Tor's logfiles
|
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#Log notice syslog
|
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## To send all messages to stderr:
|
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#Log debug stderr
|
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|
||||
## Uncomment this to start the process in the background... or use
|
||||
## --runasdaemon 1 on the command line. This is ignored on Windows;
|
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## see the FAQ entry if you want Tor to run as an NT service.
|
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#RunAsDaemon 1
|
||||
|
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## The directory for keeping all the keys/etc. By default, we store
|
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## things in $HOME/.tor on Unix, and in Application Data\tor on Windows.
|
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#DataDirectory /var/lib/tor
|
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|
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## The port on which Tor will listen for local connections from Tor
|
||||
## controller applications, as documented in control-spec.txt.
|
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#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
|
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#CookieAuthentication 1
|
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|
||||
############### 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.
|
||||
|
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#HiddenServiceDir /var/lib/tor/hidden_service/
|
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#HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:80
|
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|
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#HiddenServiceDir /var/lib/tor/other_hidden_service/
|
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#HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:80
|
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#HiddenServicePort 22 127.0.0.1:22
|
||||
|
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################ 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), you can do it as
|
||||
## follows. You'll need to do ipchains or other port forwarding
|
||||
## yourself to make this work.
|
||||
#ORPort 443 NoListen
|
||||
#ORPort 127.0.0.1:9090 NoAdvertise
|
||||
|
||||
## The IP address or full DNS name for incoming connections to your
|
||||
## relay. Leave commented out and Tor will guess.
|
||||
#Address noname.example.com
|
||||
|
||||
## If you have multiple network interfaces, you can specify one for
|
||||
## outgoing traffic to use.
|
||||
# OutboundBindAddress 10.0.0.5
|
||||
|
||||
## A handle for your relay, so people don't have to refer to it by key.
|
||||
Nickname hacktheplanet
|
||||
|
||||
## 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 kilobytes per second.
|
||||
## Note that units for these config options are bytes (per second), not
|
||||
## bits (per second), and that prefixes are binary prefixes, i.e. 2^10,
|
||||
## 2^20, etc.
|
||||
#RelayBandwidthRate 100 KBytes # Throttle traffic to 100KB/s (800Kbps)
|
||||
#RelayBandwidthBurst 200 KBytes # But allow bursts up to 200KB (1600Kb)
|
||||
|
||||
## Use these to restrict the maximum traffic per day, week, or month.
|
||||
## Note that this threshold applies separately to sent and received bytes,
|
||||
## not to their sum: setting "4 GB" may allow up to 8 GB 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
|
||||
|
||||
## Administrative contact information for this relay or bridge. This line
|
||||
## can be used to contact you if your relay or bridge is misconfigured or
|
||||
## something else goes wrong. Note that we archive and publish all
|
||||
## descriptors containing these lines and that Google indexes them, so
|
||||
## spammers might also collect them. You may want to obscure the fact that
|
||||
## it's an email address and/or generate a new address for this purpose.
|
||||
#ContactInfo Random Person <nobody AT example dot com>
|
||||
## You might also include your PGP or GPG fingerprint if you have one:
|
||||
ContactInfo ${CONTACT_GPG_FINGERPRINT} ${CONTACT_NAME} ${CONTACT_EMAIL}
|
||||
|
||||
## 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), you can do it as
|
||||
## follows. below too. You'll need to do ipchains or other port
|
||||
## forwarding yourself to make this work.
|
||||
#DirPort 80 NoListen
|
||||
#DirPort 127.0.0.1:9091 NoAdvertise
|
||||
## 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 /etc/tor/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://www.torproject.org/docs/faq#MultipleRelays
|
||||
## However, you should never include a bridge's fingerprint here, as it would
|
||||
## break its concealability and potentially reveal its IP/TCP address.
|
||||
#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.
