API-README 34 KB

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  1. This README contains details about the cgminer RPC API
  2. It also includes some detailed information at the end,
  3. about using miner.php
  4. If you start cgminer with the "--api-listen" option, it will listen on a
  5. simple TCP/IP socket for single string API requests from the same machine
  6. running cgminer and reply with a string and then close the socket each time
  7. If you add the "--api-network" option, it will accept API requests from any
  8. network attached computer.
  9. You can only access the comands that reply with data in this mode.
  10. By default, you cannot access any privileged command that affects the miner -
  11. you will receive an access denied status message see --api-allow below.
  12. You can specify IP addresses/prefixes that are only allowed to access the API
  13. with the "--api-allow" option e.g. --api-allow W:192.168.0.1,10.0.0/24
  14. will allow 192.168.0.1 or any address matching 10.0.0.*, but nothing else
  15. IP addresses are automatically padded with extra '.0's as needed
  16. Without a /prefix is the same as specifying /32
  17. 0/0 means all IP addresses.
  18. The 'W:' on the front gives that address/subnet privileged access to commands
  19. that modify cgminer (thus all API commands)
  20. Without it those commands return an access denied status.
  21. See --api-groups below to define other groups like W:
  22. Privileged access is checked in the order the IP addresses were supplied to
  23. "--api-allow"
  24. The first match determines the privilege level.
  25. Using the "--api-allow" option overides the "--api-network" option if they
  26. are both specified
  27. With "--api-allow", 127.0.0.1 is not by default given access unless specified
  28. More groups (like the privileged group W:) can be defined using the
  29. --api-groups command
  30. Valid groups are only the letters A-Z (except R & W are predefined) and are
  31. not case sensitive
  32. The R: group is the same as not privileged access
  33. The W: group is (as stated) privileged access (thus all API commands)
  34. To give an IP address/subnet access to a group you use the group letter
  35. in front of the IP address instead of W: e.g. P:192.168.0/32
  36. An IP address/subnet can only be a member of one group
  37. A sample API group would be:
  38. --api-groups P:switchpool:enablepool:addpool:disablepool:removepool.poolpriority:*
  39. This would create a group 'P' that can do all current pool commands and all
  40. non-priviliged commands - the '*' means all non-priviledged commands
  41. Without the '*' the group would only have access to the pool commands
  42. Defining multiple groups example:
  43. --api-groups Q:quit:restart:*,S:save
  44. This would define 2 groups:
  45. Q: that can 'quit' and 'restart' as well as all non-priviledged commands
  46. S: that can only 'save' and no other commands
  47. The RPC API request can be either simple text or JSON.
  48. If the request is JSON (starts with '{'), it will reply with a JSON formatted
  49. response, otherwise it replies with text formatted as described further below.
  50. The JSON request format required is '{"command":"CMD","parameter":"PARAM"}'
  51. (though of course parameter is not required for all requests)
  52. where "CMD" is from the "Request" column below and "PARAM" would be e.g.
  53. the CPU/GPU number if required.
  54. An example request in both formats to set GPU 0 fan to 80%:
  55. gpufan|0,80
  56. {"command":"gpufan","parameter":"0,80"}
  57. The format of each reply (unless stated otherwise) is a STATUS section
  58. followed by an optional detail section
  59. From API version 1.7 onwards, reply strings in JSON and Text have the
  60. necessary escaping as required to avoid ambiguity - they didn't before 1.7
  61. For JSON the 2 characters '"' and '\' are escaped with a '\' before them
  62. For Text the 4 characters '|' ',' '=' and '\' are escaped the same way
  63. Only user entered information will contain characters that require being
  64. escaped, such as Pool URL, User and Password or the Config save filename,
  65. when they are returned in messages or as their values by the API
  66. For API version 1.4 and later:
  67. The STATUS section is:
  68. STATUS=X,When=NNN,Code=N,Msg=string,Description=string|
  69. STATUS=X Where X is one of:
  70. W - Warning
  71. I - Informational
  72. S - Success
  73. E - Error
  74. F - Fatal (code bug)
  75. When=NNN
  76. Standard long time of request in seconds
  77. Code=N
  78. Each unique reply has a unigue Code (See api.c - #define MSG_NNNNNN)
  79. Msg=string
  80. Message matching the Code value N
  81. Description=string
  82. This defaults to the cgminer version but is the value of --api-description
  83. if it was specified at runtime.
