4.2 KiB
start-many Setup Guide
Setting up your Wallet
Create New Wallet Addresses
- Open the QT Wallet.
- Click the Receive tab.
- Fill in the form to request a payment.
- Label: mn01
- Amount: 1000 (optional)
- Click Request payment button
- Click the Copy Address button
Create a new wallet address for each Masternode.
Close your QT Wallet.
Send 1000 DASH to New Addresses
Send exactly 1000 DASH to each new address created above.
Create New Masternode Private Keys
Open your QT Wallet and go to console (from the menu select Tools
=> Debug Console
)
Issue the following:
masternode genkey
Note: A masternode private key will need to be created for each Masternode you run. You should not use the same masternode private key for multiple Masternodes.
Close your QT Wallet.
Create masternode.conf file
Remember... this is local. Make sure your QT is not running.
Create the masternode.conf
file in the same directory as your wallet.dat
.
Copy the masternode private key and corresponding collateral output transaction that holds the 1000 DASH.
Note: The masternode private key is not the same as a wallet private key. Never put your wallet private key in the masternode.conf file. That is almost equivalent to putting your 1000 DASH on the remote server and defeats the purpose of a hot/cold setup.
Get the collateral output
Open your QT Wallet and go to console (from the menu select Tools
=> Debug Console
)
Issue the following:
masternode outputs
Make note of the hash (which is your collateral_output) and index.
Enter your Masternode details into your masternode.conf file
masternode.conf
format is a space separated text file. Each line consisting of an alias, IP address followed by port, masternode private key, collateral output transaction id and collateral output index.
alias ipaddress:port masternode_private_key collateral_output collateral_output_index
Example:
mn01 127.0.0.1:9999 93HaYBVUCYjEMeeH1Y4sBGLALQZE1Yc1K64xiqgX37tGBDQL8Xg 2bcd3c84c84f87eaa86e4e56834c92927a07f9e18718810b92e0d0324456a67c 0
mn02 127.0.0.2:9999 93WaAb3htPJEV8E9aQcN23Jt97bPex7YvWfgMDTUdWJvzmrMqey aa9f1034d973377a5e733272c3d0eced1de22555ad45d6b24abadff8087948d4 0
Update dash.conf on server
If you generated a new masternode private key, you will need to update the remote dash.conf
files.
Shut down the daemon and then edit the file.
nano .dashcore/dash.conf
Edit the masternodeprivkey
If you generated a new masternode private key, you will need to update the masternodeprivkey
value in your remote dash.conf
file.
Start your Masternodes
Remote
If your remote server is not running, start your remote daemon as you normally would.
You can confirm that remote server is on the correct block by issuing
dash-cli getinfo
and comparing with the official explorer at https://explorer.dash.org/chain/Dash
Local
Finally... time to start from local.
Open up your QT Wallet
From the menu select Tools
=> Debug Console
If you want to review your masternode.conf
setting before starting Masternodes, issue the following in the Debug Console:
masternode list-conf
Give it the eye-ball test. If satisfied, you can start your Masternodes one of two ways.
masternode start-alias [alias_from_masternode.conf]
Examplemasternode start-alias mn01
masternode start-many
Verify that Masternodes actually started
Remote
Issue command masternode status
It should return you something like that:
dash-cli masternode status
{
"outpoint" : "<collateral_output>-<collateral_output_index>",
"service" : "<ipaddress>:<port>",
"pubkey" : "<1000 DASH address>",
"status" : "Masternode successfully started"
}
Command output should have "Masternode successfully started" in its status
field now. If it says "not capable" instead, you should check your config again.
Local
Search your Masternodes on https://dashninja.pl/masternodes.html
Hint: Bookmark it, you definitely will be using this site a lot.