FPGA-README 10 KB

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  1. This README contains extended details about FPGA mining with cgminer
  2. ModMinerQuad (MMQ)
  3. ------------------
  4. The mining bitstream does not survive a power cycle, so cgminer will upload
  5. it, if it needs to, before it starts mining (approx 7min 40sec)
  6. The red LED also flashes while it is uploading the bitstream
  7. -
  8. When mining on windows, the driver being used will determine if mining will work.
  9. If the driver doesn't allow mining, you will get a "USB init," error message
  10. i.e. one of:
  11. open device failed, err %d, you need to install a Windows USB driver for the device
  12. or
  13. kernel detach failed :(
  14. or
  15. claim interface %d failed, err %d
  16. The best solution for this is to use a tool called Zadig to set the driver:
  17. http://sourceforge.net/projects/libwdi/files/zadig/
  18. This allows you set the driver for the device to be WinUSB which is usually
  19. required to make it work if your having problems
  20. You must also make sure you are using the latest libusb-1.0.dll supplied
  21. with cgminer (not the libusbx version)
  22. -
  23. There is a hidden option in cgminer to dump out a lot of information
  24. about USB that will help the developers to assist you if you are having
  25. problems:
  26. --usb-dump 0
  27. It will only help if you have a working MMQ device attached to the computer
  28. -
  29. If the MMQ doesn't respond to cgminer at all, or the red LED isn't flashing
  30. then you will need to reset the MMQ
  31. The red LED should always be flashing when it is mining or ready to mine
  32. To reset the MMQ, you are best to press the left "RESET" button on the
  33. backplane, then unplug and replug the USB cable
  34. If your MMQ doesn't have a button on the "RESET" pad, you need to join
  35. the two left pads of the "RESET" pad with conductive wire to reset it.
  36. Cutting a small (metal) paper-clip in half works well for this
  37. Then unplug the USB cable, wait for 5 seconds, then plug it back in
  38. After you press reset, the red LED near the USB port should blink continuously
  39. If it still wont work, power off, wait for 5 seconds, then power on the MMQ
  40. This of course means it will upload the bitstream again when you start cgminer
  41. -
  42. Device 0 is on the power end of the board
  43. -
  44. You must make sure you have an approriate firmware in your MMQ
  45. Read here for official details of changing the firmware:
  46. http://wiki.btcfpga.com/index.php?title=Firmware
  47. The basics of changing the firmware are:
  48. You need two short pieces of conductive wire if your MMQ doesn't have
  49. buttons on the "RESET" and "ISP" pads on the backplane board
  50. Cutting a small (metal) paper-clip in half works well for this
  51. Join the 2 left pads of the "RESET" pad with wire and the led will dim
  52. Without disconnecting the "RESET", join the 2 left pads of the "ISP" pad
  53. with a wire and it will stay dim
  54. Release "RESET" then release "ISP" and is should still be dim
  55. Unplug the USB and when you plug it back in it will show up as a mass
  56. storage device
  57. Linux: (as one single line):
  58. mcopy -i /dev/disk/by-id/usb-NXP_LPC134X_IFLASH_ISP000000000-0:0
  59. modminer091012.bin ::/firmware.bin
  60. Windows: delete the MSD device file firmware.bin and copy in the new one
  61. rename the new file and put it under the same name 'firmware.bin'
  62. Disconnect the USB correctly (so writes are flushed first)
  63. Join and then disconnect "RESET" and then plug the USB back in and it's done
  64. Best to update to one of the latest 2 listed below if you don't already
  65. have one of them in your MMQ
  66. The current latest different firmware are:
  67. Latest for support of normal or TLM bitstream:
  68. http://btcfpga.com/files/firmware/modminer092612-TLM.bin
  69. Latest with only normal bitstream support (Temps/HW Fix):
  70. http://btcfpga.com/files/firmware/modminer091012.bin
  71. The code is currently tested on the modminer091012.bin firmware.
  72. This comment will be updated when others have been tested
  73. -
  74. On many linux distributions there is an app called modem-manager that
  75. may cause problems when it is enabled, due to opening the MMQ device
  76. and writing to it
  77. The problem will typically present itself by the flashing led on the
  78. backplane going out (no longer flashing) and it takes a power cycle to
  79. re-enable the MMQ firmware - which then can lead to the problem happening
  80. again
  81. You can either disable/uninstall modem-manager if you don't need it or:
  82. a (hack) solution to this is to blacklist the MMQ USB device in
  83. /lib/udev/rules.d/77-mm-usb-device-blacklist.rules
  84. Adding 2 lines like this (just above APC) should help
  85. # MMQ
  86. ATTRS{idVendor}=="1fc9", ATTRS{idProduct}=="0003", ENV{ID_MM_DEVICE_IGNORE}="1"
  87. The change will be lost and need to be re-done, next time you update the
  88. modem-manager software
  89. TODO: check that all MMQ's have the same product ID
  90. Bitforce (BFL)
  91. --------------
  92. --bfl-range Use nonce range on bitforce devices if supported
  93. This option is only for bitforce devices. Earlier devices such as the single
  94. did not have any way of doing small amounts of work which meant that a lot of
  95. work could be lost across block changes. Some of the "minirigs" have support
  96. for doing this, so less work is lost across a longpoll. However, it comes at
  97. a cost of 1% in overall hashrate so this feature is disabled by default. It
  98. is only recommended you enable this if you are mining with a minirig on
  99. p2pool.
