It is possible to run PIVX as a Tor hidden service, and connect to such services.
The following directions assume you have a Tor proxy running on port 9050. Many distributions default to having a SOCKS proxy listening on port 9050, but others may not. In particular, the Tor Browser Bundle defaults to listening on a random port. See Tor Project FAQ:TBBSocksPort for how to properly configure Tor.
The first step is running PIVX behind a Tor proxy. This will already make all outgoing connections be anonymized, but more is possible.
-proxy=ip:port Set the proxy server. If SOCKS5 is selected (default), this proxy
server will be used to try to reach .onion addresses as well.
-onion=ip:port Set the proxy server to use for tor hidden services. You do not
need to set this if it's the same as -proxy. You can use -noonion
to explicitly disable access to hidden service.
-listen When using -proxy, listening is disabled by default. If you want
to run a hidden service (see next section), you'll need to enable
it explicitly.
-connect=X When behind a Tor proxy, you can specify .onion addresses instead
-addnode=X of IP addresses or hostnames in these parameters. It requires
-seednode=X SOCKS5. In Tor mode, such addresses can also be exchanged with
other P2P nodes.
-onlynet=tor Only connect to .onion nodes and drop IPv4/6 connections.
An example how to start the client if the Tor proxy is running on local host on port 9050 and only allows .onion nodes to connect:
./pivxd -onion=127.0.0.1:9050 -onlynet=tor -listen=0 -addnode=dnetzj6l4cvo2fxy.onion:989
In a typical situation, this suffices to run behind a Tor proxy:
./pivxd -proxy=127.0.0.1:9050
Run a PIVX hidden server
If you configure your Tor system accordingly, it is possible to make your node also reachable from the Tor network. Add these lines to your /etc/tor/torrc (or equivalent config file):
ClientOnly 1
SOCKSPort 9050
SOCKSPolicy accept 127.0.0.1/8
Log notice file /var/log/tor/notices.log
ControlPort 9051
HiddenServiceDir /var/lib/tor/dnet/
HiddenServicePort 989 127.0.0.1:51472
HiddenServiceStatistics 0
ORPort 9001
LongLivedPorts 989
ExitPolicy reject *:*
DisableDebuggerAttachment 0
NumEntryGuards 8
The directory can be different of course, but (both) port numbers should be equal to your pivxd's P2P listen port (51472 by default).
-externalip=X You can tell pivx about its publicly reachable address using
this option, and this can be a .onion address. Given the above
configuration, you can find your onion address in
/var/lib/tor/pivx-service/hostname. Onion addresses are given
preference for your node to advertize itself with, for connections
coming from unroutable addresses (such as 127.0.0.1, where the
Tor proxy typically runs).
-listen You'll need to enable listening for incoming connections, as this
is off by default behind a proxy.
-discover When -externalip is specified, no attempt is made to discover local
IPv4 or IPv6 addresses. If you want to run a dual stack, reachable
from both Tor and IPv4 (or IPv6), you'll need to either pass your
other addresses using -externalip, or explicitly enable -discover.
Note that both addresses of a dual-stack system may be easily
linkable using traffic analysis.
In a typical situation, where you're only reachable via Tor, this should suffice:
./pivxd -proxy=127.0.0.1:9050 -externalip=dnetzj6l4cvo2fxy.onion:989 -listen
(obviously, replace the Onion address with your own). If you don't care too much about hiding your node, and want to be reachable on IPv4 as well, additionally specify:
./pivxd ... -discover
and open port 51472 on your firewall (or use -upnp).
If you only want to use Tor to reach onion addresses, but not use it as a proxy for normal IPv4/IPv6 communication, use:
./pivxd -onion=127.0.0.1:9050 -externalip=dnetzj6l4cvo2fxy.onion:989 -discover
y5kcscnhpygvvnjn.onion:989
5bmhtjvn2jvwpiej.onion:989
pyfdxkazur3iib7y.onion:989
ok3ym5zy6m5klimk.onion:989
i6vpvzk2jxuqqs5f.onion:989
bgdhpb76fkbw5fmg.onion:989
gtlqzb5zbws5di7g.onion:989
f7j2m26rptm5f7af.onion:989
dnetzj6l4cvo2fxy.onion:989
s3v3n7xhqafg6sb7.onion:989