|
||||
##
|
||||
## For security, by default Tor rejects connections to private (local)
|
||||
## networks, including to your public IP address. See the man page entry
|
||||
## for ExitPolicyRejectPrivate if you want to allow "exit enclaving".
|
||||
##
|
||||
#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
|
||||
#
|
||||
# Reduced exit policy from https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/wiki/doc/ReducedExitPolicy
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:20-23 # FTP, SSH, telnet
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:43 # WHOIS
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:53 # DNS
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:79-81 # finger, HTTP
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:88 # kerberos
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:110 # POP3
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:143 # IMAP
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:194 # IRC
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:220 # IMAP3
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:389 # LDAP
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:443 # HTTPS
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:464 # kpasswd
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:465 # URD for SSM (more often: an alternative SUBMISSION port, see 587)
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:531 # IRC/AIM
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:543-544 # Kerberos
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:554 # RTSP
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:563 # NNTP over SSL
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:587 # SUBMISSION (authenticated clients [MUA's like Thunderbird] send mail over STARTTLS SMTP here)
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:636 # LDAP over SSL
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:706 # SILC
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:749 # kerberos
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:873 # rsync
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:902-904 # VMware
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:981 # Remote HTTPS management for firewall
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:989-995 # FTP over SSL, Netnews Administration System, telnets, IMAP over SSL, ircs, POP3 over SSL
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:1194 # OpenVPN
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:1220 # QT Server Admin
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:1293 # PKT-KRB-IPSec
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:1500 # VLSI License Manager
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:1533 # Sametime
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:1677 # GroupWise
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:1723 # PPTP
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:1755 # RTSP
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:1863 # MSNP
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:2082 # Infowave Mobility Server
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:2083 # Secure Radius Service (radsec)
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:2086-2087 # GNUnet, ELI
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:2095-2096 # NBX
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:2102-2104 # Zephyr
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:3128 # SQUID
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:3389 # MS WBT
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:3690 # SVN
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:4321 # RWHOIS
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:4643 # Virtuozzo
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:5050 # MMCC
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:5190 # ICQ
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:5222-5223 # XMPP, XMPP over SSL
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:5228 # Android Market
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:5900 # VNC
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:6660-6669 # IRC
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:6679 # IRC SSL
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:6697 # IRC SSL
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:8000 # iRDMI
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:8008 # HTTP alternate
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:8074 # Gadu-Gadu
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:8080 # HTTP Proxies
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:8082 # HTTPS Electrum Bitcoin port
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:8087-8088 # Simplify Media SPP Protocol, Radan HTTP
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:8332-8333 # Bitcoin
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:8443 # PCsync HTTPS
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:8888 # HTTP Proxies, NewsEDGE
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:9418 # git
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:9999 # distinct
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:10000 # Network Data Management Protocol
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:11371 # OpenPGP hkp (http keyserver protocol)
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:19294 # Google Voice TCP
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:19638 # Ensim control panel
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:50002 # Electrum Bitcoin SSL
|
||||
ExitPolicy accept *:64738 # Mumble
|
||||
ExitPolicy reject *:*
|
||||
|
||||
## 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 an
|
||||
## ISP that filters connections to all the known Tor relays 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
|
||||
## By default, Tor will advertise your bridge to users through various
|
||||
## mechanisms like https://bridges.torproject.org/. If you want to run
|
||||
## a private bridge, for example because you'll give out your bridge
|
||||
## address manually to your friends, uncomment this line:
|
||||
#PublishServerDescriptor 0
|
192
tor-relay/torrc.middle
Normal file
192
tor-relay/torrc.middle
Normal file
|
@ -0,0 +1,192 @@
|
|||
## Configuration file for a typical Tor user
|
||||
## Last updated 2 September 2014 for Tor 0.2.6.1-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/docs/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://www.torproject.org/docs/faq#torrc
|
||||
|
||||
## Tor opens a socks proxy on port 9050 by default -- even if you don't
|
||||
## configure one below. Set "SocksPort 0" if you plan to run Tor only
|
||||
## as a relay, and not make any local application connections yourself.
|
||||
#SocksPort 9050 # Default: Bind to localhost:9050 for local connections.
