2009-07-23 16:59:00 +02:00
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Filename: 166-statistics-extra-info-docs.txt
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Title: Including Network Statistics in Extra-Info Documents
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Author: Karsten Loesing
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Created: 21-Jul-2009
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Target: 0.2.2
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2009-08-19 23:36:27 +02:00
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Status: Accepted
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2009-07-23 16:59:00 +02:00
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Change history:
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21-Jul-2009 Initial proposal for or-dev
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Overview:
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The Tor network has grown to almost two thousand relays and millions
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of casual users over the past few years. With growth has come
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increasing performance problems and attempts by some countries to
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block access to the Tor network. In order to address these problems,
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we need to learn more about the Tor network. This proposal suggests to
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measure additional statistics and include them in extra-info documents
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to help us understand the Tor network better.
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Introduction:
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As of May 2009, relays, bridges, and directories gather the following
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data for statistical purposes:
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- Relays and bridges count the number of bytes that they have pushed
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in 15-minute intervals over the past 24 hours. Relays and bridges
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include these data in extra-info documents that they send to the
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directory authorities whenever they publish their server descriptor.
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- Bridges further include a rough number of clients per country that
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they have seen in the past 48 hours in their extra-info documents.
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- Directories can be configured to count the number of clients they
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see per country in the past 24 hours and to write them to a local
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file.
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Since then we extended the network statistics in Tor. These statistics
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include:
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- Directories now gather more precise statistics about connecting
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clients. Fixes include measuring in intervals of exactly 24 hours,
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counting unsuccessful requests, measuring download times, etc. The
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directories append their statistics to a local file every 24 hours.
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- Entry guards count the number of clients per country per day like
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bridges do and write them to a local file every 24 hours.
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- Relays measure statistics of the number of cells in their circuit
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queues and how much time these cells spend waiting there. Relays
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write these statistics to a local file every 24 hours.
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- Exit nodes count the number of read and written bytes on exit
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connections per port as well as the number of opened exit streams
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per port in 24-hour intervals. Exit nodes write their statistics to
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a local file.
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The following four sections contain descriptions for adding these
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statistics to the relays' extra-info documents.
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Directory request statistics:
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The first type of statistics aims at measuring directory requests sent
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by clients to a directory mirror or directory authority. More
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precisely, these statistics aim at requests for v2 and v3 network
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statuses only. These directory requests are sent non-anonymously,
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either via HTTP-like requests to a directory's Dir port or tunneled
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over a 1-hop circuit.
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Measuring directory request statistics is useful for several reasons:
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First, the number of locally seen directory requests can be used to
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estimate the total number of clients in the Tor network. Second, the
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country-wise classification of requests using a GeoIP database can
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help counting the relative and absolute number of users per country.
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Third, the download times can give hints on the available bandwidth
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capacity at clients.
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Directory requests do not give any hints on the contents that clients
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send or receive over the Tor network. Every client requests network
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statuses from the directories, so that there are no anonymity-related
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concerns to gather these statistics. It might be, though, that clients
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wish to hide the fact that they are connecting to the Tor network.
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Therefore, IP addresses are resolved to country codes in memory,
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events are accumulated over 24 hours, and numbers are rounded up to
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multiples of 4 or 8.
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"dirreq-stats-end" YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS (NSEC s) NL
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[At most once.]
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YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS defines the end of the included measurement
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interval of length NSEC seconds (86400 seconds by default).
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A "dirreq-stats-end" line, as well as any other "dirreq-*" line,
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is only added when the relay has opened its Dir port and after 24
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hours of measuring directory requests.
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"dirreq-v2-ips" CC=N,CC=N,... NL
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[At most once.]
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"dirreq-v3-ips" CC=N,CC=N,... NL
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[At most once.]
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List of mappings from two-letter country codes to the number of
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unique IP addresses that have connected from that country to
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request a v2/v3 network status, rounded up to the nearest multiple
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of 8. Only those IP addresses are counted that the directory can
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answer with a 200 OK status code.
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"dirreq-v2-reqs" CC=N,CC=N,... NL
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[At most once.]
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"dirreq-v3-reqs" CC=N,CC=N,... NL
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[At most once.]
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List of mappings from two-letter country codes to the number of
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requests for v2/v3 network statuses from that country, rounded up
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to the nearest multiple of 8. Only those requests are counted that
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the directory can answer with a 200 OK status code.
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"dirreq-v2-share" num% NL
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[At most once.]
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"dirreq-v3-share" num% NL
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[At most once.]
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The share of v2/v3 network status requests that the directory
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expects to receive from clients based on its advertised bandwidth
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compared to the overall network bandwidth capacity. Shares are
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formatted in percent with two decimal places. Shares are
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calculated as means over the whole 24-hour interval.
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"dirreq-v2-resp" status=num,... NL
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[At most once.]
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"dirreq-v3-resp" status=nul,... NL
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[At most once.]
