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Cryptocurrency Ecosystem => Crypto currency Mining => Topic started by: nodelistverdant on September 07, 2020, 02:56:21 PM

Title: 5 Hive OS Tips for large ASIC farms
Post by: nodelistverdant on September 07, 2020, 02:56:21 PM
(https://miro.medium.com/max/1000/1*cjJlHwfqO3g5bwuC016PHA.jpeg)

Owners of large farms often face the same problems of how to simplify the management process. We’ve gathered five useful, but often overlooked, Hive OS functions (https://hiveos.farm/?utm_source=Reddit&utm_medium=i&utm_campaign=article&utm_term=click&utm_content=hiveos) when working with your ASICs farms.

1. Segregating your workers using farms
Many mining hotel owners or administrators of several customers prefer to segregate their user base in Hive OS by farms based on different networks or premises.

A farm is a group of workers that you combine together to aggregate a part of your devices (workers). In a farm, workers are isolated from each other, meaning each farm shows a separate general statistic like power consumption, hashrate, the number of devices with problems, etc. It is a convenient way to place individual clients or individual premises as a farm. It is also convenient to apply an action in bulk across an entire farm. For example, change wallets or pools for all devices.

In Hive OS there are different access rights for accounts. Let’s say, an administrator can have 10 farms with full access to them, and can share any farm with monitoring rights (without management) with another account. A client can receive notifications in Telegram in case their workers have problems or to check their statistics.

2. Using Tags
There are many options where tags can be used:

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Using tags to sort problematic workers

3. Statistics
Currently, there are statistics for a specific single device, or for the entire farm. Farm statistics shows a hashrate graph and a graph of the number of active devices.

The statistics of the device shows graphs of consumption, hashrate, temperature and fan speed.

All statistics can be exported to a .csv file. This allows a user to calculate the average or an exact value for any given period or even build custom charts.

Each farm displays in real-time the current hashrates, power consumption and the number of non-working devices.

(https://miro.medium.com/max/700/1*Ec_8Q9pd1ESGnPnqxDLUpQ.png)
Statistics of consumption, hashrate, temperature and fan speed

4. ASICs bulk installation
There are several ways in which you can install Hive OS unto an ASIC:

All installation manuals are available in our GitHub.

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Bulk firmware installation through the web interface

5. ASICs bulk actions
There are many different actions that can be performed with the ASICs in bulk. For example, overclock, flash, change the wallet/pool and receive notifications.

Through Hive’s web interface, you can select all the devices in a farm in one click or select one device at a time. Another option is to select all devices on the page in multipage mode. Further, you can perform the following actions in bulk:

(https://miro.medium.com/max/700/1*WqjJJ1D9YXSpVbvlCkN5SQ.png)
Bulk flight sheets applying

The above-mentioned functionality will be of great help to anyone who’s managing a large number of ASICs as they provide users with tons of flexibility for just about any use case.
Don’t forget to use these helpful functions when working on your farms.
Good luck and happy mining (https://hiveos.farm/?utm_source=Reddit&utm_medium=i&utm_campaign=article&utm_term=click&utm_content=hiveos)!