GPU plotter Help
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@Propagandalf wow
I was following the video and the readme file for gpu plotting and thats the way they show it. I'll give it a try.
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@Propagandalf same error message
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@Redmogul I still don't know the exact answer, but wish I could help you! Have you figured it out yet?
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@Propagandalf Thanks for the help, it was only 1 / and that seemed to fix it. now i have to figure out why i can't get the miner to work....lol
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@Redmogul Glad to hear you figured out the plotting! Perhaps you could start a new thread with your mining issues if you need help. Remember to include as many details as possible, so that people can help more easily.
May the burst be with you!
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@Redmogul
Hey I started this whole thing and I was downloading every miner plotter and wallet I could find and found myself pulling my hair out trying to write bat files do command lines and just plain trying to figure this stuff out. I found that the AIO (ALL IN ONE ) Client :
https://forums.burst-team.us/topic/16/hotfix-burst-client-for-windows-v0-3-1-all-in-one-wallet-plotting-mining
is your best bet, daWallet seems to be constantly working on this project and it seem to me the direction the whole project is going to make it turn key for the new users. Follow the video and it it step by step and you will be mining in 30 mins. (After you have plotted)Optional:
If you want to get started fast with the local wallet, I recommend you to download the latest package of the blockchain here: http://db.burst-team.us. You have to extract it to your C:\Users\Username\AppData\Roaming\BurstWallet\burst_db\ folder.
(The AppData folder is hidden! so you are going to have to go to explorer and change settings to see hidden files/ folders) and manually place it( Blockchain: DB.zip)as the above forum describes, it takes forever to download the BlockChain through the client.
Again I can't emphasize enough just follow the video and do everything through the client, (THE BOTTOM Left Buttons Plotting and Mining) . After plotting there are 3 settings for mining and I believe the third one down is for GPU mining. I honestly did not see a difference in the speed or the amount of Burst Deadlines I was finding while doing GPU mining, and my Video card was getting hella hot. I live in the desert and its hot enough as is without adding to climate and burning up my video cards:) I hope this helps. Have a good day,Kind Regards,
~LostBoy_SeekTime
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@LostBoy
Good info! I was in the same boat as you when I started, and I did the same thing, hehe.@Redmogul
I just want to add that you don't have to use a GPU miner if your plots were plotted with a GPU plotter, you could also use a CPU miner.my Video card was getting hella hot
Unless you have an insane amount of TB I cannot imagine why your video card would get hot during mining, unless you are using your GPU for mining other cryptocurrencies at the same time. After all, Burst is POC and not POW.
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@Propagandalf
Yea I was doing litecoins to. But I just turned that off cause I need to pack that machine for the move to Midwest.:) My burst machine will stay running until I light the torch and walk out the door:)Regards
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@Propagandalf I generally set stagger to = 0.5 * RAM, so in Redmogul's case 8GB. If you're plotting multiple files at once, divide this by the number of files being plotted - eg if plotting 4 files - 2GB each. The NVRam setting goes into the devices.txt and is per device, so it doesn't matter how many files you're plotting, just set it for that device.
H.
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Thanks for the reply. For non-technical people, it can sometimes be quite difficult to relate to all the different values and calculations. I have had a hard time understanding how stagger works and how to calculate it my self, but if I understand you correctly now, this is how we should think and plan for setting up stagger:
Finding stagger (the next blockbuster film from CryptoPixar)
1: Find out how much RAM is available in your system (remember that even though you have for example 8 GB of ram installed, you might already be using 3 GB for other processes, which leaves you with 5 GB available). RAM should not be confused with NVRAM, which is your graphics card's dedicated memory, and is not part of this equation.*2: Decide how much of your available RAM to dedicate to plotting, for instance 4 out of 5 GB of available RAM.
3: Understand that 1 stagger is a unit measure of 256 KB of RAM memory. Therefore, if you want to run an exact calculation to understand the conversion from memory to stagger, you need to find out how many KB the 4 GB of RAM you want to use consists of (break the numbers down to smaller units). 4 GB equals 4096 MB equals 4194304 KB.
