Hi,
I never setup a Masternode with the old code, just started once I updated to the zXLR code base that was just recently published to github. I followed the instructions posted, but am using my own node, so I set 127.0.0.1 instead of what would be a VPS server at some public IP address. I saw where it said to set externalip= to this public IP VPS server, but since I'm using the same server, I just set it to 127.0.0.1 in case the setting just needed to be there. Upon restarting the node via the instructions, I got this:
---begin cli output snippet------
************************
EXCEPTION: N5boost16exception_detail10clone_implINS0_19error_info_injectorINS_16bad_lexica l_castEEEEE
bad lexical cast: source type value could not be interpreted as target
solaris in AppInit()
----end cli output snippet-------
Please keep in mind I'm not using the gui, and was able to get all the information I needed using:
./solaris-cli getnewaddress ""
./solaris-cli sendtoaddress "
./solaris-cli listtransactions
./solaris-cli masternode genkey
./solaris-cli masternode outputs
nano /home/user/.solaris/solaris.conf
nano /home/user/.solaris/masternode.conf
./solaris-cli stop
./solarisd -daemon
I filled out the masternode.conf and solaris.conf file per the instructions as well. Any ideas why this isn't working?
For the alias, I just ran ./solaris-cli getnewaddress " to generate a new address, then deposited exactly 1000 xlr and the contents reflect as such. I also let is get more than 219 confirmations as well before attempting to alter the masternode.conf file.
Also... When I comment out the additions for creating the masternode, "solarisd -daemon" starts just fine and my balances are fine as well so that's a relief.
I hope this is obvious as to what I'm missing. Keep in mind, I don't like GUIs period. I'm old school like that. All I have is CLI linux Ubuntu 16.04 LTS loaded.
Not that I think this is your main problem but 127.0.0.1 is not your IP address. You need to access your router and put in your actual IP. You should go on Discord where one of the devs is often there to help.