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A handy bash script to setup crypto masternodes in no time. Initially developed for $PIVX. Now many more ;-)

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Nodemaster VPS installation howto

This masternode installation script vastly simplifies the setup of any masternode running on a virtual private server (VPS), and it also adds a number of other powerful features, including:

  • IPv6 Support
  • Installs 1-100 (or more!) masternodes in parallel on one VPS, with individual config and data directories
  • It can install masternodes for other coins on the same VPS
  • 100% auto-compilation and 99% of configuration on the masternode side of things
  • Automatically compiling from the latest release tag, or another tag can be specified
  • Some security hardening is done, including firewalling and a separate user, increasing security
  • Automatic startup for all masternode daemons

Some notes and requirements:

  • Script has been tested on DigitalOcean, Hetzner & Vultr VPS, but should work almost anywhere where IPv6 addresses are available
  • Currently only Ubuntu 16.04 and 18.04 LTS are supported
  • This script needs to run as root or with sudo, the masternodes will and should not!

Have fun, this is crypto after all!

BTC  33ENWZ9RCYBG7nv6ac8KxBUSuQX64Hx3x3

Install guide for Vultr

How to get VPS server

Feel free to use my reflink to signup and receive a bonus w/ vultr:

Supported masternode projects

The ever growing list of supported projects is now maintained at https://nodemaster-vps.com/supported-masternode-projects/.

For new masternode owners, Vultr is recommended as a VPS hosting provider, but other providers that allow direct root SSH login access may work.

Deploy a new system

First, create a new VPS by clicking that small "+" button.

VPS creation

Location choice

You can choose any location. You may wish to have it hosted in a city/country near you, or choose a different area to help with the global decentralization your chosen masternode network.

VPS location choice

Linux distribution (Ubuntu 16.04 / 18.04 LTS)

Select Ubuntu 16.04 or 18.04 LTS

VPS location choice

VPS size

The 25 GB SSD / 1024MBB Memory instance is enough for 2-3 masternodes. You may need more memory as the blockchain grows over time, or if you want to run more masternodes.

VPS sizing

Activating additional features (IPv6)

Toggle "Enable IPv6" to activate that feature--at Vultr there is no additional cost for this.

VPS sizing

You may wish to enable DDOS Protection to protect your masternodes against a potential denial of service attack, especially if you are running multiple masternodes from one VPS. Vultr charges an additional fee for this.

Hostnames & number of VPS

Choose how many instances you want and click "Deploy Now".

VPS sizing

Installation of PuTTY as SSH client (Windows)

If you are running your wallet from Windows, install PuTTY while the server is being set up. You can download PuTTY from here: http://www.putty.org/. Skip this step if you are using a Mac--you will use the built in Terminal application instead.

Once PuTTY is installed, return to the Vultr dashboard to get the login details by clicking on the ... to the right of your server, and select Server Details.

Accessing your VPS via SSH

Copy your password for SSH access from the server details page. check hostname and password

Now open PuTTY to add the server.

login to VPS

Enter the IP address in the Host Name field, and enter the server name you wish to use for this VPS (e.g., MN01) to Saved Sessions. Click save.

Click the open button. When the console has opened, click Yes in the PuTTY Security Alert box. Alert from PuTTY

Now enter your server login details provided in your Vultr account. You cannot Ctrl+V to paste in the console. Either right click the mouse or type shift+insert (sometimes on keyboard it will just be INS key)

User: root Password: (paste or type password)

When you paste it will not display, so don't try to paste again. Just paste once and press Enter.

For Mac users, open Terminal (e.g., Press Command-Space and type Terminal and press Enter). Then type:

ssh -l root <IP address>

Install a PHORE masternode

Login to your newly installed node as "root".

VPS sizing

Enter this command to copy the Masternode installation script and install a single Phore Masternode:

git clone https://github.com/masternodes/vps.git && cd vps && ./install.sh -p phore

If you have your masternode private key, please use this (you can generate masternode private key with Step 2 below).

git clone https://github.com/masternodes/vps.git && cd vps && ./install.sh -p phore -k **PRIVATE KEY**

Using this command, you can skip "Configure masternode configuration files" below, because the command above adds the masternode private key to the masternode configuration files.

This prepares the system and installs the Phore Masternode daemon. This includes downloading the latest Phore masternode release, creating a swap file, configuring the firewall, and compiling the Phore Masternode from source code. This process takes about 10-15 minutes.

VPS configuration

While that is underway, go back to your local desktop and open phore-qt.

