Hi Karsten,
On Wed, Mar 5, 2014 at 2:50 AM, Karsten Loesing wrote:
> Hi Christian, Sathya,
>
> On 05/03/14 01:39, Sathyanarayanan Gunasekaran wrote:
>>
>> Why? Do we want to deprecate onionoo?
>
> Christian and I discussed this in private mail before moving this
Hey Christian,
On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 2:28 PM, Christian wrote:
> Hi,
> in the last couple of days I thought about a topic for a gsoc application.
>
> After getting ideas from Karsten and Sathya, I started making a rough
> roadmap of things that I want to do for globe, in the next couple of
> mon
Hi.
On Tue, Sep 24, 2013 at 6:03 AM, Karsten Loesing wrote:
> On 9/23/13 12:53 AM, Sathyanarayanan Gunasekaran wrote:
>>
>> I don't understand how this will work when users just apt-get install
>> torperf. Ideally if someone writes a good experiment, they should send
&
Hi,
I have some comments on the updated pdf -
> It should be easy for a user to implement or install an experiment that isn’t
> bundled with the core distribution. Ideally, installing an experiment should
> be as simple as unzipping a folder or config file into an experiments folder.
I don't u
Hi,
Thanks for writing this Karsten!
On Fri, Sep 6, 2013 at 9:58 AM, Karsten Loesing wrote:
> Hi everyone,
>
> I just finished a first draft of a tech report sketching out the
> requirements and a software design for a new Torperf implementation.
>
> This is related to my earlier attempt to rewr
On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 10:35 PM, George Kadianakis
wrote:
>
> I'm attaching a stupid mockup we came up with during the dev meeting.
> I'm also attaching some hopefully improved FAQ-section strings.
Updated mockup - https://people.torproject.org/~gsathya/bridgedb/
On Fri, Mar 8, 2013 at 11:26 PM, George Kadianakis wrote:
>
> I started writing a skeleton and some strings for the new website. I'm
> also attaching an image of how the website looked like in my head
> while I was writing the strings (although the person who codes, should
> choose the interface).
Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) is software that gives the user
the freedom to use, copy, study, change, and improve it. FOSS
contributors believe that this is the best way to develop software
because it benefits society, creates a fun collaborative community
around a project, and allows anyon
I was mostly busy with giving the required exams for grad school and
generally worrying about. I did manage to do a bunch of Tor stuff -
- Implemented DisableNetwork in Orbot. Orbot stops making new connections
and drops existing ones once you lose network connectivity, saving battery
life. Also,
Hi Damian!
On Sun, Oct 14, 2012 at 2:00 AM, Damian Johnson wrote:
>
> PS. Sathyanarayanan: I was gonna ping you separately but might as well
> hijack this thread - would you mind giving stem's new networkstatus
> module a try in pyonionoo? You can find documentation for it at...
>
> https://stem.
Tickets I hacked on, closed, discussed, code reviewed, etc -
### Pyonionoo
* Hacked on the Pyonionoo front end to make it deployable. I've mostly
finished implementing all the features. Thanks to karsten for the
really fast code reviews!
#6708: Pyonionoo returns code 500 for a few parameters
#69
Tickets I hacked on -
### Compass
#6498 - make compass, add FastExits, AlmostFastExits options
#6679 - Make Compass' website interface more intuitive
#6618 - Convert Compass to a single page app
#6692 - Displaying more information when using 'group by' feature
#6696 - add Byte/s to Advertised Ban
Hi,
>>> Some more feedback after a _very_ quick look through the files:
>>>
>>> - Why do we need something like scripts/cookie_secret.py?
>>
>> We probably don't. We just jumped off of Sathya's first pass, and
>> didn't play with the Cyclone details at all.
>
> Sathya, what do you think about tha
> First feedback is that I'm having trouble installing cyclone. :/ What
> steps does it take from, say, a vanilla Debian Squeeze to an environment
> where `twistd -n cyclone -r pyonionoo.web.Application` works? Ideally,
> these steps only include `apt-get install`, but if something else is
> need
July 2012
- Attended Tor dev meeting and hackfest in Florence in the first week of July.
- Talked to arma, Karsten and asn about helping out with certain
metrics tasks(#6460, #6232) to figure out the safety of the Tor
network. Hopefully, I can extend this to something bigger and hack on
it for my
Hi,
>> We were
>> wondering what some of the entries might look like so we would be able to
>> see what information was being parsed to fill in some of the fields such as
>> the bandwidth handler's "write_history" and "read_history". We noticed that
>> the router descriptor format includes "write_
> Sathya, do you want to work on the back-end while we work on the front-end
> (starting with the code you've already written)?
Okay.
___
tor-dev mailing list
tor-dev@lists.torproject.org
https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-dev
> Based on a quick look, it seems like Cyclone provides a slightly nicer way
> to specify how to handle the various requests than does a plain Twisted web
> application. Are there any other advantages to using Cyclone as opposed to
> plain Twisted?
Cyclone provides a much nicer API than Twisted w
> So basically if you would like to make a desktop application including
> Onionoo & Atlas together to provide an end-user an application that he
> can download to query/search/analyze the Consensus, APAF it's a good choice.
> If you just need to do it for a single application that does not need to
> Is this available yet?
Yep - https://github.com/gsathya/pyonionoo It's pretty hacky(it was
meant to be a prototype to see if Cyclone was a good idea - and well,
i like it) and will probably have to be refactored.
> So we need to decide on both some milestones and also what various people
> ough
> OK; Megan and Erik, after you incorporate the export function into
> Descriptor in stem, please start reading through the Django tutorial.
I'm not sure if Django is a good choice for this project. We don't
require such a heavy web framework with a templating engine, auth,
etc. I'd rather use Tor
21 matches
Mail list logo