|
||||
#SocksPort 192.168.0.1:9100 # Bind to this address:port too.
|
||||
|
||||
## 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 that reach a SocksPort. Untrusted users who
|
||||
## can access your SocksPort may be able to learn about the connections
|
||||
## you make.
|
||||
#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 /var/log/tor/notices.log
|
||||
#Log notice file /var/log/tor/notices.log
|
||||
## Send every possible message to /var/log/tor/debug.log
|
||||
#Log debug file /var/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 /var/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 /var/lib/tor/hidden_service/
|
||||
#HiddenServicePort 80 127.0.0.1:80
|
||||
|
||||
#HiddenServiceDir /var/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), you can do it as
|
||||
## follows. You'll need to do ipchains or other port forwarding
|
||||
## yourself to make this work.
|
||||
#ORPort 443 NoListen
|
||||
#ORPort 127.0.0.1:9090 NoAdvertise
|
||||
|
||||
## The IP address or full DNS name for incoming connections to your
|
||||
## relay. Leave commented out and Tor will guess.
|
||||
#Address noname.example.com
|
||||
|
||||
## If you have multiple network interfaces, you can specify one for
|
||||
## outgoing traffic to use.
|
||||
# OutboundBindAddress 10.0.0.5
|
||||
|
||||
## A handle for your relay, so people don't have to refer to it by key.
|
||||
Nickname hacktheplanet
|
||||
|
||||
## 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 kilobytes per second.
|
||||
## Note that units for these config options are bytes (per second), not
|
||||
## bits (per second), and that prefixes are binary prefixes, i.e. 2^10,
|
||||
## 2^20, etc.
|
||||
#RelayBandwidthRate 100 KBytes # Throttle traffic to 100KB/s (800Kbps)
|
||||
#RelayBandwidthBurst 200 KBytes # But allow bursts up to 200KB (1600Kb)
|
||||
|
||||
## Use these to restrict the maximum traffic per day, week, or month.
|
||||
## Note that this threshold applies separately to sent and received bytes,
|
||||
## not to their sum: setting "4 GB" may allow up to 8 GB 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
|
||||
|
||||
## Administrative contact information for this relay or bridge. This line
|
||||
## can be used to contact you if your relay or bridge is misconfigured or
|
||||
## something else goes wrong. Note that we archive and publish all
|
||||
## descriptors containing these lines and that Google indexes them, so
|
||||
## spammers might also collect them. You may want to obscure the fact that
|
||||
## it's an email address and/or generate a new address for this purpose.
|
||||
#ContactInfo Random Person <nobody AT example dot com>
|
||||
## You might also include your PGP or GPG fingerprint if you have one:
|
||||
ContactInfo ${CONTACT_GPG_FINGERPRINT} ${CONTACT_NAME} ${CONTACT_EMAIL}
|
||||
|
||||
## 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), you can do it as
|
||||
## follows. below too. You'll need to do ipchains or other port
|
||||
## forwarding yourself to make this work.
|
||||
#DirPort 80 NoListen
|
||||
#DirPort 127.0.0.1:9091 NoAdvertise
|
||||
## 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 /etc/tor/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://www.torproject.org/docs/faq#MultipleRelays
|
||||
## However, you should never include a bridge's fingerprint here, as it would
|
||||
## break its concealability and potentially reveal its IP/TCP address.
|
||||
#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.
|
||||
##
|
||||
## For security, by default Tor rejects connections to private (local)
|
||||
## networks, including to your public IP address. See the man page entry
|
||||
## for ExitPolicyRejectPrivate if you want to allow "exit enclaving".
|
||||
##
|
||||
#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 an
|
||||
## ISP that filters connections to all the known Tor relays 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
|
||||
## By default, Tor will advertise your bridge to users through various
|
||||
## mechanisms like https://bridges.torproject.org/. If you want to run
|
||||
## a private bridge, for example because you'll give out your bridge
|
||||
## address manually to your friends, uncomment this line:
|
||||
#PublishServerDescriptor 0
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user