Bitcoin Swami
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June 26, 2011, 06:07:52 PM |
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Hey guys is there a program like Powertune included in Linuxcoin. I have a few 6950's that I'd love to try it on. Seems like I could be getting alot more out of these cards.
If so please tell me how to run it. I'm still learning linux.
Thanks for all the support.
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Folax
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June 26, 2011, 06:31:14 PM |
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AMDoverdriveCtrl is included, you run 1 instance (for card0) from the start menu icon, the next one from a console.
Search this forum for the commands.
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My GF thinks I'm useless, if you think otherwise and can proof it to her, please do so and donate: 14wG6u2bAD9q1nLmLL9MST1ZzbTE9Pt8nG
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Bitcoin Swami
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June 26, 2011, 06:39:16 PM |
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AMDoverdriveCtrl is included, you run 1 instance (for card0) from the start menu icon, the next one from a console.
Search this forum for the commands.
Oh I thought things like powertune were a seperate % boost altogether.
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talpan
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June 26, 2011, 07:32:20 PM |
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Bitcoin Swami
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June 26, 2011, 08:07:31 PM |
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AMDoverdriveCtrl is included, you run 1 instance (for card0) from the start menu icon, the next one from a console.
Search this forum for the commands.
Oh I see the new version has the powertune option... linuxcoin has the old version i guess. Not sure how to install things on linuxcoin (gotta set up persistant mode first) but I guess I'll figure it out.
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drgr33n (OP)
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June 26, 2011, 08:09:44 PM Last edit: June 26, 2011, 08:31:51 PM by drgr33n |
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AMDoverdriveCtrl is included, you run 1 instance (for card0) from the start menu icon, the next one from a console.
Search this forum for the commands.
Oh I see the new version has the powertune option... linuxcoin has the old version i guess. Not sure how to install things on linuxcoin (gotta set up persistant mode first) but I guess I'll figure it out. EDIT: Yes powertune is included in AMDOverdriveCtrl TFTP cluster guide is on its way You lucky people hahaha
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pinjas
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June 26, 2011, 08:38:09 PM Last edit: June 26, 2011, 08:50:20 PM by pinjas |
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Hey guys,
This seems like great stuff but I seem to be struggling to utilize this and that. I am very newbish to linux but I have used a fair share of command line in windows myself.
Firstly, I saw the persistence guide a few moments ago and followed it up until the point where I am asked to open a root terminal ( I am certain I opened a root term ) and enter sudo su- df. I have tried several variations of this command and have come up with 'unknown user: df' as the most promising and 'unknown command' as the most common. I don't know if anyone else came across this error, if it is some mistake on my part or whatever. Any help would be appreciated, thanks
I am excited about .2b, I wasn't able to get mining going in .2a, I did 'start_mining' but I think I may have been missing what to put into the 'kernel' portion. I tried opencl and something else having to do with phatk or something (words found through searching), but had no success.
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talpan
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June 26, 2011, 08:58:18 PM |
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Hi you have to type sudo su df in two seperate lines regards, Talpan
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no_alone
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Activity: 84
Merit: 10
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June 26, 2011, 09:00:14 PM |
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Hey guys,
This seems like great stuff but I seem to be struggling to utilize this and that. I am very newbish to linux but I have used a fair share of command line in windows myself.
Firstly, I saw the persistence guide a few moments ago and followed it up until the point where I am asked to open a root terminal ( I am certain I opened a root term ) and enter sudo su- df. I have tried several variations of this command and have come up with 'unknown user: df' as the most promising and 'unknown command' as the most common. I don't know if anyone else came across this error, if it is some mistake on my part or whatever. Any help would be appreciated, thanks
I am excited about .2b, I wasn't able to get mining going in .2a, I did 'start_mining' but I think I may have been missing what to put into the 'kernel' portion. I tried opencl and something else having to do with phatk or something (words found through searching), but had no success.
Only if you use phoenix miners you need to write what kernel to use... anyway you can wite phatk to use phatk kernal and you can also write poclbm to use poclbm kernal
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Bitcoin Swami
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June 26, 2011, 09:02:22 PM |
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AMDoverdriveCtrl is included, you run 1 instance (for card0) from the start menu icon, the next one from a console.
Search this forum for the commands.
Oh I see the new version has the powertune option... linuxcoin has the old version i guess. Not sure how to install things on linuxcoin (gotta set up persistant mode first) but I guess I'll figure it out. EDIT: Yes powertune is included in AMDOverdriveCtrl TFTP cluster guide is on its way You lucky people hahaha Right but I have to download the new version yes? Just makin sure peace
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drgr33n (OP)
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June 26, 2011, 09:03:12 PM |
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Hi you have to type sudo su df in two seperate lines regards, Talpan or just
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Jonathan Ryan Owens
Donator
Sr. Member
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Activity: 392
Merit: 252
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June 26, 2011, 09:04:11 PM |
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For anyone wanting to be able to open AMDOverdriveCtrl for multiple cards at once and quickly apply saved overclock + powertune settings, go to your root terminal and type the following:
AMDOverdriveCtrl -i
output should look like this:
INF: Nr. of Adapters: 9 INF: Adapter index: 0, active, ID:17880608, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 1, inact., ID:17880608, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 2, inact., ID:17880608, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 3, active, ID:20057984, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 4, inact., ID:20057984, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 5, inact., ID:20057984, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 6, active, ID:22180816, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 7, inact., ID:22180816, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 8, inact., ID:22180816, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series Option 'i' requires a value.
