As of 2022/7/6, Sepolia has switched to PoS. The window to do some mining has closed.
It's mid 2022, Ethereum is still PoW and motoring towards merge / PoS. Surviving testnets will be Sepolia - currently PoW - and Goerli. Ropsten will be merged and then deprecated, Rinkeby and Kovan won't be merged.
I want to "get ready" for some Sepolia testing pre- and post-merge. Sepolia will not have a public validator set; testing post-merge will be limited to running applications on it. As Sepolia is PoW, I can actually go mine myself some SepplETH. Here's how.
- Geth on Sepolia, Linux. This could absolutely be Windows, I just happen to have Linux tooling I like
- ethminer or t-rex, Windows, with an NVidia or AMD GPU. Mostly because the only GPU I have that can mine is in my Windows box
I'm using eth-docker for this.
Get prereqs: sudo apt update && sudo apt install -y docker-compose
Make your user part of the docker
group so you don't need sudo
for docker commands: sudo usermod -aG docker MYUSERNAME && newgrp docker
Clone eth-docker: git clone https://github.com/eth-educators/eth-docker.git sepolia && cd sepolia
Configure eth-docker for this: cp default.env .env
, then nano .env
and set
COMPOSE_FILE=geth.yml:el-shared.yml
EL_NETWORK=sepolia
Save and close.
Get the ETH address you want the Sepolia mining rewards to be sent to. Anything created in Metamask will do.
A few changes for Geth so it can mine. nano geth.yml
and change the entrypoint
. Enable the miner
API, and append to it:
entrypoint:
- geth
.... existing entries, leave those be
- --http.api
- web3,eth,net,miner
.... existing entries, leave those be
- --pprof.addr
- 0.0.0.0
- --mine
- --miner.etherbase
- "0xMYETHADDRESS"
You need the quotes around the address, and 0xMYETHADDRESS
is going to be your actual address.
Start it: ./ethd up
, and look at the logs with ./ethd logs -f execution
. It should sync the chain in minutes and then be ready for mining.
If your Linux boxen is on the Internet, not in your home network, and only then, you'll want to firewall the RPC port 8545 and WS port 8546, which are both exposed now. Follow instructions to place ufw "in front of" docker, get the public IP your Windows box uses with something like whatismyip and create a simple policy along these lines:
sudo ufw allow OpenSSH
sudo ufw allow proto tcp from MYPUBLICIP to any port 8545
sudo ufw deny 8545
sudo ufw deny 8546
And finally sudo ufw enable
. Adjust the policy to your own needs if you already had ufw running.
In Metamask, go to Settings, Network, Add Network and create a new custom network.
Call it Sepolia Test Network
, set the New RPC URL to your Sepolia Geth as http://IP-OF-GETH-BOX:8545
, Chain ID 11155111
, currency symbol SepplETH
and Explorer to https://sepolia.etherscan.io
.
Your AntiVirus and browser will likely quarantine these as cryptominers, because they are. You'll need to allow-list them.
Grab ethminer. It's open source, but doesn't work with newer-generation cards. A PR that enables CUDA11 and thus RTX 3000 series does exist, but there are no ready-made executables for it.
Extract that somewhere, get into a PowerShell or create a bat file, then start it like so: For NVidia, .\ethminer.exe -U -P getwork://IP-OF-GETH-BOX:8545
or for AMD, .\ethminer.exe -G -P getwork://IP-OF-GETH-BOX:8545
.
You can get help with .\ethminer.exe --help
.
An alternative is t-rex, which is closed-source. It takes a 1% dev cut, and supports newer-generation cards. Download it, then run it in PowerShell or via bat as .\t-rex.exe -a ethash -o http://IP-OF-GETH-BOX:8545
.
You can get help with .\t-rex.exe --help
.
In my testing both ethminer and t-rex get almost the same hashrate from GTX 1080 and GTX 1070, with T-Rex ahead by maybe 5%. T-Rex does have a nice UI.
In your Geth logs, you should see 🔨 mined potential block
and 🔗 block reached canonical chain
as well as the occasional
⑂ block became an uncle
, and in ethminer you should see Job:
and **Accepted
messages.
Enjoy the feeling of early Ethereum mining. Difficulty on Sepolia is low, you should see rewards come in steadily.
Hi can i get a 150? Thank you