  84. For API version 1.10 and later:
  85. The list of requests - a (*) means it requires privileged access - and replies are:
  86. Request Reply Section Details
  87. ------- ------------- -------
  88. version VERSION CGMiner=cgminer, version
  89. API=API| version
  90. config CONFIG Some miner configuration information:
  91. GPU Count=N, <- the number of GPUs
  92. PGA Count=N, <- the number of PGAs
  93. CPU Count=N, <- the number of CPUs
  94. Pool Count=N, <- the number of Pools
  95. ADL=X, <- Y or N if ADL is compiled in the code
  96. ADL in use=X, <- Y or N if any GPU has ADL
  97. Strategy=Name, <- the current pool strategy
  98. Log Interval=N, <- log interval (--log N)
  99. Device Code=GPU ICA , <- spaced list of compiled devices
  100. OS=Linux/Apple/..., <- operating System
  101. Failover-Only=true/false | <- failover-only setting
  102. summary SUMMARY The status summary of the miner
  103. e.g. Elapsed=NNN,Found Blocks=N,Getworks=N,...|
  104. pools POOLS The status of each pool
  105. e.g. Pool=0,URL=http://pool.com:6311,Status=Alive,...|
  106. devs DEVS Each available GPU, PGA and CPU with their details
  107. e.g. GPU=0,Accepted=NN,MHS av=NNN,...,Intensity=D|
  108. Last Share Time=NNN, <- standand long time in seconds
  109. (or 0 if none) of last accepted share
  110. Last Share Pool=N, <- pool number (or -1 if none)
  111. Will not report PGAs if PGA mining is disabled
  112. Will not report CPUs if CPU mining is disabled
  113. gpu|N GPU The details of a single GPU number N in the same
  114. format and details as for DEVS
  115. pga|N PGA The details of a single PGA number N in the same
  116. format and details as for DEVS
  117. This is only available if PGA mining is enabled
  118. Use 'pgacount' or 'config' first to see if there are any
  119. cpu|N CPU The details of a single CPU number N in the same
  120. format and details as for DEVS
  121. This is only available if CPU mining is enabled
  122. Use 'cpucount' or 'config' first to see if there are any
  123. gpucount GPUS Count=N| <- the number of GPUs
  124. pgacount PGAS Count=N| <- the number of PGAs
  125. Always returns 0 if PGA mining is disabled
  126. cpucount CPUS Count=N| <- the number of CPUs
  127. Always returns 0 if CPU mining is disabled
  128. switchpool|N (*)
  129. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  130. stating the results of switching pool N to the
  131. highest priority (the pool is also enabled)
  132. The Msg includes the pool URL
  133. enablepool|N (*)
  134. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  135. stating the results of enabling pool N
  136. The Msg includes the pool URL
  137. addpool|URL,USR,PASS (*)
  138. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  139. stating the results of attempting to add pool N
  140. The Msg includes the pool URL
  141. Use '\\' to get a '\' and '\,' to include a comma
  142. inside URL, USR or PASS
  143. poolpriority|N,... (*)
  144. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  145. stating the results of changing pool priorities
  146. See usage below
  147. disablepool|N (*)
  148. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  149. stating the results of disabling pool N
  150. The Msg includes the pool URL
  151. removepool|N (*)
  152. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  153. stating the results of removing pool N
  154. The Msg includes the pool URL
  155. N.B. all details for the pool will be lost
  156. gpuenable|N (*)
  157. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  158. stating the results of the enable request
  159. gpudisable|N (*)
  160. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  161. stating the results of the disable request
  162. gpurestart|N (*)
  163. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  164. stating the results of the restart request
  165. gpuintensity|N,I (*)
  166. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  167. stating the results of setting GPU N intensity to I
  168. gpumem|N,V (*)
  169. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  170. stating the results of setting GPU N memoryclock to V MHz
  171. gpuengine|N,V (*)
  172. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  173. stating the results of setting GPU N clock to V MHz
  174. gpufan|N,V (*)
  175. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  176. stating the results of setting GPU N fan speed to V%
  177. gpuvddc|N,V (*)
  178. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  179. stating the results of setting GPU N vddc to V
  180. save|filename (*)
  181. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  182. stating success or failure saving the cgminer config
  183. to filename
  184. The filename is optional and will use the cgminer
  185. default if not specified
  186. quit (*) none There is no status section but just a single "BYE"
  187. reply before cgminer quits
  188. notify NOTIFY The last status and history count of each devices problem
  189. This lists all devices including those not supported
  190. by the 'devs' command
  191. e.g. NOTIFY=0,Name=GPU,ID=0,Last Well=1332432290,...|
  192. privileged (*)
  193. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  194. stating an error if you do not have privileged access