More complex situations (ignore if you are installing a single masternode on a new VPS)

If you wish to install more than one masternode on the same VPS, you can add a -c parameter to tell the script how many to configure, so for example this would install three Phore masternodes:

git clone https://github.com/masternodes/vps.git && cd vps
./install.sh -p phore -c 3

If you already have your masternode private keys, you can add them as shown below:

git clone https://github.com/phoreproject/vps.git && cd vps
./install.sh -p phore -c 3 --key **PRIVATE KEY 01** --key2 **PRIVATE KEY 02** --key3 **PRIVATE KEY 03**

Using this command, you can skip the step for "Configure masternode configuration files", because the command above adds the masternode private keys to the masternode configuration files.

If you are upgrading your masternode(s) to a new release, you can add a -u parameter:

git clone https://github.com/masternodes/vps.git && cd vps
./install.sh -p phore -u

The project is configured to use the latest official release of the Phore masternode code, and we will update this project each time a new release is issued, but without downloading the latest version of this project and using the -u parameter, the script will not update an existing Phore node that is already installed.

Configure Phore Wallet

Step1 - Create Collateral Transaction

Once the wallet is open on your local computer, generate a new receive address and label it however you want to identify your masternode rewards (e.g., Phore-MN-1). This label will show up in your transactions each time you receive a block reward.

Click the Request payment button, and copy the address.

making new address

Now go to the Send tab, paste the copied address, and send exactly 10,000 PHR to it in a single transaction. Wait for it to confirm on the blockchain. This is the collateral transaction that will be locked and paired with your new masternode. If you are setting up more than one masternode at one time, repeat this process for each one.

sending 10kPHR

Step 2 - Generate Masternode Private Key

Go to the [Tools > Debug Console] and enter these commands below:

masternode genkey

This will produce a masternode private key:

generating masternode private key

Copy this value to a text file. It will be needed for both the phore configuration file on the masternode VPS, and the masternode configuration file on the computer with the controlling Phore wallet.

If you are setting up multiple masternodes, repeat this step for each one. Each time you run the masternode genkey command it will give you a new private key--it doesn't matter which one you use, but it is important that it is unique for each masternode and that the VPS phore configuration file and wallet masternode configuration file match (see below).

Step 3 - Masternode Outputs

This will give you the rest of the information you need to configure your masternode in your Phore wallet--the transaction ID and the output index.

masternode outputs

getting transaction id

The long string of characters is the Transaction ID for your masternode collateral transaction. The number after the long string is the Index. Copy and paste these into the text file next to the private key you generated in Step 2.

If you have multiple masternodes in the same wallet and have done the 10,000 PHR transactions for each of them, masternode outputs will display transaction IDs and indexes for each one. You can choose which private key to go with each transaction ID and index, as long as they are all different, and you make sure the corresponding lines in masternode.conf and the VPS phore configuration files match (see below).

End of installations

When the script finishes, it will look similar to this:

installation ended

You only have a few steps remaining to complete your masternode configuration.

Configure masternode configuration files

Since this installation method supports multiple masternodes, the phore configuration files have a node number added to them (e.g., phore_n1.conf, phore_n2.conf), stored in the /etc/masternodes directory. If you have a single masternode on the VPS, you will only need to edit /etc/masternodes/phore_n1.conf.

To open phore_n1.conf for editing, enter these commands:

sudo apt-get install nano
nano /etc/masternodes/phore_n1.conf

The next step adds your masternode private key.

Add masternode private key

What you need to change is only masternode private key. (We recommend using IPv6 which is the default, but if you choose IPv4 when you ran the installation script, please edit #NEW_IPv4_ADDRESS_FOR_MASTERNODE_NUMBER to your VPS IP address). After typing the nano command, you will see something similar to this.

add private key

Copy the masternode private key from the text file you saved it in, and replace HERE_GOES_YOUR_MASTERNODE_KEY_FOR_MASTERNODE_phore_1 with that private key (this typically begins with an 8).

While you have this file opened, copy the information that follows after masternodeaddr=, starting with the open bracket. This is the masternode's IPv6 address and port, and will be needed for the wallet's masternode.conf file.

Once you have your masternode private key entered, press Ctrl+X . Then press Y to save, and press Enter to exit.

Finally, close and restart your Phore wallet so that it will have the new masternode configuration.

Start your masternodes

A script for starting all masternodes on the VPS has been created at /usr/local/bin/activate_masternodes_phore Run this command after your masternode configuration written above.

