|  | @@ -234,6 +234,22 @@ your circuits.
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				|  |  |  The default is "middle,rendezvous", and other choices are not advised.
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				|  |  |  .LP
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				|  |  |  .TP
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				|  |  | +\fBCircuitBuildTimeout \fR\fINUM\fP
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				|  |  | +Try for at most NUM seconds when building circuits. If the circuit
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				|  |  | +isn't open in that time, give up on it.
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				|  |  | +(Default: 1 minute.)
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				|  |  | +.LP
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				|  |  | +.TP
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				|  |  | +\fBCircuitIdleTimeout \fR\fINUM\fP
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				|  |  | +If we have keept a clean (never used) circuit around for NUM seconds,
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				|  |  | +then close it. This way when the Tor client is entirely idle, it can
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				|  |  | +expire all of its circuits, and then expire its TLS connections. Also,
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				|  |  | +if we end up making a circuit that is not useful for exiting any of
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				|  |  | +the requests we're receiving, it won't forever take up a slot in the
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				|  |  | +circuit list.
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				|  |  | +(Default: 1 hour.)
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				|  |  | +.LP
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				|  |  | +.TP
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				|  |  |  \fBClientOnly \fR\fB0\fR|\fB1\fR\fP
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				|  |  |  If set to 1, Tor will under no circumstances run as a server. The default
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				|  |  |  is to run as a client unless ORPort is configured.  (Usually,
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