  195. to the API and success if you do have privilege
  196. The command doesn't change anything in cgminer
  197. pgaenable|N (*)
  198. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  199. stating the results of the enable request
  200. You cannot enable a PGA if it's status is not WELL
  201. This is only available if PGA mining is enabled
  202. pgadisable|N (*)
  203. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  204. stating the results of the disable request
  205. This is only available if PGA mining is enabled
  206. devdetails DEVDETAILS Each device with a list of their static details
  207. This lists all devices including those not supported
  208. by the 'devs' command
  209. e.g. DEVDETAILS=0,Name=GPU,ID=0,Driver=opencl,...|
  210. restart (*) none There is no status section but just a single "RESTART"
  211. reply before cgminer restarts
  212. stats STATS Each device or pool that has 1 or more getworks
  213. with a list of stats regarding getwork times
  214. The values returned by stats may change in future
  215. versions thus would not normally be displayed
  216. Device drivers are also able to add stats to the
  217. end of the details returned
  218. check|cmd COMMAND Exists=Y/N, <- 'cmd' exists in this version
  219. Access=Y/N| <- you have access to use 'cmd'
  220. failover-only|true/false (*)
  221. none There is no reply section just the STATUS section
  222. stating what failover-only was set to
  223. When you enable, disable or restart a GPU or PGA, you will also get Thread messages
  224. in the cgminer status window
  225. The 'poolpriority' command can be used to reset the priority order of multiple
  226. pools with a single command - 'switchpool' only sets a single pool to first priority
  227. Each pool should be listed by id number in order of preference (first = most
  228. preferred)
  229. Any pools not listed will be prioritised after the ones that are listed, in the
  230. priority order they were originally
  231. If the priority change affects the miner's preference for mining, it may switch
  232. immediately
  233. When you switch to a different pool to the current one (including by priority
  234. change), you will get a 'Switching to URL' message in the cgminer status
  235. windows
  236. Obviously, the JSON format is simply just the names as given before the '='
  237. with the values after the '='
  238. If you enable cgminer debug (-D or --debug) you will also get messages showing
  239. details of the requests received and the replies
  240. There are included 4 program examples for accessing the API:
  241. api-example.php - a php script to access the API
  242. usAge: php api-example.php command
  243. by default it sends a 'summary' request to the miner at 127.0.0.1:4028
  244. If you specify a command it will send that request instead
  245. You must modify the line "$socket = getsock('127.0.0.1', 4028);" at the
  246. beginning of "function request($cmd)" to change where it looks for cgminer
  247. API.java/API.class
  248. a java program to access the API (with source code)
  249. usAge is: java API command address port
  250. Any missing or blank parameters are replaced as if you entered:
  251. java API summary 127.0.0.1 4028
  252. api-example.c - a 'C' program to access the API (with source code)
  253. usAge: api-example [command [ip/host [port]]]
  254. again, as above, missing or blank parameters are replaced as if you entered:
  255. api-example summary 127.0.0.1 4028
  256. miner.php - an example web page to access the API
  257. This includes buttons and inputs to attempt access to the privileged commands
  258. See the end of this API-README for details of how to tune the display
  259. and also to use the option to display a multi-rig summary
  260. ----------
  261. Feature Changelog for external applications using the API:
  262. API V1.17
  263. Modified API commands:
  264. 'summary' - add 'Work Utility'
  265. 'pools' - add 'Diff1 Shares'
  266. ----------
  267. API V1.16 (cgminer v2.6.5)
  268. Added API commands:
  269. 'failover-only'
  270. Modified API commands:
  271. 'config' - include failover-only state
  272. ----------
  273. API V1.15 (cgminer v2.6.1)
  274. Added API commands:
  275. 'poolpriority'
  276. ----------
  277. API V1.14 (cgminer v2.5.0)
  278. Modified API commands:
  279. 'stats' - more icarus timing stats added
  280. 'notify' - include new device comms error counter
  281. The internal code for handling data was rewritten (~25% of the code)
  282. Completely backward compatible
  283. ----------
  284. API V1.13 (cgminer v2.4.4)
  285. Added API commands:
  286. 'check'
  287. Support was added to cgminer for API access groups with the --api-groups option
  288. It's 100% backward compatible with previous --api-access commands
  289. ----------
  290. API V1.12 (cgminer v2.4.3)
  291. Modified API commands:
  292. 'stats' - more pool stats added
  293. Support for the ModMinerQuad FPGA was added
  294. ----------
  295. API V1.11 (cgminer v2.4.2)
  296. Modified API commands:
  297. 'save' no longer requires a filename (use default if not specified)
  298. 'save' incorrectly returned status E (error) on success before.