  100. C source is included for a bitforce firmware flash utility on Linux only:
  101. bitforce-firmware-flash.c
  102. Using this, you can change the bitstream firmware on bitforce singles.
  103. It is untested with other devices. Use at your own risk!
  104. To compile:
  105. make bitforce-firmware-flash
  106. To flash your BFL, specify the BFL port and the flash file e.g.:
  107. sudo ./bitforce-firmware-flash /dev/ttyUSB0 alphaminer_832.bfl
  108. It takes a bit under 3 minutes to flash a BFL and shows a progress % counter
  109. Once it completes, you may also need to wait about 15 seconds,
  110. then power the BFL off and on again
  111. If you get an error at the end of the BFL flash process stating:
  112. "Error reading response from ZBX"
  113. it may have worked successfully anyway.
  114. Test mining on it to be sure if it worked or not.
  115. You need to give cgminer about 10 minutes mining with the BFL to be sure of
  116. the MH/s value reported with the changed firmware - and the MH/s reported
  117. will be less than the firmware speed since you lose work on every block change.
  118. Icarus (ICA)
  119. ------------
  120. There are two hidden options in cgminer when Icarus support is compiled in:
  121. --icarus-options <arg> Set specific FPGA board configurations - one set of values for all or comma separated
  122. baud:work_division:fpga_count
  123. baud The Serial/USB baud rate - 115200 or 57600 only - default 115200
  124. work_division The fraction of work divided up for each FPGA chip - 1, 2, 4 or 8
  125. e.g. 2 means each FPGA does half the nonce range - default 2
  126. fpga_count The actual number of FPGA working - this would normally be the same
  127. as work_division - range is from 1 up to 'work_division'
  128. It defaults to the value of work_division - or 2 if you don't specify
  129. work_division
  130. If you define fewer comma seperated values than Icarus devices, the last values will be used
  131. for all extra devices
  132. An example would be: --icarus-options 57600:2:1
  133. This would mean: use 57600 baud, the FPGA board divides the work in half however
  134. only 1 FPGA actually runs on the board (e.g. like an early CM1 Icarus copy bitstream)
  135. --icarus-timing <arg> Set how the Icarus timing is calculated - one setting/value for all or comma separated
  136. default[=N] Use the default Icarus hash time (2.6316ns)
  137. short Calculate the hash time and stop adjusting it at ~315 difficulty 1 shares (~1hr)
  138. long Re-calculate the hash time continuously
  139. value[=N] Specify the hash time in nanoseconds (e.g. 2.6316) and abort time (e.g. 2.6316=80)
  140. If you define fewer comma seperated values than Icarus devices, the last values will be used
  141. for all extra devices
  142. Icarus timing is required for devices that do not exactly match a default Icarus Rev3 in
  143. processing speed
  144. If you have an Icarus Rev3 you should not normally need to use --icarus-timing since the
  145. default values will maximise the MH/s and display it correctly
  146. Icarus timing is used to determine the number of hashes that have been checked when it aborts
  147. a nonce range (including on a LongPoll)
  148. It is also used to determine the elapsed time when it should abort a nonce range to avoid
  149. letting the Icarus go idle, but also to safely maximise that time
  150. 'short' or 'long' mode should only be used on a computer that has enough CPU available to run
  151. cgminer without any CPU delays (an active desktop or swapping computer would not be stable enough)
  152. Any CPU delays while calculating the hash time will affect the result
  153. 'short' mode only requires the computer to be stable until it has completed ~315 difficulty 1 shares
  154. 'long' mode requires it to always be stable to ensure accuracy, however, over time it continually
  155. corrects itself
  156. When in 'short' or 'long' mode, it will report the hash time value each time it is re-calculated
  157. In 'short' or 'long' mode, the scan abort time starts at 5 seconds and uses the default 2.6316ns
  158. scan hash time, for the first 5 nonce's or one minute (whichever is longer)
  159. In 'default' or 'value' mode the 'constants' are calculated once at the start, based on the default
  160. value or the value specified
  161. The optional additional =N specifies to set the default abort at N 1/10ths of a second, not the
  162. calculated value, which is 112 for 2.6316ns
  163. To determine the hash time value for a non Icarus Rev3 device or an Icarus Rev3 with a different
  164. bitstream to the default one, use 'long' mode and give it at least a few hundred shares, or use
  165. 'short' mode and take note of the final hash time value (Hs) calculated
  166. You can also use the RPC API 'stats' command to see the current hash time (Hs) at any time
  167. The Icarus code currently only works with an FPGA device that supports the same commands as
  168. Icarus Rev3 requires and also is less than ~840MH/s and greater than 2MH/s
  169. If an FPGA device does hash faster than ~840MH/s it should work correctly if you supply the
  170. correct hash time nanoseconds value
  171. The timing code itself will affect the Icarus performance since it increases the delay after
  172. work is completed or aborted until it starts again
  173. The increase is, however, extremely small and the actual increase is reported with the
  174. RPC API 'stats' command (a very slow CPU will make it more noticeable)
  175. Using the 'short' mode will remove this delay after 'short' mode completes
  176. The delay doesn't affect the calculation of the correct hash time