Let's try to solve a discrete logarithm:
$\beta \equiv \alpha ^{x} \bmod \,\, p$
using the Pohlig-Hellman algorithm. Let's suppose that $p-1=tq$, where $q$ is a large prime number. This means that the resolution is probable infeasible, however, if $t$ is factorizable with small prime numbers the algorithm can determine the discrete logs $\bmod t$ in an efficient way. But at this point, what i do with the discrete logs $\bmod t$?
I am also having trouble understanding this passage:
Note that even if $p - 1 = tq$ has a large prime factor $q$, the algorithm can determine discrete logs mod $t$ if $t$ is composed of small prime factors. For this reason, often $\beta$ is chosen to be a power of $\alpha^t$. Then the discrete log is automatically $0$ mod $t$, so the discrete log hides only mod $q$ information, which the algorithm cannot find. If the discrete log $x$ represents a secret (or better, $t$ times a secret), this means that an attacker does not obtain partial information by determining $x \bmod t$, since there is no information hidden this way. This idea is used in the Digital Signature Algorithm, which we discuss in Chapter 9.