  299. It now correctly returns S (success)
  300. ----------
  301. API V1.10 (cgminer v2.4.1)
  302. Added API commands:
  303. 'stats'
  304. N.B. the 'stats' command can change at any time so any specific content
  305. present should not be relied upon.
  306. The data content is mainly used for debugging purposes or hidden options
  307. in cgminer and can change as development work requires
  308. Modified API commands:
  309. 'pools' added "Last Share Time"
  310. ----------
  311. API V1.9 (cgminer v2.4.0)
  312. Added API commands:
  313. 'restart'
  314. Modified API commands:
  315. 'notify' corrected invalid JSON
  316. ----------
  317. API V1.8 (cgminer v2.3.5)
  318. Added API commands:
  319. 'devdetails'
  320. Support for the ZTex FPGA was added
  321. ----------
  322. API V1.7 (cgminer v2.3.4)
  323. Added API commands:
  324. 'removepool'
  325. Modified API commands:
  326. 'pools' added "User"
  327. From API version 1.7 onwards, reply strings in JSON and Text have the
  328. necessary escaping as required to avoid ambiguity
  329. For JSON the 2 characters '"' and '\' are escaped with a '\' before them
  330. For Text the 4 characters '|' ',' '=' and '\' are escaped the same way
  331. ----------
  332. API V1.6 (cgminer v2.3.2)
  333. Added API commands:
  334. 'pga'
  335. 'pgaenable'
  336. 'pgadisable'
  337. 'pgacount'
  338. Modified API commands:
  339. 'devs' now includes Icarus and Bitforce FPGA devices
  340. 'notify' added "*" to the front of the name of all numeric error fields
  341. 'config' correct "Log Interval" to use numeric (not text) type for JSON
  342. Support for Icarus and Bitforce FPGAs was added
  343. ----------
  344. API V1.5 was not released
  345. ----------
  346. API V1.4 (Kano's interim release of cgminer v2.3.1)
  347. Added API commands:
  348. 'notify'
  349. Modified API commands:
  350. 'config' added "Device Code" and "OS"
  351. Added "When" to the STATUS reply section of all commands
  352. ----------
  353. API V1.3 (cgminer v2.3.1-2)
  354. Added API commands:
  355. 'addpool'
  356. Modified API commands:
  357. 'devs'/'gpu' added "Total MH" for each device
  358. 'summary' added "Total MH"
  359. ----------
  360. API V1.2 (cgminer v2.3.0)
  361. Added API commands:
  362. 'enablepool'
  363. 'disablepool'
  364. 'privileged'
  365. Modified API commands:
  366. 'config' added "Log Interval"
  367. Starting with API V1.2, any attempt to access a command that requires
  368. privileged security, from an IP address that does not have privileged
  369. security, will return an "Access denied" Error Status
  370. ----------
  371. API V1.1 (cgminer v2.2.4)
  372. There were no changes to the API commands in cgminer v2.2.4,
  373. however support was added to cgminer for IP address restrictions
  374. with the --api-allow option
  375. ----------
  376. API V1.1 (cgminer v2.2.2)
  377. Prior to V1.1, devs/gpu incorrectly reported GPU0 Intensity for all GPUs
  378. Modified API commands:
  379. 'devs'/'gpu' added "Last Share Pool" and "Last Share Time" for each device
  380. ----------
  381. API V1.0 (cgminer v2.2.0)
  382. Remove default CPU support
  383. Added API commands:
  384. 'config'
  385. 'gpucount'
  386. 'cpucount'
  387. 'switchpool'
  388. 'gpuintensity'
  389. 'gpumem'
  390. 'gpuengine'
  391. 'gpufan'
  392. 'gpuvddc'
  393. 'save'
  394. ----------
  395. API V0.7 (cgminer v2.1.0)
  396. Initial release of the API in the main cgminer git
  397. Commands:
  398. 'version'
  399. 'devs'
  400. 'pools'
  401. 'summary'
  402. 'gpuenable'
  403. 'gpudisable'
  404. 'gpurestart'
  405. 'gpu'
  406. 'cpu'
  407. 'gpucount'
  408. 'cpucount'
  409. 'quit'
  410. ----------------------------------------
  411. miner.php
  412. =========
  413. miner.php is a PHP based interface to the cgminer RPC API
  414. (referred to simply as the API below)
  415. It can show rig details, summaries and input fields to allow you to change