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List of mappings from response statuses to the number of requests
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for v2/v3 network statuses that were answered with that response
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status, rounded up to the nearest multiple of 4. Only response
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statuses with at least 1 response are reported. New response
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statuses can be added at any time. The current list of response
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statuses is as follows:
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"ok": a network status request is answered; this number
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corresponds to the sum of all requests as reported in
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"dirreq-v2-reqs" or "dirreq-v3-reqs", respectively, before
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rounding up.
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"not-enough-sigs: a version 3 network status is not signed by a
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sufficient number of requested authorities.
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"unavailable": a requested network status object is unavailable.
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"not-found": a requested network status is not found.
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"not-modified": a network status has not been modified since the
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If-Modified-Since time that is included in the request.
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"busy": the directory is busy.
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"dirreq-v2-direct-dl" key=val,... NL
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[At most once.]
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"dirreq-v3-direct-dl" key=val,... NL
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[At most once.]
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"dirreq-v2-tunneled-dl" key=val,... NL
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[At most once.]
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"dirreq-v3-tunneled-dl" key=val,... NL
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[At most once.]
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List of statistics about possible failures in the download process
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of v2/v3 network statuses. Requests are either "direct"
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HTTP-encoded requests over the relay's directory port, or
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"tunneled" requests using a BEGIN_DIR cell over the relay's OR
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port. The list of possible statistics can change, and statistics
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can be left out from reporting. The current list of statistics is
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as follows:
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Successful downloads and failures:
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"complete": a client has finished the download successfully.
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"timeout": a download did not finish within 10 minutes after
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starting to send the response.
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"running": a download is still running at the end of the
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measurement period for less than 10 minutes after starting to
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send the response.
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Download times:
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"min", "max": smallest and largest measured bandwidth in B/s.
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"d[1-4,6-9]": 1st to 4th and 6th to 9th decile of measured
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bandwidth in B/s. For a given decile i, i/10 of all downloads
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had a smaller bandwidth than di, and (10-i)/10 of all downloads
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had a larger bandwidth than di.
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"q[1,3]": 1st and 3rd quartile of measured bandwidth in B/s. One
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fourth of all downloads had a smaller bandwidth than q1, one
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fourth of all downloads had a larger bandwidth than q3, and the
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remaining half of all downloads had a bandwidth between q1 and
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q3.
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"md": median of measured bandwidth in B/s. Half of the downloads
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had a smaller bandwidth than md, the other half had a larger
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bandwidth than md.
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Entry guard statistics:
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Entry guard statistics include the number of clients per country and
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per day that are connecting directly to an entry guard.
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Entry guard statistics are important to learn more about the
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distribution of clients to countries. In the future, this knowledge
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can be useful to detect if there are or start to be any restrictions
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for clients connecting from specific countries.
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The information which client connects to a given entry guard is very
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sensitive. This information must not be combined with the information
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what contents are leaving the network at the exit nodes. Therefore,
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entry guard statistics need to be aggregated to prevent them from
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becoming useful for de-anonymization. Aggregation includes resolving
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IP addresses to country codes, counting events over 24-hour intervals,
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and rounding up numbers to the next multiple of 8.
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"entry-stats-end" YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS (NSEC s) NL
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[At most once.]
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YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS defines the end of the included measurement
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interval of length NSEC seconds (86400 seconds by default).
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An "entry-stats-end" line, as well as any other "entry-*"
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line, is first added after the relay has been running for at least
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24 hours.
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"entry-ips" CC=N,CC=N,... NL
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[At most once.]
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List of mappings from two-letter country codes to the number of
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unique IP addresses that have connected from that country to the
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relay and which are no known other relays, rounded up to the
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nearest multiple of 8.
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Cell statistics:
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The third type of statistics have to do with the time that cells spend
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in circuit queues. In order to gather these statistics, the relay
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memorizes when it puts a given cell in a circuit queue and when this
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cell is flushed. The relay further notes the life time of the circuit.
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These data are sufficient to determine the mean number of cells in a
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queue over time and the mean time that cells spend in a queue.
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Cell statistics are necessary to learn more about possible reasons for
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the poor network performance of the Tor network, especially high
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latencies. The same statistics are also useful to determine the
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effects of design changes by comparing today's data with future data.
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There are basically no privacy concerns from measuring cell
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statistics, regardless of a node being an entry, middle, or exit node.
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"cell-stats-end" YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS (NSEC s) NL
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[At most once.]
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YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS defines the end of the included measurement
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interval of length NSEC seconds (86400 seconds by default).
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A "cell-stats-end" line, as well as any other "cell-*" line,
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is first added after the relay has been running for at least 24
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hours.
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"cell-processed-cells" num,...,num NL
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[At most once.]
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Mean number of processed cells per circuit, subdivided into
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deciles of circuits by the number of cells they have processed in
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descending order from loudest to quietest circuits.
