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Author Topic: [ANN] [KMC] Kripto Marka Coin  (Read 53505 times)
divedaucd
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January 15, 2018, 11:49:31 PM
 #1121

KMC is going to the moon, hold for yur life  Grin
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Transactions must be included in a block to be properly completed. When you send a transaction, it is broadcast to miners. Miners can then optionally include it in their next blocks. Miners will be more inclined to include your transaction if it has a higher transaction fee.
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Warix3
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January 15, 2018, 11:50:48 PM
 #1122

again thank you youve been really helpful
done a 10 coin transfer test.

how come the price is so wild at the moment

It looks like KMC is starting to get some bigger investors.
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January 16, 2018, 12:35:21 AM
 #1123

I not conect pool Sad
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January 16, 2018, 06:46:40 AM
Last edit: January 16, 2018, 09:20:56 AM by crd007
 #1124

Yeah devs should take a look at their pool. It's not working for days now ..
It gets time for version 2.0 now ...

Edit: ok, that's it. I'm switching now to hashpool. I would have really loved to support the devs by mining at their official pool but it just f*cking sucks ..
Not going to switch back.

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January 16, 2018, 10:43:50 AM
 #1125

how many coins we need for masternodes colleteral?

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January 16, 2018, 11:49:32 AM
 #1126

how many coins we need for masternodes colleteral?

~ 5000 Coins
The amount was not yet set. But 5000 was said to be the max amount requiered

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January 16, 2018, 04:55:21 PM
 #1127

I sent my KMC to the exchange but accidentally put PaymentID into Label field in the GUI wallet.  Undecided
What should I do now ?

I already sent a ticket, but they are not quickly answering the tickets.
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January 16, 2018, 04:56:53 PM
 #1128

I sent my KMC to the exchange but accidentally put PaymentID into Label field in the GUI wallet.  Undecided
What should I do now ?

I already sent a ticket, but they are not quickly answering the tickets.


You can't do anything, you need to wait for their support to answer you.
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January 16, 2018, 05:00:16 PM
 #1129

I sent my KMC to the exchange but accidentally put PaymentID into Label field in the GUI wallet.  Undecided
What should I do now ?

I already sent a ticket, but they are not quickly answering the tickets.


You can't do anything, you need to wait for their support to answer you.

well done , this is only right way,  be patient bro. everything will ok.
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January 16, 2018, 05:12:21 PM
 #1130

OK. I will wait.
maybe price goes more up in the meantime. Smiley
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January 16, 2018, 05:57:25 PM
 #1131

Sent 1 KMC for testing with correct PaymentID.
It's did NOT came through.(for now)

waited also 2 days for ETH deposit.
This exchange worries me.

Someone else also having problems sending KMC to exchange ?
How long do you have to wait ?
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January 16, 2018, 06:07:52 PM
 #1132

Sent 1 KMC for testing with correct PaymentID.
It's did NOT came through.(for now)

waited also 2 days for ETH deposit.
This exchange worries me.

Someone else also having problems sending KMC to exchange ?
How long do you have to wait ?

I've waited for 3 hours yesterday.
zanasklodas
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January 16, 2018, 08:16:55 PM
 #1133

Sent 1 KMC for testing with correct PaymentID.
It's did NOT came through.(for now)

waited also 2 days for ETH deposit.
This exchange worries me.

Someone else also having problems sending KMC to exchange ?
How long do you have to wait ?

I've waited for 3 hours yesterday.

i have been minig this coin from poll  http://kmcoin.hashpool.eu, with xmr miner, i used just my wallet adress  in config file, but none of the kmc came to my my account, what is the problem, i have windows windows wallwt, but i am not recievin anything from pool, wallet shows synchronized. is anyone expieriencing the same prom, , do i dong something wrong?
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January 16, 2018, 08:28:35 PM
 #1134

i have been minig this coin from poll  http://kmcoin.hashpool.eu, with xmr miner, i used just my wallet adress  in config file, but none of the kmc came to my my account, what is the problem, i have windows windows wallwt, but i am not recievin anything from pool, wallet shows synchronized. is anyone expieriencing the same prom, , do i dong something wrong?


