# monero-pool A Monero mining pool server written in C. Design decisions are focused on performance and efficiency, hence the use of libevent and LMDB. Currently it uses only two threads (one for the stratum clients and one for the web UI clients). It gets away with this thanks to the efficiency of libevent (for the stratum clients) and some sensible proxying/caching being placed in front of the [web UI](#web-ui). The single payout mechanism is PPLNS, which favors loyal pool miners. I have no plans to add any other payout mechanisms or other coins. Work should stay focussed on performance, efficiency and stability. ## Project status I have tested this quite a bit on the Monero testnet (if you plan to do the same, ensure to use `--testnet` flag when starting your wallet and daemon) and mainnet, but there is always room for improvement. Please see the [TODO](./TODO) file for the current list of things that could do with looking at. There is also a reference mainnet pool setup and running at [http://monerop.com](http://monerop.com). If you want to help with testing or help setting up your own pool, give me a shout on IRC: jtgrassie on Freenode. ## Compiling from source ### Dependencies The build system now requires the Monero source tree to be cloned and compiled. Follow the [instructions](https://github.com/monero-project/monero#compiling-monero-from-source) for compiling Monero, then export the following variable: ```bash export MONERO_ROOT=/path/to/cloned/monero ``` Replacing the path appropriately. Beyond the Monero dependencies, the following extra libraries are also required to build the pool: - liblmdb - libevent - json-c - libmicrohttpd - uuid As an example, on Ubuntu, these dependencies can be installed with the following command: ``` sudo apt-get install liblmdb-dev libevent-dev libjson-c-dev libmicrohttpd-dev uuid-dev ``` ### Compile First install all the dependencies as described above. Then to compile the pool as a release build, run: ``` make release ``` The application will be built in `build/release/`. Optionally you can compile a debug build by simply running: ``` make ``` Debug builds are output in `build/debug/`. ## Configuration Copy and edit the `pool.conf` file to either the same directory as the compiled binary `monero-pool`, or place it in your home directory or launch `monero-pool` with the flag `--config-file path/to/pool.conf` to use a custom location. The configuration options should be self explanatory. #### Block notification There is one configuration option that deserves a special mention. You can optionally start the pool with the flag `--block-notified` (or set in the config file: `block-notified = 1`). This will prevent the pool from *polling* for new blocks using a timer, and instead, fetch a new block template when it receives a *signal* (specifically, *SIGUSR1*). Now whenever you start `monerod`, you'll make use of its `--block-notify` option. E.g.
monerod ... --block-notify '/usr/bin/pkill -USR1 monero-pool'This instructs `monerod` to send the required signal, *SIGUSR1*, to your pool whenever a new block is added to the chain. Using this mechanism has a significant benefit - your pool *immediatley* knows when to fetch a new block template to send to your miners. You're essentially giving your miners a head-start over miners in pools which use polling (which is what all the other pool implementations do). ## Running Ensure you have your Monero daemon (`monerod`) and wallet RPC (`monero-wallet-rpc`) up and running with the correct host and port settings as defined in the pool config file. It is highly recommended to run these on the same host as the pool server to avoid network latency when their RPC methods are called. Then simply `cd build/debug|release` and run `./monero-pool`. ## Web UI There is a minimal web UI that gets served on the port specified in the config file. It's advisable to use either Apache or Nginx as a proxy in front of this with some appropriate caching. ## Supporting the project This mining pool has **no built-in developer donation** (like *other* mining pool software has), so if you use it and want to donate, XMR donations to: ``` 451ytzQg1vUVkuAW73VsQ72G96FUjASi4WNQse3v8ALfjiR5vLzGQ2hMUdYhG38Fi15eJ5FJ1ZL4EV1SFVi228muGX4f3SV ``` would be very much appreciated. ## License Please see the [LICENSE](./LICENSE) file. [//]: # ( vim: set tw=80: )