Vidalia (software)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Rhododendrites (talk | contribs) at 17:36, 20 April 2014 (refimprove → unreferenced). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Vidalia
Original author(s)Matt Edman, Justin Hipple
Developer(s)Tomás Touceda
Initial release28 February 2006; 18 years ago (2006-02-28)
Stable release0.2.21 (3 December 2012; 11 years ago (2012-12-03)) [±]
Preview release0.3.1 alpha (27 February 2012; 12 years ago (2012-02-27)) [±]
Written inC++, Qt
Operating systemOS X, Microsoft Windows, Unix-like
Available in30 languages
List of languages
Arabic, Basque, Brazilian Portuguese, Bulgarian, Burmese, Catalan, Chinese (simplified), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Korean, Norwegian, Persian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish
TypeAnonymity, GUI
LicenseGNU GPL v2 (with OpenSSL exception)
Websitewww.torproject.org/projects/vidalia.html
Vidalia control panel

Vidalia is a cross-platform GUI for controlling Tor, built using Qt. It allows the user to start, stop or view the status of Tor, view, filter or search log messages, monitor bandwidth usage, and configure some aspects of Tor. Vidalia also makes it easier to contribute to the Tor network by optionally helping the user set up a Tor relay.

Another prominent feature of Vidalia is its Tor network map, which lets the user see the geographic location of relays on the Tor network, as well as where the user's application traffic is going.

The name comes from the Vidalia onion since Tor uses onion routing.

Vidalia is released under the GNU General Public License. It runs on any platform supported by Qt 4.2, including Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux or other Unix-like variants using the X11 window system.

See also

References

External links