Review: How to Mine RaveOS configuring & Installation – Windows 10/ 11 and Linux – Find out RaveOS. Installation, configuration, mining, commands, updating. RaveOS is one of the most popular cryptocurrency mining systems. RaveOS is based on Linux, which makes this system as stable, fast, energy efficient and reliable as possible. In this detailed article, we will consider all questions about the operating system, we will understand the nuances of installation, configuration, mining, commands, management and updating. Let’s analyze the causes of most of the problems and the main mistakes in working with RaveOS.
To start working with RaveOS, you need to register. Follow the link and go through the registration procedure. Register in RaveOS
Registration is standard, fill in the login, e-mail, password and confirm the password. After creating an account, you will be taken to the RaveOS Web management interface.
In our case, there are two workers and two rigs, you will have everything zero.
We are finished with the registration, we are going to download RaveOS.
How exactly to do this in BIOS, read the article on setting up a BIOS for mining.
In the same window of the Web interface of the operating system, look for the Download link on the left. This link always leads to the latest and most current version of RaveOS. I recommend not downloading the RaveOS image anywhere else, except the official website.
The name of the image will be something like this – raveos-v1.0.24-8340-1698.img.zip. When you download, the version will already be newer.
The RaveOS image is downloaded in a zip archive, after downloading the archive, unzip it to write the image to an SSD, HDD, M.2 or a USB flash drive.
Before installing RaveOS, we need to add a Worker. This is necessary in order to bind the installed RaveOS system to the created worker. So when loading RaveOS from the media, we will see the running system in the Web interface.
In the RaveOS web interface, go to the Dashboard or Workers tab and add a Worker by clicking Add Worker.
You can also add a Worker through the Workers tab.
When adding a worker, fill in the following fields:
After downloading the RaveOS image to your PC, you need to install it on the media. The media must be at least 16Gb. We highly recommend using SSD drives, because they work much faster than flash drives and are more stable. If possible, you can use an M.2 SSD, but this port in the motherboard can be used for an additional video card, and choose an SSD as a medium.
If you still stop at a flash drive, be sure to make sure that it has a minimum USB 3.0 interface and is inserted into a motherboard port that supports USB 3.0, and also make sure that the flash drive has at least 16Gb of memory.
To write the image, we need an unzipped RaveOS image. Install HDD Raw Copy Tool.
Using the HDD Raw Copy Tool, write the RaveOS image.
Run the program, select the RaveOS image in the FILE field.
In the next window, open the ATA field and select the medium to which we will write the image.
Next, click Continue and confirm the entry.
After recording the image, you need to register the token of our rig in the configuration file, this will connect our system with the rig on which RaveOS will be launched.
Go to the Web interface, i.e. we enter our account in the RaveOS system, and go to the Workers tab.
Select Edit, enter the worker settings and look for the SYSTEM INFO tab. We are interested in the Worker Token field.
Copy the Worker token.
We need to insert it into the OS file (disk with the RaveOS operating system): / config / token.txt, insert the Worker’s token and save it. That’s it, by this action you connected your worker in RaveOS with the image, now when you run this image in the farm, you will see it through the control panel (web interface) of RaveOS.
After recording the image, we set up the bios of the motherboard for mining, making our media with the image a priority for recording as well.
After recording the image to a hard drive or USB flash drive, and inserting the worker’s token into the token.txt file, connect your image to the farm, read how to build and configure the farm on the website. The farm can be connected to the monitor or not. It doesn’t matter, after starting the farm in the RaveOS web interface, you will see that your worker is online. If so, then you did everything right.
If RaveOS does not see video card 3060, 3070 or 3080, make sure you have installed the latest version, at least raveos-v1.0.24-8340-1698. Because older versions do not support these video cards. We will discuss how to update rave os later.
If RaveOS does not see other video cards, give it the opportunity to initialize them. At the first boot, the system may take a very long time to initialize video cards, especially if there are a lot of them, 6 or more.
In this case, start the farm one map at a time, i.e. leave only one card in the motherboard, start the farm and wait for it to start. After starting and initializing the video card, turn off the farm and connect the second card, and repeat this for each farm card. This usually helps.
If this does not help, make sure that you have correctly set the BIOS settings, read how to do this in the article on setting up the BIOS for mining.
After successfully launching the farm, you need to create a wallet, select a pool and a miner.
To create a wallet, go to the Wallets tab and select Add Wallet.
In the Wallet name field, enter the wallet field.
And click Save.
After creating the wallet, you can start mining in RaveOS.
In the next window, select a wallet, coin, pool, server, miner and start mining.
To understand the correct setup of your Rave OS farms, let’s explain the hierarchy of objects in the farm.
Clusters – think of this as an object, for example a garage or a room in which your workers or rigs are located (we’ll get to the rigs or workers later). Organize your workers into clusters that replicate the physical layout of your devices. By combining rigs into farms, you can divide them by geolocation, for example, if you have rigs in different garages, offices, apartments, rooms. This is more needed for those with many farms and rigs.
Workers are your rig itself. Those. motherboard with processor, power supply and video cards. In ordinary life, this is called a farm. Read how a mining farm works on the website.
All clusters are located in the main “Clusters” tab. What can we do with clusters in Rave OS:
Clicking on the desired cluster takes you to the Dashboard tab. General panel features:
In the Dashboard tab, you can see in real time the status of your rigs, namely:
To the right of each worker, you can see the following information:
Actions can be performed on each worker separately, or you can select several workers and perform some actions. What can be done with a single worker:
We will consider these actions in more detail later in the article, when we consider the worker settings and each possibility separately.
If you select a separate worker, check the box to the left of the name and clicking the “Action” button you will see the following actions:
In order to get into the worker settings, just go to the Workers tab and click on the pencil images on the required worker. Or click on the name of the required worker in the Dashboard tab.
What information can be found and what actions can be done by logging into a specific worker in Rave OS? Worker name, current hash rate, current consumption, mining button Mining, which makes it possible to quickly change mining settings (wallet, coin, miner). And the Actions panel, available in the upper right corner.
In this panel, the following actions are available on the worker:
6 tabs are available below:
In this tab, which opens in the default workers section in Rave OS, you can see the card manufacturer (Manufacturer), wallet (Wallet), coin (Coin), miner (Miner), the number of accepted and not accepted shares (Shares) , the percentage of unaccepted shares (Bad shares) and the algorithm on which the worker is running (Algo). This is the top line below the tabs.
Next is a table with detailed data for each card in the worker. In our case, this is mining on a GTX 1080 TI. The table is divided into 7 columns:
This tab allows you to configure video cards in Rave OS, i.e. overclock and downvolt them. You can overclock the cards one by one, or apply the overclocking template for all cards or only certain cards that you select with the checkbox on the left. We’ll talk about overclocking video cards in Rave OS below.
This tab contains Watchdog settings for temperature and hash rate.
Also in this tab there are the following settings:
This tab contains system information for your worker. Namely:
This tab shows statistics for the worker for the last 24 hours. What can be analyzed here:
The Notification tab contains system messages. What messages are there and what they mean, let’s talk in more detail later in the article.
There are two ways to update the RaveOS version:
It is clear how to update Rave OS in the first way, it is described above in the RaveOS installation.
To update RaveOS to the latest version via the terminal, you need to do the following:
We go to the Dashboard and on the right of each rig there will be a Console button. We press not on it.
As a login, enter – root, as a password, enter – admin.
We enter the upgrade command and update to the latest version.
The update will proceed automatically, after which your rig will reboot.
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