  416. cgminer
  417. You can also create custom summary pages with it
  418. It has two levels to the security:
  419. 1) cgminer can be configured to allow or disallow API access and access level
  420. security for miner.php
  421. 2) miner.php can be configured to allow or disallow privileged cgminer
  422. access, if cgminer is configured to allow privileged access for miner.php
  423. ---------
  424. To use miner.php requires a web server with PHP
  425. Basics: On xubuntu 11.04, to install apache2 and php, the commands are:
  426. sudo apt-get install apache2
  427. sudo apt-get install php5
  428. sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 reload
  429. On Fedora 17:
  430. yum install httpd php
  431. systemctl restart httpd.service
  432. systemctl enable httpd.service --system
  433. On windows there are a few options.
  434. Try one of these (I've never used either one)
  435. http://www.apachefriends.org/en/xampp.html
  436. http://www.wampserver.com/en/
  437. ---------
  438. The basic cgminer option to enable the API is:
  439. --api-listen
  440. or in your cgminer.conf
  441. "api-listen" : true,
  442. (without the ',' on the end if it is the last item)
  443. If the web server is running on the cgminer computer, the above
  444. is the only change required to give miner.php basic access to
  445. the cgminer API
  446. -
  447. If the web server runs on a different computer to cgminer,
  448. you will also need to tell cgminer to allow the web server
  449. to access cgminer's API and tell miner.php where cgminer is
  450. Assuming a.b.c.d is the IP address of the web server, you
  451. would add the following to cgminer:
  452. --api-listen --api-allow a.b.c.d
  453. or in your cgminer.conf
  454. "api-listen" : true,
  455. "api-allow" : "a.b.c.d",
  456. to tell cgminer to give the web server read access to the API
  457. You also need to tell miner.php where cgminer is.
  458. Assuming cgminer is at IP address e.f.g.h, then you would
  459. edit miner.php and change the line
  460. $rigs = array('127.0.0.1:4028');
  461. to
  462. $rigs = array('e.f.g.h:4028');
  463. See --api-network or --api-allow for more access details
  464. and how to give write access
  465. ---------
  466. Once you have a web server with PHP running
  467. copy your miner.php to the main web folder
  468. On Xubuntu 11.04
  469. /var/www/
  470. On Fedora 17
  471. /var/www/html/
  472. On Windows
  473. see your windows Web/PHP documentation
  474. Assuming the IP address of the web server is a.b.c.d
  475. Then in your web browser go to:
  476. http://a.b.c.d/miner.php
  477. Done :)
  478. ---------
  479. The rest of this documentation deals with the more complex
  480. functions of miner.php, using myminer.php, creaing custom
  481. summaries and displaying multiple cgminer rigs
  482. ---------
  483. If you create a file called myminer.php in the same web folder
  484. where you put miner.php, miner.php will load it when it runs
  485. This is useful, to put any changes you need to make to miner.php
  486. instead of changing miner.php
  487. Thus if you update/get a new miner.php, you won't lose the changes
  488. you have made if you put all your changes in myminer.php
  489. (and don't change miner.php at all)
  490. A simple example myminer.php that defines 2 rigs
  491. (that I will keep referring to further below) is:
  492. <?php
  493. #
  494. $rigs = array('192.168.0.100:4028:A', '192.168.0.102:4028:B');
  495. #
  496. ?>
  497. Changes in myminer.php superscede what is in miner.php
  498. However, this is only valid for variables in miner.php before the
  499. 2 lines where myminer.php is included by miner.php:
  500. if (file_exists('myminer.php'))
  501. include_once('myminer.php');
  502. Every variable in miner.php above those 2 lines, can be changed by
  503. simply defining them in your myminer.php
