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- This README contains extended details about FPGA mining with cgminer
- Bitforce
- --bfl-range Use nonce range on bitforce devices if supported
- This option is only for bitforce devices. Earlier devices such as the single
- did not have any way of doing small amounts of work which meant that a lot of
- work could be lost across block changes. Some of the "minirigs" have support
- for doing this, so less work is lost across a longpoll. However, it comes at
- a cost of 1% in overall hashrate so this feature is disabled by default. It
- is only recommended you enable this if you are mining with a minirig on
- p2pool.
- BFGMiner also bundles a bitforce-firmware-flash utility on Linux. Using this,
- you can change the bitstream firmware on BitFORCE Singles. It is untested with
- other devices. Use at your own risk! Windows users may use Butterfly Labs
- EasyMiner to change firmware.
- Icarus
- There are two hidden options in cgminer when Icarus support is compiled in:
- --icarus-options <arg> Set specific FPGA board configurations - one set of values for all or comma separated
- baud:work_division:fpga_count
- baud The Serial/USB baud rate - 115200 or 57600 only - default 115200
- work_division The fraction of work divided up for each FPGA chip - 1, 2, 4 or 8
- e.g. 2 means each FPGA does half the nonce range - default 2
- fpga_count The actual number of FPGA working - this would normally be the same
- as work_division - range is from 1 up to 'work_division'
- It defaults to the value of work_division - or 2 if you don't specify
- work_division
- If you define fewer comma seperated values than Icarus devices, the last values will be used
- for all extra devices
- An example would be: --icarus-options 57600:2:1
- This would mean: use 57600 baud, the FPGA board divides the work in half however
- only 1 FPGA actually runs on the board (e.g. like an early CM1 Icarus copy bitstream)
- --icarus-timing <arg> Set how the Icarus timing is calculated - one setting/value for all or comma separated
- default[=N] Use the default Icarus hash time (2.6316ns)
- short Calculate the hash time and stop adjusting it at ~315 difficulty 1 shares (~1hr)
- long Re-calculate the hash time continuously
- value[=N] Specify the hash time in nanoseconds (e.g. 2.6316) and abort time (e.g. 2.6316=80)
- If you define fewer comma seperated values than Icarus devices, the last values will be used
- for all extra devices
- Icarus timing is required for devices that do not exactly match a default Icarus Rev3 in
- processing speed
- If you have an Icarus Rev3 you should not normally need to use --icarus-timing since the
- default values will maximise the MH/s and display it correctly
- Icarus timing is used to determine the number of hashes that have been checked when it aborts
- a nonce range (including on a LongPoll)
- It is also used to determine the elapsed time when it should abort a nonce range to avoid
- letting the Icarus go idle, but also to safely maximise that time
- 'short' or 'long' mode should only be used on a computer that has enough CPU available to run
- cgminer without any CPU delays (an active desktop or swapping computer would not be stable enough)
- Any CPU delays while calculating the hash time will affect the result
- 'short' mode only requires the computer to be stable until it has completed ~315 difficulty 1 shares
- 'long' mode requires it to always be stable to ensure accuracy, however, over time it continually
- corrects itself
- When in 'short' or 'long' mode, it will report the hash time value each time it is re-calculated
- In 'short' or 'long' mode, the scan abort time starts at 5 seconds and uses the default 2.6316ns
- scan hash time, for the first 5 nonce's or one minute (whichever is longer)
- In 'default' or 'value' mode the 'constants' are calculated once at the start, based on the default
- value or the value specified
- The optional additional =N specifies to set the default abort at N 1/10ths of a second, not the
- calculated value, which is 112 for 2.6316ns
- To determine the hash time value for a non Icarus Rev3 device or an Icarus Rev3 with a different
- bitstream to the default one, use 'long' mode and give it at least a few hundred shares, or use
- 'short' mode and take note of the final hash time value (Hs) calculated
- You can also use the RPC API 'stats' command to see the current hash time (Hs) at any time
- The Icarus code currently only works with an FPGA device that supports the same commands as
- Icarus Rev3 requires and also is less than ~840MH/s and greater than 2MH/s
- If an FPGA device does hash faster than ~840MH/s it should work correctly if you supply the
- correct hash time nanoseconds value
- The timing code itself will affect the Icarus performance since it increases the delay after
- work is completed or aborted until it starts again
- The increase is, however, extremely small and the actual increase is reported with the
- RPC API 'stats' command (a very slow CPU will make it more noticeable)
- Using the 'short' mode will remove this delay after 'short' mode completes
- The delay doesn't affect the calculation of the correct hash time
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