Post your config file so we can help

zanasklodas
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January 16, 2018, 08:50:01 PM
 #1135

i have been minig this coin from poll  http://kmcoin.hashpool.eu, with xmr miner, i used just my wallet adress  in config file, but none of the kmc came to my my account, what is the problem, i have windows windows wallwt, but i am not recievin anything from pool, wallet shows synchronized. is anyone expieriencing the same prom, , do i dong something wrong?


Post your config file so we can help


/*
 * 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".
 * use_nicehash    - Limit the nonce to 3 bytes as required by nicehash.
 * use_tls         - This option will make us connect using Transport Layer Security.
 * tls_fingerprint - Server's SHA256 fingerprint. If this string is non-empty then we will check the server's cert against it.
 * pool_weight     - Pool weight is a number telling the miner how important the pool is. Miner will mine mostly at the pool
 *                   with the highest weight, unless the pool fails. Weight must be an integer larger than 0.
 *
 * We feature pools up to 1MH/s. For a more complete list see M5M400's pool list at www.moneropools.com
 */
"pool_list" :
[
   {"pool_address" : "//pool.etn.spacepools.org:5555", "wallet_address" : "etnk4rfbNZ8gouGSkvEndXQNGgkNZdsoJ9HCDupjn12DXTQGhL9xeZqACZhujCrEYnHRvfCKRa4oc1S pvuRttgfp5U7Z7WHuFC", "pool_password" : "x", "use_nicehash" : false, "use_tls" : false, "tls_fingerprint" : "", "pool_weight" : 1 },
],

/*
 * currency to mine
 * allowed values: 'monero' or 'aeon'
 */
"currency" : "monero",

/*
 * 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" : 30,
"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
 *
 * print_motd    - Display messages from your pool operator in the hashrate result.
 */
"verbose_level" : 3,
"print_motd" : true,

/*
 * 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,

/*
 * Manual hardware AES override
 *
 * Some VMs don't report AES capability correctly. You can set this value to true to enforce hardware AES or
 * to false to force disable AES or null to let the miner decide if AES is used.
 *
 * WARNING: setting this to true on a CPU that doesn't support hardware AES will crash the miner.
 */
"aes_override" : null,

/*
 * LARGE PAGE SUPPORT
 * Large pages need a properly set up OS. It can be difficult if you are not used to systems administration,
 * but the performance results are worth the trouble - you will get around 20% boost. Slow memory mode is
 * meant as a backup, you won't get stellar results there. If you are running into trouble, especially
 * on Windows, please read the common issues in the README.
 *
 * By default we will try to allocate large pages. This means you need to "Run As Administrator" on Windows.
 * You need to edit your system's group policies to enable locking large pages. Here are the steps from MSDN
 *
 * 1. On the Start menu, click Run. In the Open box, type gpedit.msc.
 * 2. On the Local Group Policy Editor console, expand Computer Configuration, and then expand Windows Settings.
 * 3. Expand Security Settings, and then expand Local Policies.
 * 4. Select the User Rights Assignment folder.
 * 5. The policies will be displayed in the details pane.
 * 6. In the pane, double-click Lock pages in memory.
 * 7. In the Local Security Setting – Lock pages in memory dialog box, click Add User or Group.
 * 8. In the Select Users, Service Accounts, or Groups dialog box, add an account that you will run the miner on
 * 9. Reboot for change to take effect.
 *
 * Windows also tends to fragment memory a lot. If you are running on a system with 4-8GB of RAM you might need
 * to switch off all the auto-start applications and reboot to have a large enough chunk of contiguous memory.
 *
 * On Linux you will need to configure large page support "sudo sysctl -w vm.nr_hugepages=128" and increase your
 * ulimit -l. To do do this you need to add following lines to /etc/security/limits.conf - "* soft memlock 262144"
 * and "* hard memlock 262144". You can also do it Windows-style and simply run-as-root, but this is NOT
 * recommended for security reasons.
 *
 * Memory locking means that the kernel can't swap out the page to disk - something that is unlikely to happen on a
 * command line system that isn't starved of memory. I haven't observed any difference on a CLI Linux system between
 * locked and unlocked memory. If that is your setup see option "no_mlck".
 */

