vardiff
Forum rules
Welcome to the System Support forum! Encounter a problem related to the pool? Post your issue here and we will help you out.
Keep in mind that the forums are monitored by PROHASHING less closely than the official support channels, so if you have a pressing issue, please submit an official support ticket so that our Support Analyst can look into your issue in a timely manner.
We cannot answer financial questions related to your account on a public forum, so those questions should always be submitted through the orange Support button on prohashing.com/about.
For the full list of PROHASHING forums rules, please visit https://prohashing.com/help/prohashing- ... rms-forums.
Welcome to the System Support forum! Encounter a problem related to the pool? Post your issue here and we will help you out.
Keep in mind that the forums are monitored by PROHASHING less closely than the official support channels, so if you have a pressing issue, please submit an official support ticket so that our Support Analyst can look into your issue in a timely manner.
We cannot answer financial questions related to your account on a public forum, so those questions should always be submitted through the orange Support button on prohashing.com/about.
For the full list of PROHASHING forums rules, please visit https://prohashing.com/help/prohashing- ... rms-forums.
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- Posts: 11
- Joined: Mon Sep 08, 2014 7:35 pm
vardiff
I was wondering if there is a way to set vardiff for the pool, my friend signed up and is only getting 22mhs with his 27 mhs asic with the current settings.
- Steve Sokolowski
- Posts: 4585
- Joined: Wed Aug 27, 2014 3:27 pm
- Location: State College, PA
Re: vardiff
Vardiff is enabled automatically. You'll see that the difficulty can go up to as high as 16384. That should be high enough to reduce any losses caused by too much bandwidth usage.
Kristof noticed this issue a while ago, and this is currently the only issue that's holding us back from scaling up. We still can't get our hands on any scrypt ASICs, and until we do we won't be able to troubleshoot exactly what is causing the decline. We're hoping that we might get some by Tuesday.
One of the theories is that certain models of ASICs are made to mine very difficult coins when blocks are rarely found, like litecoins, and providing them with new work reduces their efficiency. The ASIC manufacturers advertise their mining rate in these perfect conditions, which never actually happens in the real world. Even if you could get that 27 Mh mining litecoins, it would still make more sense to use a switching pool.
One of the experiments I'm going to have Chris test is to put our ASICs, whenever they finally arrive, on other pools for an hour at a time and to record their hashrates. If it turns out that the other pools have higher hashrates, then there must be a bug. Unfortunately, however, I think that the ASIC manufacturers are just advertising their products to people who think the ASICs will earn more than they can actually earn. We'll know more in a few days about whether this is true.
Kristof noticed this issue a while ago, and this is currently the only issue that's holding us back from scaling up. We still can't get our hands on any scrypt ASICs, and until we do we won't be able to troubleshoot exactly what is causing the decline. We're hoping that we might get some by Tuesday.
One of the theories is that certain models of ASICs are made to mine very difficult coins when blocks are rarely found, like litecoins, and providing them with new work reduces their efficiency. The ASIC manufacturers advertise their mining rate in these perfect conditions, which never actually happens in the real world. Even if you could get that 27 Mh mining litecoins, it would still make more sense to use a switching pool.
One of the experiments I'm going to have Chris test is to put our ASICs, whenever they finally arrive, on other pools for an hour at a time and to record their hashrates. If it turns out that the other pools have higher hashrates, then there must be a bug. Unfortunately, however, I think that the ASIC manufacturers are just advertising their products to people who think the ASICs will earn more than they can actually earn. We'll know more in a few days about whether this is true.
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- Posts: 44
- Joined: Fri Aug 29, 2014 11:15 am
Re: vardiff
Which asic is he using? I'm fairly sure this has to do with the way that the asic's actually get work and then distribute it among the cores in the asic unit. My A2 unit gets its advertised speed on prohashing and a typical litecoin pool, however my zeusminer slows down a bit on prohashing versus a litecoin pool. As best as I can tell the zeusminer has fairly low bandwidth between the controller and actual mining chips. Since prohashing is sending out new work at a higher rate than a litecoin pool would the time it takes for the controller to refresh the work on the actual mining cores is causing the miner to waste time restarting on new work. This makes sense if you look at the hardware the zeusminer is using. They use a cp210x uart-usb chip, uart is rather slow way of communication, 1mbp or so is the max bandwidth which would be fine if you weren't constantly restarting work and compound that with any other internal bottlenecks and you'll experience what is happening.
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- Posts: 3
- Joined: Thu Oct 09, 2014 2:29 pm
Re: vardiff
I am only running @ 66% efficiency and have to think it's the 2048 diff being applied. Im running a 13mh/s black widow and have always had the best luck @ 1024.
On this pool s there a way through worker password to force a diff? For instance d=1024 that works on other pools?
thanks,
john
On this pool s there a way through worker password to force a diff? For instance d=1024 that works on other pools?
thanks,
john
- Chris Sokolowski
- Site Admin
- Posts: 945
- Joined: Wed Aug 27, 2014 12:47 pm
- Location: State College, PA
Re: vardiff
Right now we do have the option to manually set difficulty. It is definitely on our list of features to add in the future.
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- Posts: 3
- Joined: Thu Oct 09, 2014 2:29 pm
Re: vardiff
Hey Chris thanks for reply.Chris Sokolowski wrote:Right now we do have the option to manually set difficulty. It is definitely on our list of features to add in the future.
So you are saying you can adjust diff from your end? Is this on an individual basis? If so, please adjust my acct to 1024. That diff works great for the current rig plus others currently being rented @ MRR that I can point to prohashing when they're not renting.
Thanks,
john (cryptoloot)
- Chris Sokolowski
- Site Admin
- Posts: 945
- Joined: Wed Aug 27, 2014 12:47 pm
- Location: State College, PA
Re: vardiff
The current code does does not allow us to change difficulty for individual users, only the entire pool. Since it is working right now (automatic with a maximum of 2048) we don't want to change it and risk the potential of breaking many other users' miners. Allowing users to set their own difficulties is definitely a feature we want to add in the future.
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- Posts: 3
- Joined: Thu Oct 09, 2014 2:29 pm
Re: vardiff
Gotcha, thanks for the explanation.Chris Sokolowski wrote:The current code does does not allow us to change difficulty for individual users, only the entire pool. Since it is working right now (automatic with a maximum of 2048) we don't want to change it and risk the potential of breaking many other users' miners. Allowing users to set their own difficulties is definitely a feature we want to add in the future.