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This option is becoming more popular recently, and I propose an example to be shown in the bitcoin.conf. pruning comments updated and corrected pruning comments Revised details on pruning in bitcoin.conf Revised details on pruning in bitcoin.conf spelling and space spelling and space add details on pruning in bitcoin.conf
148 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
148 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
##
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## bitcoin.conf configuration file. Lines beginning with # are comments.
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##
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# Network-related settings:
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# Run on the test network instead of the real bitcoin network.
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#testnet=0
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# Run a regression test network
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#regtest=0
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# Connect via a SOCKS5 proxy
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#proxy=127.0.0.1:9050
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# Bind to given address and always listen on it. Use [host]:port notation for IPv6
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#bind=<addr>
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# Bind to given address and whitelist peers connecting to it. Use [host]:port notation for IPv6
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#whitebind=<addr>
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##############################################################
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## Quick Primer on addnode vs connect ##
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## Let's say for instance you use addnode=4.2.2.4 ##
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## addnode will connect you to and tell you about the ##
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## nodes connected to 4.2.2.4. In addition it will tell ##
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## the other nodes connected to it that you exist so ##
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## they can connect to you. ##
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## connect will not do the above when you 'connect' to it. ##
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## It will *only* connect you to 4.2.2.4 and no one else.##
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## ##
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## So if you're behind a firewall, or have other problems ##
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## finding nodes, add some using 'addnode'. ##
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## ##
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## If you want to stay private, use 'connect' to only ##
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## connect to "trusted" nodes. ##
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## ##
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## If you run multiple nodes on a LAN, there's no need for ##
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## all of them to open lots of connections. Instead ##
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## 'connect' them all to one node that is port forwarded ##
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## and has lots of connections. ##
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## Thanks goes to [Noodle] on Freenode. ##
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##############################################################
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# Use as many addnode= settings as you like to connect to specific peers
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#addnode=69.164.218.197
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#addnode=10.0.0.2:8333
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# Alternatively use as many connect= settings as you like to connect ONLY to specific peers
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#connect=69.164.218.197
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#connect=10.0.0.1:8333
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# Listening mode, enabled by default except when 'connect' is being used
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#listen=1
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# Maximum number of inbound+outbound connections.
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#maxconnections=
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#
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# JSON-RPC options (for controlling a running Bitcoin/bitcoind process)
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#
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# server=1 tells Bitcoin-Qt and bitcoind to accept JSON-RPC commands
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#server=0
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# Bind to given address to listen for JSON-RPC connections. Use [host]:port notation for IPv6.
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# This option can be specified multiple times (default: bind to all interfaces)
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#rpcbind=<addr>
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# If no rpcpassword is set, rpc cookie auth is sought. The default `-rpccookiefile` name
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# is .cookie and found in the `-datadir` being used for bitcoind. This option is typically used
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# when the server and client are run as the same user.
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#
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# If not, you must set rpcuser and rpcpassword to secure the JSON-RPC api. The first
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# method(DEPRECATED) is to set this pair for the server and client:
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#rpcuser=Ulysseys
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#rpcpassword=YourSuperGreatPasswordNumber_DO_NOT_USE_THIS_OR_YOU_WILL_GET_ROBBED_385593
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#
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# The second method `rpcauth` can be added to server startup argument. It is set at intialization time
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# using the output from the script in share/rpcuser/rpcuser.py after providing a username:
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#
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# ./share/rpcuser/rpcuser.py alice
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# String to be appended to bitcoin.conf:
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# rpcauth=alice:f7efda5c189b999524f151318c0c86$d5b51b3beffbc02b724e5d095828e0bc8b2456e9ac8757ae3211a5d9b16a22ae
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# Your password:
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# DONT_USE_THIS_YOU_WILL_GET_ROBBED_8ak1gI25KFTvjovL3gAM967mies3E=
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#
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# On client-side, you add the normal user/password pair to send commands:
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#rpcuser=alice
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#rpcpassword=DONT_USE_THIS_YOU_WILL_GET_ROBBED_8ak1gI25KFTvjovL3gAM967mies3E=
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#
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# You can even add multiple entries of these to the server conf file, and client can use any of them:
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# rpcauth=bob:b2dd077cb54591a2f3139e69a897ac$4e71f08d48b4347cf8eff3815c0e25ae2e9a4340474079f55705f40574f4ec99
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# How many seconds bitcoin will wait for a complete RPC HTTP request.
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# after the HTTP connection is established.
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#rpcclienttimeout=30
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# By default, only RPC connections from localhost are allowed.
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# Specify as many rpcallowip= settings as you like to allow connections from other hosts,
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# either as a single IPv4/IPv6 or with a subnet specification.
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# NOTE: opening up the RPC port to hosts outside your local trusted network is NOT RECOMMENDED,
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# because the rpcpassword is transmitted over the network unencrypted.
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# server=1 tells Bitcoin-Qt to accept JSON-RPC commands.
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# it is also read by bitcoind to determine if RPC should be enabled
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#rpcallowip=10.1.1.34/255.255.255.0
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#rpcallowip=1.2.3.4/24
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#rpcallowip=2001:db8:85a3:0:0:8a2e:370:7334/96
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# Listen for RPC connections on this TCP port:
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#rpcport=8332
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# You can use Bitcoin or bitcoind to send commands to Bitcoin/bitcoind
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# running on another host using this option:
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#rpcconnect=127.0.0.1
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# Create transactions that have enough fees so they are likely to begin confirmation within n blocks (default: 6).
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# This setting is over-ridden by the -paytxfee option.
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#txconfirmtarget=n
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# Miscellaneous options
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# Pre-generate this many public/private key pairs, so wallet backups will be valid for
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# both prior transactions and several dozen future transactions.
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#keypool=100
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# Pay an optional transaction fee every time you send bitcoins. Transactions with fees
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# are more likely than free transactions to be included in generated blocks, so may
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# be validated sooner.
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#paytxfee=0.00
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# Enable pruning to reduce storage requirements by deleting old blocks.
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# This mode is incompatible with -txindex and -rescan.
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# 0 = default (no pruning).
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# 1 = allows manual pruning via RPC.
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# >=550 = target to stay under in MiB.
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#prune=550
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# User interface options
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# Start Bitcoin minimized
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#min=1
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# Minimize to the system tray
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#minimizetotray=1
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