> Why not make an image that has an install wizard to set nicknames etc, and
> keeps other settings up to date to best current practices?
I think this could be a good idea, within the Tor installation panel you could
structure a page that firstly contains the question “Do you want to contribute
On Donnerstag, 29. August 2024 08:40:08 CEST George Hartley via tor-dev wrote:
> 1. You MUST have read the manual, at least the entries explaining the
> settings in your Tor configuration file. Please take a look at it here:
> https://2019.www.torproject.org/docs/tor-manual.html.en
^^ I also pref
> The relays do not have a proper configuration, the standard nickname, etc.
Why not make an image that has an install wizard to set nicknames etc, and
keeps other settings up to date to best current practices?
Saying that you *must* have digested the inner workings of Tor first is a
little elitis
We want people to be knowledgeable, and these "do it one time and forget about
it" websites are not helping.
I personally believe, that if you want to host a Tor node:
1. You MUST have read the manual, at least the entries explaining the settings
in your Tor configuration file. Please take a
Hi Allef,
For routers with OpenWrt (a FOSS firmware) you can install the Luci admin panel
plugin to configure Tor called luci-app-tor. This is probably the only web GUI
for Tor.
Currently it allows to configure very basic things like onion services so you
can access your router without a public
On Sonntag, 25. August 2024 15:07:48 CEST Alessandro Greco via tor-dev wrote:
> I have been thinking about creating a web app that generates a script to
> configure a Tor node based on the settings defined by the user.
> I'm not sure if something like this already exists, but I think it could be