I've gone through SOAT and my life is changed because of it. It's a
massive file that would take a long time to properly grok but much
respect to Mike, your mind is a wonderful tool of destruction.
Question, probably for Mike, where is the latest version? I'm looking
at the one packed into Torflow
On 1/31/13 10:25 PM, Mike Perry wrote:
>
> Roger insists it may be wiser to start simple with a fixed test server
> that you control and work your way up to something as exhaustive as SoaT
> later. If you don't want to be watching huge volumes of result feeds
> like a hawk for the rest of your life
Thus spake Damian Johnson (ata...@torproject.org):
> > Stem seems like a good choice and something I've been meaning to get
> > back in to. I've been using the old Python library. I'd be happy to
> > work on this project and get up to speed with what Mike wrote a while
> > back.
>
> Great! Just l
> Stem seems like a good choice and something I've been meaning to get
> back in to. I've been using the old Python library. I'd be happy to
> work on this project and get up to speed with what Mike wrote a while
> back.
Great! Just let me know if you have any stem questions.
> I've got to go thr
Stem seems like a good choice and something I've been meaning to get
back in to. I've been using the old Python library. I'd be happy to
work on this project and get up to speed with what Mike wrote a while
back. I've got to go through the old SOAT code, but can anyone tell me
a structural reason n
> Actually, I might be a good fit. Feel free to ping me off-list to discuss.
Unless there's a reason that you'd like to make this private it's
better to have development discussions in the open (though tor-dev@ is
probably more appropriate). Imho writing a SoaT counterpart based on
either stem [1]