diff --git a/contrib/debian/examples/bitcoin.conf b/contrib/debian/examples/bitcoin.conf index 5c71baa85e..ae5f8088a9 100644 --- a/contrib/debian/examples/bitcoin.conf +++ b/contrib/debian/examples/bitcoin.conf @@ -1,141 +1,148 @@ ## ## bitcoin.conf configuration file. Lines beginning with # are comments. ## # Network-related settings: # Run on the test network instead of the real bitcoin network. #testnet=0 # Run a regression test network #regtest=0 # Connect via a SOCKS5 proxy #proxy=127.0.0.1:9050 # Bind to given address and always listen on it. Use [host]:port notation for IPv6 #bind= # Bind to given address and whitelist peers connecting to it. Use [host]:port notation for IPv6 #whitebind= ############################################################## ## Quick Primer on addnode vs connect ## ## Let's say for instance you use addnode=4.2.2.4 ## ## addnode will connect you to and tell you about the ## ## nodes connected to 4.2.2.4. In addition it will tell ## ## the other nodes connected to it that you exist so ## ## they can connect to you. ## ## connect will not do the above when you 'connect' to it. ## ## It will *only* connect you to 4.2.2.4 and no one else.## ## ## ## So if you're behind a firewall, or have other problems ## ## finding nodes, add some using 'addnode'. ## ## ## ## If you want to stay private, use 'connect' to only ## ## connect to "trusted" nodes. ## ## ## ## If you run multiple nodes on a LAN, there's no need for ## ## all of them to open lots of connections. Instead ## ## 'connect' them all to one node that is port forwarded ## ## and has lots of connections. ## ## Thanks goes to [Noodle] on Freenode. ## ############################################################## # Use as many addnode= settings as you like to connect to specific peers #addnode=69.164.218.197 #addnode=10.0.0.2:8333 # Alternatively use as many connect= settings as you like to connect ONLY to specific peers #connect=69.164.218.197 #connect=10.0.0.1:8333 # Listening mode, enabled by default except when 'connect' is being used #listen=1 # Maximum number of inbound+outbound connections. #maxconnections= # # JSON-RPC options (for controlling a running Bitcoin/bitcoind process) # # server=1 tells Bitcoin-Qt and bitcoind to accept JSON-RPC commands #server=0 # Bind to given address to listen for JSON-RPC connections. Use [host]:port notation for IPv6. # This option can be specified multiple times (default: bind to all interfaces) #rpcbind= # If no rpcpassword is set, rpc cookie auth is sought. The default `-rpccookiefile` name # is .cookie and found in the `-datadir` being used for bitcoind. This option is typically used # when the server and client are run as the same user. # # If not, you must set rpcuser and rpcpassword to secure the JSON-RPC api. The first # method(DEPRECATED) is to set this pair for the server and client: #rpcuser=Ulysseys #rpcpassword=YourSuperGreatPasswordNumber_DO_NOT_USE_THIS_OR_YOU_WILL_GET_ROBBED_385593 # # The second method `rpcauth` can be added to server startup argument. It is set at initialization time # using the output from the script in share/rpcuser/rpcuser.py after providing a username: # # ./share/rpcuser/rpcuser.py alice # String to be appended to bitcoin.conf: # rpcauth=alice:f7efda5c189b999524f151318c0c86$d5b51b3beffbc02b724e5d095828e0bc8b2456e9ac8757ae3211a5d9b16a22ae # Your password: # DONT_USE_THIS_YOU_WILL_GET_ROBBED_8ak1gI25KFTvjovL3gAM967mies3E= # # On client-side, you add the normal user/password pair to send commands: #rpcuser=alice #rpcpassword=DONT_USE_THIS_YOU_WILL_GET_ROBBED_8ak1gI25KFTvjovL3gAM967mies3E= # # You can even add multiple entries of these to the server conf file, and client can use any of them: # rpcauth=bob:b2dd077cb54591a2f3139e69a897ac$4e71f08d48b4347cf8eff3815c0e25ae2e9a4340474079f55705f40574f4ec99 # How many seconds bitcoin will wait for a complete RPC HTTP request. # after the HTTP connection is established. #rpcclienttimeout=30 # By default, only RPC connections from localhost are allowed. # Specify as many rpcallowip= settings as you like to allow connections from other hosts, # either as a single IPv4/IPv6 or with a subnet specification. # NOTE: opening up the RPC port to hosts outside your local trusted network is NOT RECOMMENDED, # because the rpcpassword is transmitted over the network unencrypted. # server=1 tells Bitcoin-Qt to accept JSON-RPC commands. # it is also read by bitcoind to determine if RPC should be enabled #rpcallowip=10.1.1.34/255.255.255.0 #rpcallowip=1.2.3.4/24 #rpcallowip=2001:db8:85a3:0:0:8a2e:370:7334/96 # Listen for RPC connections on this TCP port: #rpcport=8332 # You can use Bitcoin or bitcoind to send commands to Bitcoin/bitcoind # running on another host using this option: #rpcconnect=127.0.0.1 # Transaction Fee Changes in 0.10.0 # Send transactions as zero-fee transactions if possible (default: 0) #sendfreetransactions=0 # Miscellaneous options # Pre-generate this many public/private key pairs, so wallet backups will be valid for # both prior transactions and several dozen future transactions. #keypool=100 # Pay an optional transaction fee every time you send bitcoins. Transactions with fees # are more likely than free transactions to be included in generated blocks, so may # be validated sooner. #paytxfee=0.00 +# Enable pruning to reduce storage requirements by deleting old blocks. +# This mode is incompatible with -txindex and -rescan. +# 0 = default (no pruning). +# 1 = allows manual pruning via RPC. +# >=550 = target to stay under in MiB. +#prune=550 + # User interface options # Start Bitcoin minimized #min=1 # Minimize to the system tray #minimizetotray=1