4194304 KB (RAM) divided by 256 (stagger unit measure) equals 16384 (stagger). This will be your correct value for stagger, based on the above example from section 1 and 2.
4: Know that it is easier to simply find out your amount of available RAM in MB and multiply it by 4 (4096 x 4 = 16384).
5: If you decide to plot several files at once, you need to divide your stagger by the number of files being plotted. For two plot files it would be 16384 stagger divided by 2 equals 8192 per plot file.
6: Start plotting if you have got the other values worked out such as
4401562696129194441 - replace with your numeric account ID
106430464 - nonce to start at, do not overlap (if this is your first plot use 0)
7618560 - number of nonces to plot, must be a multiple of the stagger (the next field)
16384 - stagger, where each unit represents 256 KB of memory, which in this case totals 4 GB (4096 MB)Example output: gpuPlotGenerator.exe generate direct u:\4401562696129194441_106430464_7618560_16384
Note: My above calculations were based on the binary value of bytes, which differs from the decimal value.
*NVRAM settings are put in devices.txt and is per device, so it does not need to be changed according to how many files you are plotting simultaneously.
Source:
@haitch said:I generally set stagger to = 0.5 * RAM, so in Redmogul's case 8GB. If you're plotting multiple files at once, divide this by the number of files being plotted - eg if plotting 4 files - 2GB each. The NVRam setting goes into the devices.txt and is per device, so it doesn't matter how many files you're plotting, just set it for that device.
gpuPlotGenerator.exe generate direct u:\4401562696129194441_106430464_7618560_16384
4401562696129194441 - replace with your numeric account ID
106430464 - nonce to start at. If this is your first plot use 0
7618560 - number of nonces to plot, must be a multiple of the stagger - the next field
16384 - stagger. Each 1 = 256 KB of memory, so divide by 4 to get amount of memory to use. In this case it's 4GB (4096 MB)@FrilledShark @luxe
I am not sure if this exists already in the FAQ section or if it is needed, but feel free to use this if it is of any help to newbies.
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I am having problem with GPU plotting, every time I start it would hang after 5
My Info
Window 7
GPU: R9 280x
gpuPlotGenerator.exe generate direct g:\xxx_0_3813375_8196Thanks in advance
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@FattySnorlax Thats how it works ... gpu creates plots in memory ... if memory is full they get written to disk ... and repeat.
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@FattySnorlax Unless you mean that it completely stops and for some reason does not create the file as it should. In system task manager you could monitor both the CPU, Memory and Disk to check if it works. Like luxe says, it will "occupy" memory resources first, and then it will move over to occupy disk resources, and then move back etc.. Maybe the CPU is involved too, but probably not much.
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Thanks for the quick reply, I will try when I have the chance and reply here again. :)
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Just tested and it stuck in the beginning 10-20 second (I have waited 10 minute and still same), GPU and CPU usage dropped to 0% but physical memory is stuck at 69%, tried again on different hdd still same, might it be GPU problem?
Thanks again in advance.
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@FattySnorlax I don't know, maybe @luxe knows?
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@FattySnorlax are you plotting in direct or buffered mode? In buffered, which creates an optimized plot, the miner will plot the first set of nonces, then build the complete file that the plot will go into. Depending on the size of your plot this can take a LONG time, and while it's happening the plotter will appear hung - CPU/GPU activity will go to about 0, the % complete will not move. However, if you go into Resource Monitor -> Disk Activity, you'll see the app is actually writing a lot of data to disk. Once the full plot file is built, then the CPU/GPU and % will get really active as the plot file is "filled in".
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@haitch I am currently plotting direct, but you are right. Although everything seems to go 0% and stuck but my hard drive used space is increasing so I guess its working :) Thanks for everyone's help.
Anyway it take about 24 hours for 2 x 1TB hard drive, is that normal? I plot both at the same time.
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@FattySnorlax It's definitely not unheard of! It depends on a lot of factors :)
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@FattySnorlax From memory 24 hours for 2 * 1TB is on the high side, but depending on your CPU/GPU/Drives could be reasonable.