Make a note of your active adapter #'s. In this case there are three active adapters listed @ 0,3 and 5.
Next up, open accessories "leafpad" and type/paste the following (replacing your card #s and quantity)..
#!/bin/sh
AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 0 & AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 3 & AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 5 &
Save the file as "anyname" to the desktop, right click and select properties. click the checkbox to make the file executable under the permissions tab.
Double click, click execute and your consoles will all pop up. If you have 4 cards, it the shell script would look like this:
#!/bin/sh
AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 0 & AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 3 & AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 5 & AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 7 &
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Folax
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June 26, 2011, 09:05:38 PM |
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I will put a space between: sudo su- and: df I understand this could be confusing, thanks! -edit- made it into: sudo df Thanks Gr33n!
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My GF thinks I'm useless, if you think otherwise and can proof it to her, please do so and donate: 14wG6u2bAD9q1nLmLL9MST1ZzbTE9Pt8nG
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drgr33n (OP)
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June 26, 2011, 09:06:34 PM Last edit: June 26, 2011, 09:35:04 PM by drgr33n |
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AMDoverdriveCtrl is included, you run 1 instance (for card0) from the start menu icon, the next one from a console.
Search this forum for the commands.
Oh I see the new version has the powertune option... linuxcoin has the old version i guess. Not sure how to install things on linuxcoin (gotta set up persistant mode first) but I guess I'll figure it out. EDIT: Yes powertune is included in AMDOverdriveCtrl TFTP cluster guide is on its way You lucky people hahaha Right but I have to download the new version yes? Just makin sure peace Yup I'd get the new version most things have been updated and a lot of bugs fixed. If you wanted to install it you could just save it to your usb drive and when you boot cd /live dpkg -i AMDOverdriveCtrl*.deb
For anyone wanting to be able to open AMDOverdriveCtrl for multiple cards at once and quickly apply saved overclock + powertune settings, go to your root terminal and type the following:
AMDOverdriveCtrl -i
output should look like this:
INF: Nr. of Adapters: 9 INF: Adapter index: 0, active, ID:17880608, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 1, inact., ID:17880608, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 2, inact., ID:17880608, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 3, active, ID:20057984, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 4, inact., ID:20057984, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 5, inact., ID:20057984, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 6, active, ID:22180816, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 7, inact., ID:22180816, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series INF: Adapter index: 8, inact., ID:22180816, AMD Radeon HD 6900 Series Option 'i' requires a value.
Make a note of your active adapter #'s. In this case there are three active adapters listed @ 0,3 and 5.
Next up, open accessories "leafpad" and type/paste the following (replacing your card #s and quantity)..
#!/bin/sh
AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 0 & AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 3 & AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 5 &
Save the file as "anyname" to the desktop, right click and select properties. click the checkbox to make the file executable under the permissions tab.
Double click, click execute and your consoles will all pop up. If you have 4 cards, it the shell script would look like this:
#!/bin/sh
AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 0 & AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 3 & AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 5 & AMDOverdriveCtrl -i 7 &
Great info pigki I'm not a fan of using GUI's so wasn't sure how to do this Guys I want to apologize for not including smartcoin I wasn't aware the author had released a beta release and haven't contacted him yet to ask if he minded if I added smartcoin to linuxcoin. I've added a link to his post with the links etc to smartcoin. I suggest people use this instead of start_mining as it was just a quick and dirty bash script really to guide peops through starting the miners. Hope everyone is enjoying Linuxcoin and its playing nice with you Right I'm off for a nice cold beer and some cod !!