  504. So although miner.php originally contains the line
  505. $rigs = array('127.0.0.1:4028');
  506. if you created the example myminer.php given above, it would actually
  507. change the value of $rigs that is used when miner.php is running
  508. i.e. you don't have to remove or comment out the $rigs line in miner.php
  509. It will be superceded by myminer.php
  510. ---------
  511. The example.php above also shows how to define more that one rig to
  512. be shown my miner.php
  513. Each rig string is 2 or 3 values seperated by colons ':'
  514. They are simply an IP address or host name, followed by the
  515. port number (usually 4028) and an optional Name string
  516. miner.php displays rig buttons that will show the defails of a single
  517. rig when you click on it - the button shows either the rig number,
  518. or the 'Name' string if you provide it
  519. PHP arrays contain each string seperated by a comma, but no comma after
  520. the last one
  521. So an example for 3 rigs would be:
  522. $rigs = array('192.168.0.100:4028:A', '192.168.0.102:4028:B', '192.168.0.110:4028:C');
  523. Of course each of the rigs listed would also have to have the API
  524. running and be set to allow the web server to access the API - as
  525. explained before
  526. ---------
  527. So basically, any variable explained below can be put in myminer.php
  528. if you wanted to set it to something different to it's default value
  529. and did not want to change miner.php itself every time you updated it
  530. Below is each variable that can be changed and an explanation of each
  531. ---------
  532. Default:
  533. $readonly = false;
  534. Set $readonly to true to force miner.php to be readonly
  535. This means it won't allow you to change cgminer even if the cgminer API
  536. options allow it to
  537. If you set $readonly to false then it will check cgminer 'privileged'
  538. and will show input fields and buttons on the single rig page
  539. allowing you to change devices, pools and even quit or restart
  540. cgminer
  541. However, if the 'privileged' test fails, the code will set $readonly to
  542. true
  543. ---------
  544. Default:
  545. $notify = true;
  546. Set $notify to false to NOT attempt to display the notify command
  547. table of data
  548. Set $notify to true to attempt to display the notify command on
  549. the single rig page
  550. If your older version of cgminer returns an 'Invalid command'
  551. coz it doesn't have notify - it just shows the error status table
  552. ---------
  553. Default:
  554. $checklastshare = true;
  555. Set $checklastshare to true to do the following checks:
  556. If a device's last share is 12x expected ago then display as an error
  557. If a device's last share is 8x expected ago then display as a warning
  558. If either of the above is true, also display the whole line highlighted
  559. This assumes shares are 1 difficulty shares
  560. Set $checklastshare to false to not do the above checks
  561. 'expected' is calculated from the device MH/s value
  562. So for example, a device that hashes at 380MH/s should (on average)
  563. find a share every 11.3s
  564. If the last share was found more than 11.3 x 12 seconds (135.6s) ago,
  565. it is considered an error and highlighted
  566. If the last share was found more than 11.3 x 8 seconds (90.4s) ago,
  567. it is considered a warning and highlighted
  568. The default highlighting is very subtle
  569. ---------
  570. Default:
  571. $poolinputs = false;
  572. Set $poolinputs to true to show the input fields for adding a pool
  573. and changing the pool priorities on a single rig page
  574. However, if $readonly is true, it will not display them
  575. ---------
  576. Default:
  577. $rigs = array('127.0.0.1:4028');
  578. Set $rigs to an array of your cgminer rigs that are running
  579. format: 'IP:Port' or 'Host:Port' or 'Host:Port:Name'