/*
 * use_slow_memory defines our behaviour with regards to large pages. There are three possible options here:
 * always  - Don't even try to use large pages. Always use slow memory.
 * warn    - We will try to use large pages, but fall back to slow memory if that fails.
 * no_mlck - This option is only relevant on Linux, where we can use large pages without locking memory.
 *           It will never use slow memory, but it won't attempt to mlock
 * never   - If we fail to allocate large pages we will print an error and exit.
 */
"use_slow_memory" : "warn",

/*
 * 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.
 *
 * tls_secure_algo - Use only secure algorithms. This will make us quit with an error if we can't negotiate a secure algo.
 */
"tls_secure_algo" : true,

/*
 * 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,

/*
 * Buffered output control.
 * When running the miner through a pipe, standard output is buffered. This means that the pipe won't read
 * each output line immediately. This can cause delays when running in background.
 * Set this option to true to flush stdout after each line, so it can be read immediately.
 */
"flush_stdout" : 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,

/*
 * HTTP Authentication
 *
 * This allows you to set a password to keep people on the Internet from snooping on your hashrate.
 * Keep in mind that this is based on HTTP Digest, which is based on MD5. To a determined attacker
 * who is able to read your traffic it is as easy to break a bog door latch.
 *
 * http_login - Login. Empty login disables authentication.
 * http_pass  - Password.
 */
"http_login" : "",
"http_pass" : "",
 
/*
 * 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,
zanasklodas
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January 16, 2018, 08:56:47 PM
 #1136

i have been minig this coin from poll  http://kmcoin.hashpool.eu, with xmr miner, i used just my wallet adress  in config file, but none of the kmc came to my my account, what is the problem, i have windows windows wallwt, but i am not recievin anything from pool, wallet shows synchronized. is anyone expieriencing the same prom, , do i dong something wrong?


Post your config file so we can help

sorry, tha
/*
 * 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".
 * use_nicehash    - Limit the nonce to 3 bytes as required by nicehash.
 * use_tls         - This option will make us connect using Transport Layer Security.
 * tls_fingerprint - Server's SHA256 fingerprint. If this string is non-empty then we will check the server's cert against it.
 * pool_weight     - Pool weight is a number telling the miner how important the pool is. Miner will mine mostly at the pool
 *                   with the highest weight, unless the pool fails. Weight must be an integer larger than 0.
 *
 * We feature pools up to 1MH/s. For a more complete list see M5M400's pool list at www.moneropools.com
 */
"pool_list" :
[
   {"pool_address" : "//kmcoin.hashpool.eu:5555", "wallet_address" : "KkavmFLkjsyLhA14P2uFrhP8RiL76DpVvHxyadR6YMBqZkMTj1xyzAe6TLMsyk2vWL9eM1dzuBqC9E2 stfKpt1kTDvYaxVe", "pool_password" : "x", "use_nicehash" : false, "use_tls" : false, "tls_fingerprint" : "", "pool_weight" : 1 },
],

/*
 * currency to mine
 * allowed values: 'monero' or 'aeon'
 */
"currency" : "monero",

/*
 * 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" : 30,
"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
 *
 * print_motd    - Display messages from your pool operator in the hashrate result.
 */
"verbose_level" : 3,
"print_motd" : true,

/*
 * 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,

/*
 * Manual hardware AES override
 *
 * Some VMs don't report AES capability correctly. You can set this value to true to enforce hardware AES or
 * to false to force disable AES or null to let the miner decide if AES is used.
 *
 * WARNING: setting this to true on a CPU that doesn't support hardware AES will crash the miner.
 */
"aes_override" : null,

