![]() ![]() This has an impact on the amount of abuse emails you will get (less ports means less abuse emails, but an exit relay allowing only few ports is also less useful). The exit policy defines which destination ports you are willing to forward. Exit policyĭefining the exit policy is one of the most important parts of an exit relay configuration. Note: DirPort is deprecated since Tor 0.4.6.5, and self-tests are no longe being showed on tor's logs.įor more information read its release notes and ticket #40282. ![]() We also have a great blog post with some more tips for running an exit relay. ![]() We offer a sample Tor exit notice HTML file, but you might want to adjust it to your needs. If you didn't set this up before, the following configuration lines must be applied to your torrc: DirPort 80 This file will be shown to anyone directing their browser to your Tor exit relay IP address. Tor can do that for you: if your DirPort is on TCP port 80, you can make use of tor's DirPortFrontPage feature to display an HTML file on that port. To make it even more obvious that this is a Tor exit relay you should serve a Tor exit notice HTML page. Definitely do not use as a domain name for your reverse DNS. If your provider offers it, make sure your WHOIS record contains clear indications that this is a Tor exit relay.ĭo use a domain name that you own. Something like "tor-exit" in its name is a good start. Reverse DNS and WHOIS recordīefore turning your non-exit relay into an exit relay, ensure that you have set a reverse DNS record (PTR) to make it more obvious that this is a tor exit relay. It is not recommended to install Tor exit relays on servers that you need for other services as well.ĭo not mix your own traffic with your exit relay traffic. It is recommended that you setup exit relays on servers dedicated to this purpose. This subpage is for operators that want to turn on exiting on their relay. We assume you read through the relay guide and technical considerations already. ![]()
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