![]() Also, don’t use this wallet for any funds – it’s a hot wallet and that’s not safe. Do that, but remember, do not encrypt the wallet. You’ll need to shut down Bitcoin Core and restart it for the config file changes to take effect, but don’t worry, this time you won’t lose any blockchain data that you’ve already downloaded.Īt some point, you will have the option to create a new wallet. This allows Electrum Personal Server to talk to Bitcoin Core. Add a line txindex=1- this allows any transaction to be looked up by Bitcoin Core, not just your own wallet. ![]() Go to menu “settings” and select “options…” and click “open configuration file”. To access the nf file is through the graphical user interface. Meanwhile, we need to edit the bitcoin configuration file. It will delete the blockchain data it has downloaded and will start again. If you changed this now, close the program and run it again. HOWEVER, before you get too far, go to the menu “settings” and click “options…” and make sure that the “prune block storage” option is not checked - assuming you want your node to be a full un-pruned node. It should now start downloading the blockchain and will take several days. Select default if you are using the internal drive, and if you are using an external drive, select “custom” and provide the location of your drive.īefore clicking OK, make sure “discard blocks after verification…” is not selected. It will ask you where to store the bitcoin directory - custom or default. Run Bitcoin Core graphical user interface by double-clicking the icon. I suggest moving the extracted directory to the desktop, and renaming it “Bitcoin” Compare the output with the listed hash you downloaded, to make sure the file has not been tampered with.Įxtract the downloaded file using the graphical interface. Next, using the terminal, navigate to where Bitcoin Core was downloaded (usually ~/Downloads/ ) and type: shasum -a 256 NameOfDownloadedFile Download Bitcoin CoreĪlso, click Verify release signatures to download a file containing the SHA 256 hashes of each Bitcoin Core OS version, for reference. Connecting a 1 or 2-terabyte solid-state drive is preferable but is an extra cost. Be prepared to use up about 350 Gb (in 2020), and have space for it to grow. You can connect and format an external hard drive, or use your internal hard drive. If it’s mildly interesting, watch this one as well, it’s a bit longer. It’s about Linux, but it works the same on a Mac. If you don’t, then watch this 11-minute video to learn some SSS (super simple stuff). This does require you to know how to navigate around the file system in Linux/Mac. The most important tip from here on is PAY ATTENTION TO DETAIL, a small typo can send you down a frustrating search for “why does this not work?” I promise it will be easy if you follow the instructions, ask me if you get stuck. This article will guide you with some command line. The MyNode setup (and Ronin Dojo) are inside docker containers - you need to be a computer scientist to have any hope of accessing the files manually. When something goes wrong and you end up needing to re-sync the blockchain on your bundled node, at least you have this simple setup up that will not let you down. By all means, use those easy-to-install nodes, but I would do that IN ADDITION to this. This is slightly more technical than running a bundled node like MyNode ( link) or RaspiBlitz ( link) these have many other applications you can run with a relatively straightforward install - but because there are more moving parts, when something goes wrong it’s harder to troubleshoot. I’ll go through more hours of pain and suffering, so you all won’t have to. I suggest getting EPS working first, then I’ll show you how to install the more powerful servers next time, after I figure it out. You also can’t be the “Uncle Jim” of your social circle with EPS, by providing a trusted node for them to connect to. ![]() So if your desktop wallet is connected, don’t spend hours tinkering with your mobile Electrum Wallet trying to figure out why it doesn’t connect (true story). One thing to note about EPS is that it really is “personal” - it only connects to one Electrum Wallet at a time. There are others too, each with different trade-offs. ![]() Others include Electrum Server in Rust (Electrs), the no-longer-supported ElectrumX, and ElectrumX/Spesmilo which is an ElectrumX variant that is supported. Note the Electrum Personal Server (EPS) is one of several server options. The server does not copy the Blockchain data, it is not a node - Bitcoin Core is. It needs an Electrum Server to be the middle man. It would be nice if your Electrum Wallet could just get blockchain data from your own Bitcoin Core, but it can’t. This article explains how to set up Bitcoin Core, Electrum Personal Server (EPS), and Electrum Desktop Wallet, and then privately connect the Wallet to Bitcoin Core via EPS. ![]()
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