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Question: How often you want to be paid?
Every 1-2 days (300 satoshis 1M shares)
Every Friday with revenue share (more than 300 satoshis / 1M shares)
I don't care, just pay Smiley

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Author Topic: TomosMining - HIGHEST PAID MINING (BTC->FaucetHub) 5% REF!  (Read 35523 times)
1manshow
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January 16, 2018, 04:57:51 PM
 #421

Hi tomos81, have you got the chance to test GPU mining with Nvidia?
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January 16, 2018, 04:59:34 PM
 #422


feel free to connect as many devices as you have Smiley  there are miners with 30-50 devices mining for single BTC address (yesterday i paid out ~50$ to one miner) !
OMG, this is so good, i just think when i have connect as many devices i'll get banned so i just have 1 devices to connect, i'll buy more devices, thanks for tips Cheesy Cheesy, you are great man brudda Cheesy:D

Cheesy  thanks man, there is nothing to ban, it's logical that you mining from more devices

just be sure your income > price for devices Smiley
i will pay always at least this rate (300 satoshis / 1.000.000 hashes) , or higher, so you can calculate wisely Smiley

yes i have calculated it, my profit up to 50% for 7 days, and get payback after 3~4 days Smiley
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January 16, 2018, 08:13:45 PM
 #423

15% bonus for today is being paid right now and will arrive to your faucethub soon Smiley
thanks for your support!

happy mining!

tomos81

PS: Today's bonus rate was 345 satoshis / 1M shares,  from tomorrow we are back in normal, but very high 300 satoshis / 1M shares Smiley

Something is missing, satoshi generation has become less! 12h was approx 1000+ satoshi and now it's less than half  Sad

i changed nothing, maybe your PC is more busy and gives less hashrate to mining.. check your mining stats in the webpage..  Also for lower hashrates (<100h/s) the income is more unstable because the network difficulty is more than 13000.  The system will lower that rate in 12 hours, my system check what is the best average and optimizes every mindight server time.. 

Thank you, here is my mining stats - https://prnt.sc/i17k1g

Please advise, I am on core i5 laptop.

as i predicted, there is big unstability with this difficulty, you need to do nothing, in 13 minutes i will upload new script to proxy, will disconnect all miners for 20 seconds and then the mining will be more smooth

Thank you for this awesome pool, mining smoth again!
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January 16, 2018, 10:28:35 PM
 #424

Small comparations of payouts in different known CPU mining sites, rates are calculated 16.1.2018 23:20 CET, payouts are calculated to 1.000.000 hashes:


  • Tomos mining (this site) :  300 satoshis  (200 for webminers)
  • Webminepool:    133 satoshis
  • Coinhive:     129 satoshis

This is fact, real numbers...

PS: 497.514 satoshis paid out today in tomosmining , 129 miners paid
neo_iamtheone
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January 17, 2018, 04:13:43 AM
 #425

Small comparations of payouts in different known CPU mining sites, rates are calculated 16.1.2018 23:20 CET, payouts are calculated to 1.000.000 hashes:


  • Tomos mining (this site) :  300 satoshis  (200 for webminers)
  • Webminepool:    133 satoshis
  • Coinhive:     129 satoshis

This is fact, real numbers...

PS: 497.514 satoshis paid out today in tomosmining , 129 miners paid

Thank you!!! Awesome, I made 1000+ satoshi in 10hours!
gmf10000
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January 17, 2018, 10:19:13 AM
 #426

can you chek your system, i am not mining naw and i get lots of btc, or som person is mining for my adres Cheesy i wont to be fair to you

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January 17, 2018, 10:20:52 AM
 #427

can you chek your system, i am not mining naw and i get lots of btc, or som person is mining for my adres Cheesy i wont to be fair to you



PM me your BTC address Smiley
gmf10000
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January 17, 2018, 10:30:01 AM
 #428

i send pm
tomos81 (OP)
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January 17, 2018, 11:57:34 AM
 #429

Small update:  Added actual earnings in $$$ value to BTC address check for cmd line mining page

Wink
tomos81 (OP)
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January 17, 2018, 03:00:03 PM
 #430

my proxy went crazy and switched 3x the pool... if it will happen one more time, i will increase temporary the payouts..
there can happen , this 15 minutes theminres will have less hashrate, but no stress about it Smiley
1manshow
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January 17, 2018, 07:10:20 PM
 #431

Hi tomos81, have you got the chance to test GPU mining with Nvidia?
Smiley Smiley
tomos81 (OP)
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January 17, 2018, 07:23:20 PM
 #432

Hi tomos81, have you got the chance to test GPU mining with Nvidia?
Smiley Smiley

hi yes, i had chance ,via remote desktop i tested NVIDIA TESLA , it was great, but remote desktop stucked  Cheesy Cheesy

but it is ok, i will send here the result tomorrow (command line etc) , when i will be able to turn on the monster server again

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January 17, 2018, 08:19:29 PM
 #433

Hi tomos81, have you got the chance to test GPU mining with Nvidia?
Smiley Smiley

hi yes, i had chance ,via remote desktop i tested NVIDIA TESLA , it was great, but remote desktop stucked  Cheesy Cheesy

but it is ok, i will send here the result tomorrow (command line etc) , when i will be able to turn on the monster server again



