Post
Topic
Board Mining (Altcoins)
Re: [OS] nvOC easy-to-use Linux Nvidia Mining vBASIC || Community Edition 2.0
by
papampi_2
on 23/07/2018, 07:24:19 UTC
Sure you can. zpool, nicehash and mph are some kind of special pools that require special configurations so they have their own sections in 1bash. If you are on ethermine (I'm on ethermine too), you just need to setup ETH coin with ethermine pool settings. There is a quite long list of coin settings, scroll down to ETH and set the pool address, your worker name, wallet address and port and you're done. If you see settings for mph in there,, they're just examples of what you should put in these configs for a generic pool.

thanks for reply!

I edited ETH coin like this

# Ethereum (ETH)
ETH_ADDRESS="0xDb4E411F930aC6aD73dF884f06FfA233bA1e830d"
ETH_EXTENSION_ARGUMENTS=""    
ETH_POOL="eu1.ethermine.org"
ETH_PORT="4444"
ETH_WORKER="$Ruda_nvOS"


but I thought I still need to define miner somewhere, so I did it here, but I feel like I do something wrong because I specify pool and adress on two different places

ETHASH_MINER="CLAYMORE"                          # Choose "CLAYMORE" or "ETHMINER", "GENOIL" or "BMINER"
ETHASH_WALLET_FORMAT="-epool eu1.ethermine.org:4444 -ewal 0xDb4E411F930aC6aD73dF884f06FfA233bA1e830d.Ruda_nvOS"
CLAYMORE_VERSION="latest"                         # Choose: latest or any version you add its folder.
ETHMINER_OPTS=""                                       # Ethminer optional arguments. add "--api-port -3333" if you want web info
CLAYMORE_OPTS="-wd 1 -r 1 -esm 0 -allpools 1 -asm 0 -mport -3333 -mode 1"

Is this correct or am I doing somthing wrong? Thank you, again!



ETHASH_WALLET_FORMAT is "." or "/" or whatever your pool requires, ethpool and ethermine wallet format are "."


from 1bash:

Code:
WALLET_ADDRESS_FORMAT="."                        # Choose between "." , "/" , "-" or any other separators your pool uses.
                                                 # Some pools require dot (address.worker), some require slash (address/worker) format.
                                                 # Depending on the pool you use, set this appropriately: