Table of Contents
Running Tor
- Why should I run Tor?
- Should I run a client or a server?
- Installing Tor on Win32
- Installing Tor on Mac OS X
- Installing Tor on Unix
- Installing SwitchProxy for Tor
- Configuring a Tor server
- Configuring a Tor hidden service
- Setting up your own Tor network
Design Documents
The design document (published at Usenix Security 2004) gives our justifications and security analysis for the Tor design:
Our follow-up paper on challenges in low-latency anonymity (still in draft form) details more recent experiences and directions: PDF version.
The specification aims to give developers enough information to build a compatible version of Tor:
The manual for the latest stable version
provides detailed instructions for how to install and use Tor, including configuration
of client and server options.
If you are running the CVS version the manual is available
here.
Look at the slides from the 21C3 talk, and listen to the audio from the talk.
Various HOWTO Docs
- Guide to Tor-ifying various applications
- How to Run a Secure Tor Server
- Running Tor in a Linux chroot
- chroot guide for OpenBSD
- Squid and Tor
Mailing List Information
- The or-announce mailing list is a low volume list for announcements of new releases.
- The or-talk mailing list is where a lot of the discussion happens, and is where we send notifications of prereleases and release candidates.
- The or-dev mailing list is for posting by developers only, and is very low traffic.
- There's also a list for cvs commits.