/* * Number of GPUs that you have in your system. Each GPU will get its own CPU thread. */ "gpu_thread_num" : 1, /* * GPU configuration. You should play around with intensity and worksize as the fastest settings will vary. * index - GPU index number usually starts from 0 * intensity - Number of parallel GPU threads (nothing to do with CPU threads) * worksize - Number of local GPU threads (nothing to do with CPU threads) * affine_to_cpu - This will affine the thread to a CPU. This can make a GPU miner play along nicer with a CPU miner. */ "gpu_threads_conf" : [ { "index" : 0, "intensity" : 1000, "worksize" : 8, "affine_to_cpu" : false }, ], /* * Platform index. This will be 0 unless you have different OpenCL platform - eg. AMD and Intel. */ "platform_index" : 0, /* * TLS Settings * If you need real security, make sure tls_secure_algo is enabled (otherwise MITM attack can downgrade encryption * to trivially breakable stuff like DES and MD5), and verify the server's fingerprint through a trusted channel. * * use_tls - This option will make us connect using Transport Layer Security. * tls_secure_algo - Use only secure algorithms. This will make us quit with an error if we can't negotiate a secure algo. * tls_fingerprint - Server's SHA256 fingerprint. If this string is non-empty then we will check the server's cert against it. */ "use_tls" : false, "tls_secure_algo" : true, "tls_fingerprint" : "", /* * pool_address - Pool address should be in the form "pool.supportxmr.com:3333". Only stratum pools are supported. * wallet_address - Your wallet, or pool login. * pool_password - Can be empty in most cases or "x". */ "pool_address" : "pool.supportxmr.com:3333", "wallet_address" : "", "pool_password" : "", /* * Network timeouts. * Because of the way this client is written it doesn't need to constantly talk (keep-alive) to the server to make * sure it is there. We detect a buggy / overloaded server by the call timeout. The default values will be ok for * nearly all cases. If they aren't the pool has most likely overload issues. Low call timeout values are preferable - * long timeouts mean that we waste hashes on potentially stale jobs. Connection report will tell you how long the * server usually takes to process our calls. * * call_timeout - How long should we wait for a response from the server before we assume it is dead and drop the connection. * retry_time - How long should we wait before another connection attempt. * Both values are in seconds. * giveup_limit - Limit how many times we try to reconnect to the pool. Zero means no limit. Note that stak miners * don't mine while the connection is lost, so your computer's power usage goes down to idle. */ "call_timeout" : 10, "retry_time" : 10, "giveup_limit" : 0, /* * Output control. * Since most people are used to miners printing all the time, that's what we do by default too. This is suboptimal * really, since you cannot see errors under pages and pages of text and performance stats. Given that we have internal * performance monitors, there is very little reason to spew out pages of text instead of concise reports. * Press 'h' (hashrate), 'r' (results) or 'c' (connection) to print reports. * * verbose_level - 0 - Don't print anything. * 1 - Print intro, connection event, disconnect event * 2 - All of level 1, and new job (block) event if the difficulty is different from the last job * 3 - All of level 1, and new job (block) event in all cases, result submission event. * 4 - All of level 3, and automatic hashrate report printing */ "verbose_level" : 3, /* * Automatic hashrate report * * h_print_time - How often, in seconds, should we print a hashrate report if verbose_level is set to 4. * This option has no effect if verbose_level is not 4. */ "h_print_time" : 60, /* * Daemon mode * * If you are running the process in the background and you don't need the keyboard reports, set this to true. * This should solve the hashrate problems on some emulated terminals. */ "daemon_mode" : false, /* * Output file * * output_file - This option will log all output to a file. * */ "output_file" : "", /* * Built-in web server * I like checking my hashrate on my phone. Don't you? * Keep in mind that you will need to set up port forwarding on your router if you want to access it from * outside of your home network. Ports lower than 1024 on Linux systems will require root. * * httpd_port - Port we should listen on. Default, 0, will switch off the server. */ "httpd_port" : 0, /* * prefer_ipv4 - IPv6 preference. If the host is available on both IPv4 and IPv6 net, which one should be choose? * This setting will only be needed in 2020's. No need to worry about it now. */ "prefer_ipv4" : true,