Lightweight TOR relay image (13.37 MB), based on LinuxServer.io Alpine Linux. Configurations can be passed as environment variables.
docker run \
-d \
--name tor-relay \
-e RELAY_TYPE=bridge \
-e TOR_ORPort=9001 \
-e TOR_DirPort=9030 \
-e TOR_Nickname=ididnteditheconfig \
-e TOR_RelayBandwidthRate="100 KBytes" \
-e TOR_RelayBandwidthBurst="200 KBytes" \
-e TZ=Europe/London \
-e PUID=$(id -u) \
-e PGID=$(id -g) \
-v $(pwd)/tor/data:/data:Z \
-p 9001:9001 \
-p 9030:9030 \
--restart always \
ilshidur/tor-relay
docker run \
-d \
--name tor-relay \
-e RELAY_TYPE=relay \
-e TOR_ORPort=9001 \
-e TOR_DirPort=9030 \
-e TOR_Nickname=ididnteditheconfig \
-e TOR_RelayBandwidthRate="100 KBytes" \
-e TOR_RelayBandwidthBurst="200 KBytes" \
-e TZ=Europe/London \
-e PUID=$(id -u) \
-e PGID=$(id -g) \
-v $(pwd)/tor/data:/data:Z \
-p 9001:9001 \
-p 9030:9030 \
--restart always \
ilshidur/tor-relay
It is highly recommended against setting up this type of configuration in a home network.
Tips for Running an Exit Node.
docker run \
-d \
--name tor-relay \
-e RELAY_TYPE=exit \
-e TOR_ORPort=9001 \
-e TOR_DirPort=9030 \
-e TOR_Nickname=ididnteditheconfig \
-e TOR_RelayBandwidthRate="100 KBytes" \
-e TOR_RelayBandwidthBurst="200 KBytes" \
-e TZ=Europe/London \
-e PUID=$(id -u) \
-e PGID=$(id -g) \
-v $(pwd)/tor/data:/data:Z \
-p 9001:9001 \
-p 9030:9030 \
--restart always \
ilshidur/tor-relay
The configuration is stored in a /etc/tor/torrc
file.
Everyline can be changed using environment variables as described below :
TOR_<configuration>=<value>
will uncomment the first line starting with <configuration>
and set its value to <value>
.
Example : setting TOR_ORPort
to 9002
will change the line #ORPort 9001
to ORPort 9002
.
MIT
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