  580. If you only have one rig, it will just show the detail of that rig
  581. If you have more than one rig it will show a summary of all the rigs
  582. with buttons to show the details of each rig -
  583. the button contents will be 'Name' rather than rig number, if you
  584. specify 'Name'
  585. e.g. $rigs = array('127.0.0.1:4028','myrig.com:4028:Sugoi');
  586. ---------
  587. Default:
  588. $rigtotals = true;
  589. $forcerigtotals = false;
  590. Set $rigtotals to true to display totals on the single rig page
  591. 'false' means no totals (and ignores $forcerigtotals)
  592. If $rigtotals is true, all data is also right aligned
  593. With false, it's as before, left aligned
  594. This option is just here to allow people to set it to false
  595. if they prefer the old non-total display when viewing a single rig
  596. Also, if there is only one line shown in any section, then no
  597. total will be shown (to save screen space)
  598. You can force it to always show rig totals on the single rig page,
  599. even if there is only one line, by setting $forcerigtotals = true;
  600. ---------
  601. Default:
  602. $socksndtimeoutsec = 10;
  603. $sockrcvtimeoutsec = 40;
  604. The numbers are integer seconds
  605. The defaults should be OK for most cases
  606. However, the longer SND is, the longer you have to wait while
  607. php hangs if the target cgminer isn't runnning or listening
  608. RCV should only ever be relevant if cgminer has hung but the
  609. API thread is still running, RCV would normally be >= SND
  610. Feel free to increase SND if your network is very slow
  611. or decrease RCV if that happens often to you
  612. Also, on some windows PHP, apparently the $usec is ignored
  613. (so usec can't be specified)
  614. ---------
  615. Default:
  616. $hidefields = array();
  617. List of fields NOT to be displayed
  618. You can use this to hide data you don't want to see or don't want
  619. shown on a public web page
  620. The list of sections are:
  621. SUMMARY, POOL, PGA, GPU, NOTIFY, CONFIG, DEVDETAILS, DEVS
  622. See the web page for the list of field names (the table headers)
  623. It is an array of 'SECTION.Field Name' => 1
  624. This example would hide the slightly more sensitive pool information:
  625. Pool URL and pool username:
  626. $hidefields = array('POOL.URL' => 1, 'POOL.User' => 1);
  627. If you just want to hide the pool username:
  628. $hidefields = array('POOL.User' => 1);
  629. ---------
  630. Default:
  631. $ignorerefresh = false;
  632. $changerefresh = true;
  633. $autorefresh = 0;
  634. Auto-refresh of the page (in seconds) - integers only
  635. $ignorerefresh = true/false always ignore refresh parameters
  636. $changerefresh = true/false show buttons to change the value
  637. $autorefresh = default value, 0 means dont auto-refresh
  638. ---------
  639. Default:
  640. $placebuttons = 'top';
  641. Where to place the Refresh, Summary, Custom Pages, Quit, etc. buttons
  642. Valid values are: 'top' 'bot' 'both'
  643. anything else means don't show them - case sensitive
  644. ---------
  645. Default:
  646. $miner_font_family = 'verdana,arial,sans';
  647. $miner_font_size = '13pt';
  648. Change these to set the font and font size used on the web page
  649. ---------
  650. Default:
  651. $colouroverride = array();
  652. Use this to change the web page colour scheme
  653. See $colourtable in miner.php for the list of possible names to change
  654. Simply put in $colouroverride, just the colours you wish to change
  655. e.g. to change the colour of the header font and background
  656. you could do the following:
  657. $colouroverride = array(
  658. 'td.h color' => 'green',
  659. 'td.h background' => 'blue'
  660. );
  661. ---------
  662. Default:
  663. $allowcustompages = true;
  664. Should we allow custom pages?
  665. (or just completely ignore them and don't display the buttons)