/usr/local/bin/activate_masternodes_phore

The masternode daemons will start and begin loading the Phore blockchain.

Finishing Wallet Configuration & Activate Masternode

To activate your nodes from your wallet, one of the last steps is to add a line for the masternode in the masternode.conf file. This file has the following format, with each value separated with a space:

  • alias IP:Port masternodeprivatekey collateral_transaction_ID collateral_output_index
  • alias - A short name you use to identify the masternode, you can choose this name as long as it is without spaces (e.g., Phore-MN-1)
  • IP:Port - The IP address (either IPv6 or IPv4) and the Port where the masternode is running, separated by a colon (:). You copied this from the phore.conf file on the VPS.
  • collateral_transaction_ID: This is the transaction ID you copied from masternode outputs.
  • collateral_output_index: This is the index you copied from masternode outputs.

From the wallet menu, edit the local wallet masternode.conf file. [Tools > Open Masternode Configuration File] Add the MN conf line, like the example below to the masternode.conf file. Save it, and close the file. It will look like the following example, using your values for each of the fields above. A common mistake is mixing up the private key and the collateral transaction ID--to make this easier, the private key usually begins with an 8.

example.

Phore-MN-1 [2001:19f0:5001:ca6:2085::1]:11771 88xrxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx7K 6b4c9xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx7ee23 0

The image below shows another example using an IPv4 IP address. If you followed this guide you are probably using an IPv6 address that looks like the line above.

editing masternode.conf

If you are running multiple masternodes, you need to add one of these lines for each masternode, and make sure the private key on each line matches the corresponding private key you entered in the VPS phore configuration file for that masternode.

Check syncing status of masternode

The masternode cannot complete activation until it is fully synced with the Phore blockchain network.

To check the status of your masternode, please enter this command in the VPS terminal. If you have multiple masternodes on the same VPS, you can change n1 to n2 etc. below to check the status of each one.

/usr/local/bin/phore-cli -conf=/etc/masternodes/phore_n1.conf getinfo

The output will look like this:

{
  "version": 1010000,
  "protocolversion": 7002,
  "walletversion": 61000,
  "balance": 0.00000000,
  "privatesend_balance": 0.00000000,
  "blocks": 176209,
  "timeoffset": 0,
  "connections": 44,
  "proxy": "",
  "difficulty": 42882.54964804553,
  "testnet": false,
  "moneysupply" : 11814171.53907114,
  "zPHRsupply" : {
      "1" : 263.00000000,
      "5" : 135.00000000,
      "10" : 500.00000000,
      "50" : 700.00000000,
      "100" : 1300.00000000,
      "500" : 5000.00000000,
      "1000" : 11000.00000000,
      "5000" : 90000.00000000,
      "total" : 108898.00000000
  },
  "keypoololdest" : 1507302593,
  "keypoolsize" : 1001,
  "paytxfee" : 0.00000000,
  "relayfee" : 0.00010000,
  "staking status" : "Staking Not Active",
  "errors" : ""
}

We're looking at the blocks, and need that to be the latest block in the blockchain. You can check your local wallet to see the latest block by hovering over the green check mark.

checking syncing status

Once your masternode has synced up to the latest block, go to next step. The syncing process may take 15-30 minutes or more as the Phore blockchain grows. You can keep checking progress with the command above, by pressing the up arrow and Enter to repeat it.

Start Masternode

Go to the debug console of your Phore wallet [Tools->Debug Console] and enter the following command, replacing mn-alias with the name of the masternode in the Alias column of the Masternodes tab:

startmasternode alias false mn-alias

You may need to unlock the wallet [Settings->Unlock Wallet] before you run this command, entering your passphrase. You can lock the wallet after it is finished.

If everything was setup correctly, after entering the command you will see something like this:

{
"overall" : "Successfully started 1 masternodes, failed to start 0, total 1",
"detail" : {
"status" : {
"alias" : "phore-mn01",
"result" : "successful"
}

If you are setting up multiple masternodes, repeat this for each one. You can now close the debug console, return the Masternodes tab and check the status: checking syncing status

It should say ENABLED, and within an hour, the timer in the Active column should start increasing.

Your Phore masternode is now set up and running! Depending on how many masternodes there are, it may take 12-24 hours before you see your first masternode reward--this is normal and rewards should come at more regular intervals after the first one.

rewards

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A handy bash script to setup crypto masternodes in no time. Initially developed for $PIVX. Now many more ;-)

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