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"cell-queued-cells" num,...,num NL
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[At most once.]
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Mean number of cells contained in queues by circuit decile. These
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means are calculated by 1) determining the mean number of cells in
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a single circuit between its creation and its termination and 2)
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calculating the mean for all circuits in a given decile as
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determined in "cell-processed-cells". Numbers have a precision of
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two decimal places.
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"cell-time-in-queue" num,...,num NL
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[At most once.]
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Mean time cells spend in circuit queues in milliseconds. Times are
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calculated by 1) determining the mean time cells spend in the
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queue of a single circuit and 2) calculating the mean for all
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circuits in a given decile as determined in
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"cell-processed-cells".
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"cell-circuits-per-decile" num NL
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[At most once.]
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Mean number of circuits that are included in any of the deciles,
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rounded up to the next integer.
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Exit statistics:
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The last type of statistics affects exit nodes counting the number of
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bytes written and read and the number of streams opened per port and
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2009-08-18 15:53:08 +02:00
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per 24 hours. Exit port statistics can be measured from looking at
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headers of BEGIN and DATA cells. A BEGIN cell contains the exit port
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that is required for the exit node to open a new exit stream.
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Subsequent DATA cells coming from the client or being sent back to the
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client contain a length field stating how many bytes of application
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data are contained in the cell.
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Exit port statistics are important to measure in order to identify
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possible load-balancing problems with respect to exit policies. Exit
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nodes that permit more ports than others are very likely overloaded
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with traffic for those ports plus traffic for other ports. Improving
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load balancing in the Tor network improves the overall utilization of
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bandwidth capacity.
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Exit traffic is one of the most sensitive parts of network data in the
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Tor network. Even though these statistics do not require looking at
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traffic contents, statistics are aggregated so that they are not
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useful for de-anonymizing users. Only those ports are reported that
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have seen at least 0.1% of exiting or incoming bytes, numbers of bytes
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are rounded up to full kibibytes (KiB), and stream numbers are rounded
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up to the next multiple of 4.
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"exit-stats-end" YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS (NSEC s) NL
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[At most once.]
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YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS defines the end of the included measurement
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interval of length NSEC seconds (86400 seconds by default).
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An "exit-stats-end" line, as well as any other "exit-*" line, is
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first added after the relay has been running for at least 24 hours
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and only if the relay permits exiting (where exiting to a single
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port and IP address is sufficient).
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"exit-kibibytes-written" port=N,port=N,... NL
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[At most once.]
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"exit-kibibytes-read" port=N,port=N,... NL
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[At most once.]
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List of mappings from ports to the number of kibibytes that the
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relay has written to or read from exit connections to that port,
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rounded up to the next full kibibyte.
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"exit-streams-opened" port=N,port=N,... NL
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[At most once.]
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List of mappings from ports to the number of opened exit streams
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to that port, rounded up to the nearest multiple of 4.
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Implementation notes:
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Right now, relays that are configured accordingly write similar
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statistics to those described in this proposal to disk every 24 hours.
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With this proposal being implemented, relays include the contents of
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these files in extra-info documents.
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The following steps are necessary to implement this proposal:
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1. The current format of [dirreq|entry|buffer|exit]-stats files needs
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to be adapted to the description in this proposal. This step
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basically means renaming keywords.
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2. The timing of writing the four *-stats files should be unified, so
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2009-08-18 15:53:08 +02:00
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that they are written exactly 24 hours after starting the
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2009-07-23 16:59:00 +02:00
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relay. Right now, the measurement intervals for dirreq, entry, and
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exit stats starts with the first observed request, and files are
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written when observing the first request that occurs more than 24
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hours after the beginning of the measurement interval. With this
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proposal, the measurement intervals should all start at the same
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time, and files should be written exactly 24 hours later.
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3. It is advantageous to cache statistics in local files in the data
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directory until they are included in extra-info documents. The
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reason is that the 24-hour measurement interval can be very
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different from the 18-hour publication interval of extra-info
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2009-08-18 15:53:08 +02:00
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documents. When a relay crashes after finishing a measurement
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2009-07-23 16:59:00 +02:00
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interval, but before publishing the next extra-info document,
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statistics would get lost. Therefore, statistics are written to
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disk when finishing a measurement interval and read from disk when
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2009-08-18 15:53:08 +02:00
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generating an extra-info document. Only the statistics that were
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appended to the *-stats files within the past 24 hours are included
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in extra-info documents. Further, the contents of the *-stats files
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need to be checked in the process of generating extra-info documents.
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2009-07-23 16:59:00 +02:00
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4. With the statistics patches being tested, the ./configure options
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should be removed and the statistics code be compiled by default.
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It is still required for relay operators to add configuration
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options (DirReqStatistics, ExitPortStatistics, etc.) to enable
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gathering statistics. However, in the near future, statistics shall
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be enabled gathered by all relays by default, where requiring a
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./configure option would be a barrier for many relay operators.
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