dash/doc/guide-startmany.md

179 lines
6.0 KiB
Markdown

#start-many Setup Guide
## Two Options for Setting up your Wallet
There are many ways to setup a wallet to support start-many. This guide will walk through two of them.
1. [Importing an existing wallet (recommended if you are consolidating wallets).](#option1)
2. [Sending 1000 DASH to new wallet addresses.](#option2)
## <a name="option1"></a>Option 1. Importing an existing wallet
This is the way to go if you are consolidating multiple wallets into one that supports start-many.
### From your single-instance Masternode Wallet
Open your QT Wallet and go to console (from the menu select `Tools` => `Debug Console`)
Dump the private key from your MasterNode's pulic key.
```
walletpassphrase [your_wallet_passphrase] 600
dumpprivkey [mn_public_key]
```
Copy the resulting priviate key. You'll use it in the next step.
### From your multi-instance Masternode Wallet
Open your QT Wallet and go to console (from the menu select `Tools` => `Debug Console`)
Import the private key from the step above.
```
walletpassphrase [your_wallet_passphrase] 600
importprivkey [single_instance_private_key]
```
The wallet will re-scan and you will see your available balance increase by the amount that was in the imported wallet.
[Skip Option 2. and go to Create masternode.conf file](#masternodeconf)
## <a name="option2"></a>Option 2. Starting with a new wallet
[If you used Option 1 above, then you can skip down to Create masternode.conf file.](#masternodeconf)
### Create New Wallet Addresses
1. Open the QT Wallet.
2. Click the Receive tab.
3. Fill in the form to request a payment.
* Label: mn01
* Amount: 1000 (optional)
* Click *Request payment* button
5. Click the *Copy Address* button
Create a new wallet address for each Masternode.
Close your QT Wallet.
### Send 1000 DASH to New Addresses
Just like setting up a standard MN. 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.
## <a name="masternodeconf"></a>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 correspondig collateral output transaction that holds the 1000 DASH.
The masternode private key may be an existing key from [Option 1](#option1), or a newly generated key from [Option 2](#option2).
*Note: The masternode priviate 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
[From the dash github repo](https://github.com/darkcoin/darkcoin/blob/master/doc/masternode_conf.md)
`masternode.conf` format is a space seperated 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
```
## What about the dash.conf file?
If you are using a `masternode.conf` file you no longer need the `dash.conf` file. The exception is if you need custom settings (_thanks oblox_). In that case you **must** remove `masternode=1` from local `dash.conf` file. This option should be used only to start local Hot masternode now.
## 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 .dash/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
```dashd getinfo```
and comparing with the official explorer at http://explorer.dashpay.io/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.
1. `masternode start-alias [alias_from_masternode.conf]`
Example ```masternode start-alias mn01```
2. `masternode start-many`
## Verify that Masternodes actually started
### Remote
Issue command `masternode status`
It should return you something like that:
```
dash-cli masternode status
{
"vin" : "CTxIn(COutPoint(<collateral_output>, <collateral_output_index>), scriptSig=)",
"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._