A Tor relay serving as a Bento server and hosting a CenTor instance for 10,000 simultaneous clients experienced only approximately 0.4% performance degradation compared to a vanilla relay; running 20 concurrent CenTor instances on a single relay caused roughly 1% degradation. Shadow-aware routing in a low-relay-density region (US, 933 of 6,666 relays in shadow) produced 0.7% relay degradation while delivering 3.6% client performance improvement.
Programmable relay functionality (CDN replication, load balancing) can be safely co-deployed with standard Tor relay duties at very low overhead cost, enabling bridge operators to offer enhanced services without sacrificing relay performance for other users.
Low-relay-density regions that also have high user density (e.g., Americas) are the highest-impact targets for new relay deployment: both anonymity scores and performance degrade in these regions, making infrastructure investment there disproportionately valuable for circumvention tool operators.