/*
 * LARGE PAGE SUPPORT
 * Large pages need a properly set up OS. It can be difficult if you are not used to systems administration,
 * but the performance results are worth the trouble - you will get around 20% boost. Slow memory mode is
 * meant as a backup, you won't get stellar results there. If you are running into trouble, especially
 * on Windows, please read the common issues in the README.
 *
 * By default we will try to allocate large pages. This means you need to "Run As Administrator" on Windows.
 * You need to edit your system's group policies to enable locking large pages. Here are the steps from MSDN
 *
 * 1. On the Start menu, click Run. In the Open box, type gpedit.msc.
 * 2. On the Local Group Policy Editor console, expand Computer Configuration, and then expand Windows Settings.
 * 3. Expand Security Settings, and then expand Local Policies.
 * 4. Select the User Rights Assignment folder.
 * 5. The policies will be displayed in the details pane.
 * 6. In the pane, double-click Lock pages in memory.
 * 7. In the Local Security Setting – Lock pages in memory dialog box, click Add User or Group.
 * 8. In the Select Users, Service Accounts, or Groups dialog box, add an account that you will run the miner on
 * 9. Reboot for change to take effect.
 *
 * Windows also tends to fragment memory a lot. If you are running on a system with 4-8GB of RAM you might need
 * to switch off all the auto-start applications and reboot to have a large enough chunk of contiguous memory.
 *
 * On Linux you will need to configure large page support "sudo sysctl -w vm.nr_hugepages=128" and increase your
 * ulimit -l. To do do this you need to add following lines to /etc/security/limits.conf - "* soft memlock 262144"
 * and "* hard memlock 262144". You can also do it Windows-style and simply run-as-root, but this is NOT
 * recommended for security reasons.
 *
 * Memory locking means that the kernel can't swap out the page to disk - something that is unlikely to happen on a
 * command line system that isn't starved of memory. I haven't observed any difference on a CLI Linux system between
 * locked and unlocked memory. If that is your setup see option "no_mlck".
 */

/*
 * use_slow_memory defines our behaviour with regards to large pages. There are three possible options here:
 * always  - Don't even try to use large pages. Always use slow memory.
 * warn    - We will try to use large pages, but fall back to slow memory if that fails.
 * no_mlck - This option is only relevant on Linux, where we can use large pages without locking memory.
 *           It will never use slow memory, but it won't attempt to mlock
 * never   - If we fail to allocate large pages we will print an error and exit.
 */
"use_slow_memory" : "warn",

/*
 * 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.
 *
 * tls_secure_algo - Use only secure algorithms. This will make us quit with an error if we can't negotiate a secure algo.
 */
"tls_secure_algo" : true,

/*
 * 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,

/*
 * Buffered output control.
 * When running the miner through a pipe, standard output is buffered. This means that the pipe won't read
 * each output line immediately. This can cause delays when running in background.
 * Set this option to true to flush stdout after each line, so it can be read immediately.
 */
"flush_stdout" : 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,

/*
 * HTTP Authentication
 *
 * This allows you to set a password to keep people on the Internet from snooping on your hashrate.
 * Keep in mind that this is based on HTTP Digest, which is based on MD5. To a determined attacker
 * who is able to read your traffic it is as easy to break a bog door latch.
 *
 * http_login - Login. Empty login disables authentication.
 * http_pass  - Password.
 */
"http_login" : "",
"http_pass" : "",
 
/*
 * 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,

t was electroneum config file, this is kmc config file
zanasklodas
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January 16, 2018, 09:24:58 PM
 #1137

do i need to include anything more , than the wallet adress in a config file, to recieve payments to windows desctop wallet?|
zanasklodas
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January 16, 2018, 09:50:20 PM
 #1138

my wallet shows, time january 1 , 2018, wallet synchronized, . warning last block recieved 363 hours and 19 minutes ago, and balance is 0, what is wrong with my wallet? does anyone knows, what i am doing wrong?


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January 16, 2018, 10:47:29 PM
Last edit: January 28, 2018, 09:33:29 PM by miguekun
 #1139

Hi,
The official pool is giving me a lot of connections problems so I have started a new one for test at:

http://209.250.249.164/kmc/

I´ll be mining there and everyone is wellcome.

Regards
zanasklodas
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January 16, 2018, 11:14:25 PM
 #1140

my wallet shows, time january 1 , 2018, wallet synchronized, . warning last block recieved 363 hours and 19 minutes ago, and balance is 0, what is wrong with my wallet? does anyone knows, what i am doing wrong?



my wallet stop synchronizin at height 60002,  where can be a problem?
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