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Bitcoin Swami
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June 26, 2011, 11:11:21 PM |
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Thanks bud worked perfectly, I now know how to install things in linux. Bad news is the PowerTune really had zero effect on my MHS
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Jonathan Ryan Owens
Donator
Sr. Member
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Activity: 392
Merit: 252
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June 27, 2011, 12:42:04 AM |
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For people who cannot get persistency to work using the existing guides (like myself), here is another try which works for me (for LinuxCoin install): You need: USB thump drive Windows PC linuxcoin-vX (whatever version you want, get it here: http://forum.bitcoin.org/index.php?topic=7374.0) BOOTICE (get it here: http://www.pendriveapps.com/bootice-partition-flash-drive-edit-boot-sector/) unetbootin (get it here: http://unetbootin.sourceforge.net/) Creating 2 partitions:A. Put the USB thumbdrive in the Windows PC B. Format the USB thumbdrive FAT32 C. Start Bootice (Make sure you have selected the USB thumbdrive. Don't mind the size in this image) D. Select Parts Manage E. Select ReFormat USB disk F. Select USB-HDD mode (Multi Partitions) and click Next G. Enter 1024 in the first field (Partition1) and select FAT32 on Partition1 and Partition4, leave the rest as it is and click OK. H. It will ask you to confirm the reformat of the partitions, click OK if you agree and finally you will get a confirmation box telling you all is ok. I. Close this tool. J. Start Unetbootin K. Select to use an ISO L. enter 1024 in the field for persistence M. Click Install and wait, when it offers to reboot: exit. Creating persistency:1. Take the USB thumbdrive from the Window PC and put it in your soon-to-be Linux miner box 2. Boot, select persistence mode 3. When booted, open a root terminal, type: sudo df You should now get a list of your drives. You should see /dev/sda2 mounted under /media/7A6D-A74F (or something like that) sda is the drive, sda2 is the partition 4. umount /media/7A6D-A74F mkfs.ext4 /dev/sda2 -L live-rw 5. It will not give a confirmation, now shut down the system and start it, selecting Persistence mode. 6. After rebooting, open a root terminal and do: df look at sda2, it should say: live/cow For me it reads: /dev/sda1 = /live/image /dev/sda2 = /live/cow Now you have persistence on your USB thumbdrive! Note: I am obviously no Linux expert, or an expert in anything whatsoever, that is why I had to write this down, so I could do it again every time I need to. Please don't hesitate to correct me on anything, my girlfriend doesn't either... I'm stuck at sudo df.... here's the output. anyone have ideas? it looks like the referenced /media/ mentioned in the post doesn't exist on my output. i have a tmpfs mounted on /live/cow but.. well.. i'm stuck. help! Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on aufs 1862288 12352 1849936 1% / tmpfs 5120 0 5120 0% /lib/init/rw tmpfs 372460 572 371888 1% /run tmpfs 5120 0 5120 0% /run/lock tmpfs 744916 44 744872 1% /tmp udev 1853764 0 1853764 0% /dev tmpfs 744916 144 744772 1% /run/shm /dev/sdb1 2096288 2095764 524 100% /live/image tmpfs 1862288 12352 1849936 1% /live/cow tmpfs 1862288 0 1862288 0% /live
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Bitcoin Swami
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June 27, 2011, 01:52:39 AM |
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Hm same here I am stuck at sudo df too.
I just installed .02a with that little persistence tutorial and it worked fine. I re did it once I saw a new version out. Now with the new version I don't get the same thing when I type sudo df. I don't believe I did anything different.
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pinjas
Newbie
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June 27, 2011, 02:08:19 AM |
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I finally got some mining going in linuxcoin. My problem stemmed from the syntax (or lack of) during one of the options.
I type start_mining in a terminal (bottom left coin, click, accessories), enter option 1, and for the option 'Enter url and press enter' I use something like this 'poolminingwebsite.com -p 8334'. I was trying something like poolminingwebsite.com:8334.
The name and password are pretty obvious and need to explanation. For some reason, before all that, when I would type all this into the terminals options, the terminal that would open to display the mining information would open and close instantly. It wasn't until I opened ati sdk license and amd overdrive did it actually not just close instantly. I opened the ati sdk license thing assuming that that was the problem, tried to mine a few times with no success, then opened the amd overdrive ctrl program and then I made some progress.
I still haven't figured out the phoenix thing. A few seemed to mention hashkill being really good as well, maybe I'll give that a shot.
Also, I am still trying to figure out the persistence thing, 'sudo df' did give me a list of stuff. However, '/dev/sdb1 10520641051712 352 100% /live/image' is the only line that seems to relate to anything further. I see nothing relating to 2 sets of 4 random numbers and letters. Perhaps I'll reformat the flash drive just to be sure I followed all the steps correctly.
@no_alone Thanks for the response. I was under the impression that phoenix might be capable of giving better mhash performance, which is why I am eager to compare. I have tried both of those options for the kernel option but the mining terminal opens and closes instantly. This doesn't happen when I choose option 1.
As I've noted previously, I am a complete linux newb. I am pretty sure many obvious details are sneaking past me, I am sorry for asking to have it spoon fed to me : P.
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Bitcoin Swami
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June 27, 2011, 02:24:34 AM |
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Yes I tried it again with the same result. Something must be different on the new version or something?
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drgr33n (OP)
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June 27, 2011, 02:29:37 AM Last edit: June 27, 2011, 03:03:11 AM by drgr33n |
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Are you guys booting with the persistence option ? Thanks for all the email and host links guys !! I'll reply to you all tomorrow as its very late now and I need to get some sleep PS: Check out this demo of linuxcoin acting a s a pxe server and distributing itself http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VfVN4l3RomI
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