Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Problem with Privoxy and Tor
Special Forums Cybersecurity Problem with Privoxy and Tor Post 302839773 by DGPickett on Friday 2nd of August 2013 04:45:10 PM
Old 08-02-2013
You can test tor with any socks5 capable browser, to eliminate it as the problem. The socks5 line is textbook-right if it matches your tor port.
 

2 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Cybersecurity

Tor and vm's

Hello all! That's my first post here and I have some few questions about navigation with tor network: 1) Is it safe to use it to access mainstream websites such as facebook, google and so on? I mean, they will probably know by there that we are using tor. And they can of course send out this... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: senhortempora
10 Replies

2. Forum Support Area for Unregistered Users & Account Problems

Account Register With Tor

Hello, I would be interested in creating an account on this forum. However I have run into trouble in the process, I seem to not have permission to access the registration page. It seems that this forum has blocked registration from Tor. I am wondering if there is any way I could obtain an account... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Unregistered
0 Replies
TOR-GENCERT(1)							    Tor Manual							    TOR-GENCERT(1)

NAME
tor-gencert - Generate certs and keys for Tor directory authorities SYNOPSIS
tor-gencert [-h|--help] [-v] [-r|--reuse] [--create-identity-key] [-i id_file] [-c cert_file] [-m num] [-a address:port] DESCRIPTION
tor-gencert generates certificates and private keys for use by Tor directory authorities running the v3 Tor directory protocol, as used by Tor 0.2.0 and later. If you are not running a directory authority, you don't need to use tor-gencert. Every directory authority has a long term authority identity key (which is distinct from the identity key it uses as a Tor server); this key should be kept offline in a secure location. It is used to certify shorter-lived signing keys, which are kept online and used by the directory authority to sign votes and consensus documents. After you use this program to generate a signing key and a certificate, copy those files to the keys subdirectory of your Tor process, and send Tor a SIGHUP signal. DO NOT COPY THE IDENTITY KEY. OPTIONS
-v Display verbose output. -h or --help Display help text and exit. -r or --reuse Generate a new certificate, but not a new signing key. This can be used to change the address or lifetime associated with a given key. --create-identity-key Generate a new identity key. You should only use this option the first time you run tor-gencert; in the future, you should use the identity key that's already there. -i FILENAME Read the identity key from the specified file. If the file is not present and --create-identity-key is provided, create the identity key in the specified file. Default: "./authority_identity_key" -s FILENAME Write the signing key to the specified file. Default: "./authority_signing_key" -c FILENAME Write the certificate to the specified file. Default: "./authority_certificate" -m NUM Number of months that the certificate should be valid. Default: 12. --passphrase-fd FILEDES Filedescriptor to read the file descriptor from. Ends at the first NUL or newline. Default: read from the terminal. -a address:port If provided, advertise the address:port combination as this authority's preferred directory port in its certificate. If the address is a hostname, the hostname is resolved to an IP before it's published. BUGS
This probably doesn't run on Windows. That's not a big issue, since we don't really want authorities to be running on Windows anyway. SEE ALSO
tor(1) See also the "dir-spec.txt" file, distributed with Tor. AUTHORS
Roger Dingledine <arma@mit.edu>, Nick Mathewson <nickm@alum.mit.edu>. AUTHOR
Nick Mathewson Author. Tor 09/26/2014 TOR-GENCERT(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:47 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy