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Topic: Using Raspberry Pi for Gridseed Mining, etc. (Read 2642 times)

member
Activity: 140
Merit: 12
March 16, 2014, 11:22:59 PM
#4
I've tried to plug more than 32 miners in to my rpi's and I have run into issues. That could be a usb hub issue too, but that's the limit I'm working with. My os is the debian wheezy you can dl from the rpi website.

I also have a windows 7 machine (i7 3770, 8 gb ram, ssd hd) with 40 gridseeds plugged into it. I have noticed a lot of slowdown using photoshop on that machine, so it definitely takes some toll on your machine. I haven't bothered to measure though.

regarding ethernet ports, get a 5 port hub for $10 on amazon. don't bother with wireless for the miners, just hardwire the pi in. I also have a 24 port 10baseT hub that will work if you want it, just pay for shipping. miners don't need much bandwith.

a few days ago I setup 3 rpi's and installed/compiled cpuminer on them, then copied a script over to run it in about 1.5 hours. Not too much time at all.

regarding the power supplies, i got them off ebay for $26, and they work great. as long as you're not mining sha, you can hook up a ton of miners to those. I have 12 hooked up to each one, and no problems whatsoever. i've also got like 3-4 extra, i'd sell them to you for $20 each if you want.



full member
Activity: 213
Merit: 100
What's up ppl...hope yer all havin' a nice weekend.

So - regarding Gridseed miners - I've got the power thing figured out.  But had questions pertaining to the utilization of a Raspberry Pi device to control your miners.

For those who have used these devices (and are operating Gridseeds), here are a few questions:

1.  What is maximum amount of miners you can control?  I was planning on buying ~50 Gridseeds very soon but figured I'd ask ahead of time.

2.  I know you use the Raspberian OS - seems like it's more efficient at holding a steady hashrate from what I've read on the forums.
 
3.  Are there any potential drawbacks vs. just plugging miners into a USB hub and connecting to your computer (for Windows 7/8) and mining that way?  (E.g. slowing your system down, etc.)

4.  Since I've got a network router with only 3 slots left and I'm going to be buying a lot of miners...I may need more slots...should I use a USB wireless attachment for the RPi to save on network cable space?

5.  How long did it take you to set up all your miners from start to end (w/ or without RPi)?

6.  Question regarding those 12V 30A 360w PSUs...do they emit any weird smell when running?  I was thinking of powering the miners by ATX PSU instead if that's the case.

Thanks for any opinions/suggestions.   Smiley

Depending on the Hubs, 1) can have a hard limit of 120 as some hubs out there will show as a USB device and thus lowers what's left for the PI

2) yep, and follow the steps for Linux compiling of BFGMiner ( on the Pi, in a terminal window ) as if you were going to do Erupters ( most of the settings for BFGMiner work for all of the USB ASICS as they show as usb to com port and just need a compatable protocol like Icarus )

3) Wall Octopuses - each usb hub NEEDS to be a powered hub so each one needs a wall wort or some kind of power rigging to all of them AND the Pi

4) NEVER!!! No one out there in the Linux or Pi comunity can guarentee 100% compatability for any usb wireless and you can always plug in another router ( regular link to the wan on the 2nd on ) with more ports.  Keep in mind EACH Pi has the limit of ( conservatively ) 120 USB miners and an etherenet switch can add more ethernet ports.

5) weeks, but that was getting an ATI HD 4850 to do OpenCL 1.0, less than an hour for the Block Erupters, once that was working and I got AntMiners it was just plug in and make sure the USB hub had power and restart the miner with the right settings.  Getting BFGMiner to work with the Erupters was actually less than an hour to work, there was more time messing with settings then finding it didn't change anything.  I already had most of the ' extra ' files needed on my Ubuntu system ( sudo apt-get )

6) If an ATX power supply smells while running, unplug it and check with a power supply tester to ensure it's working properly.  I bought a cheap one for GPU mining and didn't use my nose to let me know it couldn't handle the 12V drain to run the cards soo..... it blew.....  As you plan on Pi mining, it's the total amps on all of the 5V lines you need to worry about.  Take the time and do the math and only if you are short by half of what the 12V line's peak is consider a 12V to 5V power mod and fuses, lots of fuses.

Good luck with it, you can avoid some of the time consuming steps if you have the Pi already by doing the compiling and all the ' sudo apt-get ' stuff ahead of time.
newbie
Activity: 13
Merit: 0
1] the max number of usb per hub is 127.  That's probably your hard limit, you might have some other limits, like software or bandwidth; but 50 should be fine

3] other than power no.

4] In my experience, wired is more reliable then wireless and have all my miners wired.  Just buy another switch instead of a wireless for the pi.

5] The first one took probably an hour to figure out and write a script for.  After that, I just use the same script so add another miner would take ~5 minutes (including the time it takes to plug in).

6] your power supply shouldn't be emitting smells
full member
Activity: 138
Merit: 100
What's up ppl...hope yer all havin' a nice weekend.

So - regarding Gridseed miners - I've got the power thing figured out.  But had questions pertaining to the utilization of a Raspberry Pi device to control your miners.

For those who have used these devices (and are operating Gridseeds), here are a few questions:

1.  What is maximum amount of miners you can control?  I was planning on buying ~50 Gridseeds very soon but figured I'd ask ahead of time.

2.  I know you use the Raspberian OS - seems like it's more efficient at holding a steady hashrate from what I've read on the forums.
 
3.  Are there any potential drawbacks vs. just plugging miners into a USB hub and connecting to your computer (for Windows 7/8) and mining that way?  (E.g. slowing your system down, etc.)

4.  Since I've got a network router with only 3 slots left and I'm going to be buying a lot of miners...I may need more slots...should I use a USB wireless attachment for the RPi to save on network cable space?

5.  How long did it take you to set up all your miners from start to end (w/ or without RPi)?

6.  Question regarding those 12V 30A 360w PSUs...do they emit any weird smell when running?  I was thinking of powering the miners by ATX PSU instead if that's the case.

Thanks for any opinions/suggestions.   Smiley
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