Thank you very much matey. Waiting badly for it, wanna turn my laptop CPU and GPU combo to mine as much satoshis as possible. Also any chance you going to bring dogeminer back? Was fun getting tons of doges that way.
tomos81 (OP)
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January 18, 2018, 06:40:56 AM
 #434

Hi tomos81, have you got the chance to test GPU mining with Nvidia?
Smiley Smiley

hi yes, i had chance ,via remote desktop i tested NVIDIA TESLA , it was great, but remote desktop stucked  Cheesy Cheesy

but it is ok, i will send here the result tomorrow (command line etc) , when i will be able to turn on the monster server again



Thank you very much matey. Waiting badly for it, wanna turn my laptop CPU and GPU combo to mine as much satoshis as possible. Also any chance you going to bring dogeminer back? Was fun getting tons of doges that way.

the simpliest way is to exchange in faucethub : btc to doge Smiley 
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January 18, 2018, 06:46:16 AM
 #435

Hi tomos81, have you got the chance to test GPU mining with Nvidia?
Smiley Smiley

hi yes, i had chance ,via remote desktop i tested NVIDIA TESLA , it was great, but remote desktop stucked  Cheesy Cheesy

but it is ok, i will send here the result tomorrow (command line etc) , when i will be able to turn on the monster server again



Thank you very much matey. Waiting badly for it, wanna turn my laptop CPU and GPU combo to mine as much satoshis as possible. Also any chance you going to bring dogeminer back? Was fun getting tons of doges that way.

I'm sorry I wasn't able to reply for days lol.

So download the XMR-stak-win64
run as admin
type monero
copy paste tomosming pool
copy paste your user (btc add)
password is x
and let it run
 Smiley)
https://prnt.sc/i219q2
1manshow
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January 18, 2018, 10:38:23 AM
 #436


the simpliest way is to exchange in faucethub : btc to doge Smiley  


Yes, but I don't want to loose BTC for doge, instead on one computer would run dogeminer if possible. My powerful laptop I would want to earn BTC only.

Thanks krugerxxx, tried your tutorial, it worked but combined hashrate of both CPU/GPU didn't went above 110. My CPU alone when using tomosmining miner does 150-180 h/s. Do note that nothing extra is used on this system, I'm simply leaving this for mining only.
tomos81 (OP)
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January 18, 2018, 12:08:28 PM
 #437

Hi graphic card owners! This post is for you, and explains how to use graphic card +  CPU at once:

1) download https://github.com/fireice-uk/xmr-stak/releases/download/v2.2.0/xmr-stak-win64.zip
2) unzip to folder and exclude from antivirus!
3) download and install vcredist (if you dont have): https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=52685
4) in the directory where you have xmr-stak unzipped (from step 1) , create config.txt file and copy paste this, change only red text to your BTC address linked with faucethub - there you will get payments.. DO NOT use spaces in your BTC address, before or after address also! Otherwise your payment will not be processed
Quote

/*
 * 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" : "80.211.205.216:3333", "wallet_address" : "YOUR_BTC_ADDRESS_WITHOUT_SPACES", "pool_password" : "x", "use_nicehash" : true, "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,



here is an example how it looks like:

1manshow
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January 18, 2018, 06:27:44 PM
 #438

Hi graphic card owners! This post is for you, and explains how to use graphic card +  CPU at once:

1) download https://github.com/fireice-uk/xmr-stak/releases/download/v2.2.0/xmr-stak-win64.zip
2) unzip to folder and exclude from antivirus!
3) download and install vcredist (if you dont have): https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=52685
4) in the directory where you have xmr-stak unzipped (from step 1) , create config.txt file and copy paste this, change only red text to your BTC address linked with faucethub - there you will get payments.. DO NOT use spaces in your BTC address, before or after address also! Otherwise your payment will not be processed
Quote

/*
 * 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" : "80.211.205.216:3333", "wallet_address" : "YOUR_BTC_ADDRESS_WITHOUT_SPACES", "pool_password" : "x", "use_nicehash" : true, "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,



here is an example how it looks like:

https://i.imgur.com/JJE4nr9.png
Can you try with ccminer? I tried xmr stak, but it doesn't yield good hash rates on my laptop with Core i7 4710HQ and Geforce GTX 860M. Combined it reaches 110 only. Not sure if it's missing something. This laptop is only for mining purpose, so nothing else running and not even in active use.

How come you are getting so high hash rate?
tomos81 (OP)
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January 18, 2018, 06:40:34 PM
 #439

Hi graphic card owners! This post is for you, and explains how to use graphic card +  CPU at once:
blah

Can you try with ccminer? I tried xmr stak, but it doesn't yield good hash rates on my laptop with Core i7 4710HQ and Geforce GTX 860M. Combined it reaches 110 only. Not sure if it's missing something. This laptop is only for mining purpose, so nothing else running and not even in active use.

How come you are getting so high hash rate?

ccminer will not work, bcs not nicehash compatible (nonce)..
try to run xmr-stak as i told, but edit .txt for cpu's, that they will not use CPU.. so you will have open 2 miners, one for GPU (xmr-stak)  and one for CPU (claymore)

my hashrate was so high bcs i was testing a monster for 20k USD (but only 50% resources used):
56 CPUs intel xeon , and NVIDIA TESLA (3 from 4 cards used)
gmf10000
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January 18, 2018, 08:05:23 PM
 #440

https://preview.ibb.co/c5tzZ6/gpu_mining.png

for me not workin on amd i have hd 7900 , new drivers itd. :/
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