Eligius: Difference between revisions
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Basic concepts: | Basic concepts: | ||
* Pool keeps all transaction fees to itself, plus 0.00000001 BTC per second since last-found block (currently this works out to | * Pool keeps all transaction fees to itself, plus 0.00000001 BTC per second since last-found block and 1 share per block (currently this works out to under 0.0003%, and gets smaller with more miners in the pool). | ||
* Remaining reward is divided equally among ALL shares contributed since its last-found block. | * Remaining reward is divided equally among ALL shares contributed since its last-found block. | ||
* When a block is found, the miner is paid for that block immediately as a Generated transaction, but only if his total balance is over 1 BTC (to help the recipient avoid transaction fees). | * When a block is found, the miner is paid for that block immediately as a Generated transaction, but only if his total balance is over 1 BTC (to help the recipient avoid transaction fees). |
Revision as of 00:34, 20 June 2011
Eligius, also sometimes referred to as Éloi or "Luke-Jr's pool", is a mining pool.
To use it, a miner merely needs to be directed to mining.eligius.st on port 8337, with the username set to a valid bitcoin address (which receives the payout). No registration is needed.
Donation address: 1RNUbHZwo2PmrEQiuX5ascLEXmtcFpooL
Basic concepts:
- Pool keeps all transaction fees to itself, plus 0.00000001 BTC per second since last-found block and 1 share per block (currently this works out to under 0.0003%, and gets smaller with more miners in the pool).
- Remaining reward is divided equally among ALL shares contributed since its last-found block.
- When a block is found, the miner is paid for that block immediately as a Generated transaction, but only if his total balance is over 1 BTC (to help the recipient avoid transaction fees).
- If a block is orphaned, its shares become part of the next block's reward distribution.
- No registration. Just send username with the address you want payouts to (password can be anything).
- Will only include transactions in its blocks if the sender pays a fee of at least 0.00004096 BTC per 512 bytes.
Eligius was announced on April 27, 2011[1]. At the time the service was operated without a name, paying out even tiny coins immediately.
- Main webpage
- Pool statistics (hashrate, found blocks, per-address balance stats)
- Coin Control: view the balance of an address.
- Total pool hashrate (EU + US, estimate)
- JSON API