Author

Topic: Bitcoin-qt 0.9.2.1 Won't synch (Read 1382 times)

newbie
Activity: 9
Merit: 0
November 07, 2014, 08:41:53 AM
#5
OK Thanks for this. Noticing that v0.9.3.0 was now available, I downloaded this and set it going.

It appears to be inert and, worryingly, there is a note in the bottom left hand corner, saying "No block source available...."   

Clicking on the icon in the bottom right hand corner, I found that 315910 blocks had been processed; after a couple of hours this number had not changed.

So far as I can see from my notes, I haven't done anything differently from the original v0.8.5 which performed as expected until it crashed a few months later.

I have plenty of hard disk space, at least 200 Gb free.
legendary
Activity: 3038
Merit: 4418
Crypto Swap Exchange
November 04, 2014, 03:08:21 AM
#4
In Nov 2013 I used v0.8.5 to buy a few BTC and learn the system. No problems. It did what it said on the tin.

After a crash in August 2014 I installed v0.9.2.1 (saving wallet.dat). It took a week to synchronise with the block chain. Thereafter it has refused to synchronise at all. Often it throws an exception, but if not it just seems to be inert.

I have 32 bit Windows XP Pro, an AMD triple core pentium running at 2.31 GHz and I have 1.75 Gb of RAM.

Is it obvious to you guys what's wrong ?

Can I help myself by using a "thin client" like Electrum bearing in mind that I don't understand what a thin client is ?

Although I only have a few hundred dollars in the wallet, it's making me a bit annoyed to lose control of it !

I see references in other posts to "having 10 connections to the bitcoin network". I don't know what this means. Should I know ? How do I find out how many...  ?
Windows XP and 32 Bit system MIGHT be the cause of the reason. I have seen a lot of people having problems with windows XP. Bitcoin Core should use less than 1GB of ram based on my experiences. How much disk space do you have?

SPV client aka. Thin client is a bit different from normal Bitcoin Core. They do not download and synchronize with the blockchain on your computer. Your private keys are generated on your own computer and it isn't shared with the server. The server just allows your client to request information and broadcast your transaction. Electrum is open sourced so you can verify and compile the code yourself. The security risk isn't huge unless you have malware on your computer. The best method of securing the wallet is to generate a paper wallet offline and send your funds there.

Having 10 connections means that the client have 8 outgoing connection and 2 incoming connection. It doesn't help you to sync since 2 incoming connection means others are connecting to you to get blocks. The main factors are CPU verification speed, disk IO speed and peer's speed.

You can also try to download the blockchain by torrent to sync faster.
legendary
Activity: 1890
Merit: 1086
Ian Knowles - CIYAM Lead Developer
November 03, 2014, 07:59:11 AM
#3
You might be pushing it a bit with less than 2GB of RAM depending upon what other software you are running.

Perhaps use the Task Manager's Performance tab to get an idea of whether the PF Usage is very high in particular.

You might also want to check the Processes tab (from the View menu use Select Columns to make sure you have VM Size selected). Click on the VM Size column twice too see your biggest consumers (bitcoin-qt will be likely at the top) and maybe see if you can shut down one or two other processes.
legendary
Activity: 4228
Merit: 1313
November 03, 2014, 07:53:17 AM
#2
It may be related to low memory and 32 bit Windows. Initial sync can use a good amount of memory.

If you know the private keys (have the wallet for example) you can use a thin client. It won't have to synchronize, just import the keys and go.  That is an advantage.  (Be safe and download from the official site, keep several wallet.dat backups etc. )

If you know the public address you can always check your balance at various web sites.
newbie
Activity: 9
Merit: 0
November 03, 2014, 07:46:13 AM
#1
In Nov 2013 I used v0.8.5 to buy a few BTC and learn the system. No problems. It did what it said on the tin.

After a crash in August 2014 I installed v0.9.2.1 (saving wallet.dat). It took a week to synchronise with the block chain. Thereafter it has refused to synchronise at all. Often it throws an exception, but if not it just seems to be inert.

I have 32 bit Windows XP Pro, an AMD triple core pentium running at 2.31 GHz and I have 1.75 Gb of RAM.

Is it obvious to you guys what's wrong ?

Can I help myself by using a "thin client" like Electrum bearing in mind that I don't understand what a thin client is ?

Although I only have a few hundred dollars in the wallet, it's making me a bit annoyed to lose control of it !

I see references in other posts to "having 10 connections to the bitcoin network". I don't know what this means. Should I know ? How do I find out how many...  ?
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