  666. ---------
  667. OK this part is more complex: Custom Summary Pages
  668. A custom summary page in an array of 'section' => array('FieldA','FieldB'...)
  669. The section defines what data you want in the summary table and the Fields
  670. define what data you want shown from that section
  671. Standard sections are:
  672. SUMMARY, POOL, PGA, GPU, NOTIFY, CONFIG, DEVDETAILS, DEVS, STATS
  673. Fields are the names as shown on the headers on the normal pages
  674. Fields can be 'name=new name' to display 'name' with a different heading
  675. 'new name'
  676. There are also now joined sections:
  677. SUMMARY+POOL, SUMMARY+DEVS, SUMMARY+CONFIG, DEVS+NOTIFY, DEVS+DEVDETAILS
  678. These sections are an SQL join of the two sections and the fields in them
  679. are named section.field where section. is the section the field comes from
  680. See the example further down
  681. Also note:
  682. - empty tables are not shown
  683. - empty columns (e.g. an unknown field) are not shown
  684. - missing field data shows as blank
  685. - the field name '*' matches all fields except in joined sections
  686. (useful for STATS)
  687. There are 2 hard coded sections:
  688. DATE - displays a date table like 'Summary'
  689. RIGS - displays a rig table like 'Summary'
  690. Each custom summary requires a second array, that can be empty, listing fields
  691. to be totaled for each section
  692. If there is no matching total data, no total will show
  693. ---------
  694. Looking at the Mobile example:
  695. $mobilepage = array(
  696. 'DATE' => null,
  697. 'RIGS' => null,
  698. 'SUMMARY' => array('Elapsed', 'MHS av', 'Found Blocks=Blks',
  699. Accepted', 'Rejected=Rej', 'Utility'),
  700. 'DEVS+NOTIFY' => array('DEVS.Name=Name', 'DEVS.ID=ID', 'DEVS.Status=Status',
  701. 'DEVS.Temperature=Temp', 'DEVS.MHS av=MHS av',
  702. 'DEVS.Accepted=Accept', 'DEVS.Rejected=Rej',
  703. 'DEVS.Utility=Utility', 'NOTIFY.Last Not Well=Not Well'),
  704. 'POOL' => array('POOL', 'Status', 'Accepted', 'Rejected=Rej', 'Last Share Time'));
  705. $mobilesum = array(
  706. 'SUMMARY' => array('MHS av', 'Found Blocks', 'Accepted', 'Rejected', 'Utility'),
  707. 'DEVS+NOTIFY' => array('DEVS.MHS av', 'DEVS.Accepted', 'DEVS.Rejected', 'DEVS.Utility'),
  708. 'POOL' => array('Accepted', 'Rejected'));
  709. $customsummarypages = array('Mobile' => array($mobilepage, $mobilesum));
  710. This will show 5 tables (according to $mobilepage)
  711. Each table will have the chosen details for all the rigs specified in $rigs
  712. DATE
  713. A single box with the web server's current date and time
  714. RIGS
  715. A table of the rigs: description, time, versions etc
  716. SUMMARY
  717. This will use the API 'summary' command and show the selected fields:
  718. Elapsed, MHS av, Found Blocks, Accepted, Rejected and Utility
  719. However, 'Rejected=Rej' means that the header displayed for the 'Rejected'
  720. field will be 'Rej', instead of 'Rejected' (to save space)
  721. Same for 'Found Blocks=Blks' - to save space
  722. DEVS+NOTIFY
  723. This will list each of the devices on each rig and display the list of
  724. fields as shown
  725. It will also include the 'Last Not Well' field from the 'notify' command
  726. so you know when the device was last not well
  727. You will notice that you need to rename each field e.g. 'DEVS.Name=Name'
  728. since each field name in the join between DEVS and NOTIFY is actually
  729. section.fieldname, not just fieldname
  730. The join code automatically adds 2 fields to each GPU device: 'Name' and 'ID'
  731. They don't exist in the API 'devs' output but you can correctly calculate
  732. them from the GPU device data
  733. These two fields are used to join DEVS to NOTIFY i.e. find the NOTIFY
  734. record that has the same Name and ID as the DEVS record and join them
  735. POOL
  736. This will use the API 'pools' command and show the selected fields:
  737. POOL, Status, Accepted, Rejected, Last Share Time
  738. Again, I renamed the 'Rejected' field using 'Rejected=Rej', to save space
  739. $mobilesum lists the sections and fields that should have a total
  740. You can't define them for 'DATE' or 'RIGS' since they are hard coded tables
  741. The example given:
  742. SUMMARY
  743. Show a total at the bottom of the columns for:
  744. MHS av, Found Blocks, Accepted, Rejected, Utility
  745. Firstly note that you use the original name i.e. for 'Rejected=Rej'
  746. you use 'Rejected', not 'Rej' and not 'Rejected=Rej'
  747. Secondly note that it simply adds up the fields
  748. If you ask for a total of a string field you will get the numerical
  749. sum of the string data
  750. DEVS+NOTIFY
  751. Simply note in this join example that you must use the original field
  752. names which are section.fieldname, not just fieldname
  753. POOL
  754. Show a total at the bottom of the columns for:
  755. Accepted and Rejected
  756. Again remember to use the original field name 'Rejected'