This thread is following the forum rules, Frodo, do not delete it, since that will (yet again) simply be your bias, and not within the rules of the forum.
The original thread owner has deleted both my posts, so following the forum message in that thread:
This is a self-moderated topic. If you do not want to be moderated by the person who started this topic, create a new topic. (2 posts by 1 user deleted.)
Here's my reply to the OP of Laurentia Pool:
While you keep deleting my posts that actually provide information that you
should take notice of,
I will make a summary, so you can take note and prove you do care about the profit and losses of those people you are convincing to mine on your pool in the future.
Firstly, as per my first deleted post on the subject, you should not use the pool software you have chosen to run the pool.
It is high risk, requires a full time developer so that the pool doesn't have weeks of outage when problems occur,
and that software has a well known history of losing blocks.
Secondly, your last post update clearly shows that someone is providing false information to you, or you are providing false information to your prospective miners. Only you will know the answer to that.
My criticising him about not testing software rather than running it untested, that he later posted a joke of a reply for the ignorant, was 1-Apr:
Re: [∞ YH] solo.ckpool.org 2% fee solo mining USA/DE 255 blocks solved!
April 01, 2020, 09:34:00 PM
Quote from: -ck on April 01, 2020, 09:32:02 PM
I will keep trying to find a workaround that suits everyone.
April 01, 2020, 09:34:00 PM
Try actually testing the changes .....................
The lost block on his pool was 10-May
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=5237323.msg54403667#msg54403667Yeah maybe he should have taken notice of my post a few weeks earlier after all ...
The claim was the server's performance was the fault, yet the replacement server is, in my opinion, below what should be used to run a pool., yet some people seem have the ignorant opinion that it could run 10 pools ...
I wonder how bad the original server was ... the same server that people were throwing large sums of mining rental money at.
Directly related to that: has anyone tested if the latest updated code in the git finds blocks correctly?
Are you waiting for his solo pool testing to succeed or fail finding a block before you go live?
It is an historical fact, on multiple occasions, that the coder has made changes in the git that lead to losing blocks due to not testing the software properly.
While you may be one of his zealots who ignores the facts, but since you are starting a pool, it would be advisable to not ignore the facts, and waste the expensive resources of those you may have convince to mine there.
I've no suggestions of what other software would be good to use, but there are, no doubt, options out there that you could consider.
Now regarding your pool whitepaper, there are a couple of issues also.
Firstly, every 2 weeks, the network difficulty changes.
This means that to keep up to a minimum target, as you have made clear in the quote below, you will need to get more hash rate on the pool every time the diff increases, if you are not above the minimum specified, not just when you start the pool. That's a tough issue that you should understand as a pool operator.
...
Our minimum average cadence is 5 blockfinds per diffadj.
...
There are issues with paying out to miners in the coinbase.
Some miners wont accept work that has a valid, but larger, coinbase.
The coinbase generated by your chosen pool software is, as is clearly stated, out of date with rewards each time it is sent to a miner.
It does not include the expectation of finding a block.
See the p2pool code about how that should be done correctly.
With the recent improved core bitcoin block distribution code (in the past couple of years), when you find a block, it can be distributed much faster than before.
However, if your coinbase is large due to including payouts in it, it will of course mean that your block distribution data will also be larger, since the coinbase transaction is the one transaction that no other bitcoin will know, and must be distributed to them all with the block.
Be wary of making it too large for miners or too large such that it slows down block distribution.
Lastly, you should understand, and comment about: if you will be using the Fibre Block Relay and how you handle when it isn't working.
The last outage of the Fibre Block Relay was the US-West node, for a number of hours recently, and thus during that time, any blocks you may have found and sent to that specific relay, will not have been distributed quickly around the world and into china, unless you have a secondary solution (like I have)
Ignoring this can easily lead to losing blocks due to stales and orphan races.
Also, not relaying your blocks yourself, directly into china, is an expectation of losing some blocks, since the largest mining pools are in china.
Feel free to ignore all this at the detriment of your miners