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Rp-pi-guide Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to rp-pi-guide
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
NOTE:
The number of mentions on this list indicates mentions on common posts plus user suggested alternatives.
Hence, a higher number means a better rp-pi-guide alternative or higher similarity.
rp-pi-guide reviews and mentions
Posts with mentions or reviews of rp-pi-guide.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-08-05.
- Raspberry Pi 4b: Geth + Lighthouse vs. OpenEthereum + Lighthouse ?
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What are your best dashboards for garfana?
Preview
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Economically rocket pool node hardware build
I'm far from a hardware expert, but from what I've read in the Rocket Pool Discord I think the most economic and resource-light option would be to run a RP node on a Raspberry Pi 4 using Nimbus as your ETH2 client. Here is u/jcrtp's guide to setting one up: https://github.com/jclapis/rp-pi-guide.
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RocketPool staking: my initial recon and questions
Hardware. General recommended minimums are 16gb RAM and a 1tb SSD nvme. But if it's within your budget to get a larger SSD then that's better for future-proofing and to reduce the frequency of which you'll need to prune the ETH1 chain data. Here's a guide that Rocket Pool dev u/jcrtp put together that shows different hardware builds from the community. https://github.com/jclapis/rocketpool.github.io/blob/main/src/guides/local/hardware.md He is staking on a Raspberry Pi (8gb RAM, he's a Pi wizard!) and has an excellent guide for that too if interested. https://github.com/jclapis/rp-pi-guide/blob/main/Overview.md
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Ethereum Researcher Carl Beek describes the energy savings of the Ethereum transition to Proof of Stake
In case anyone is curious about my 5 watt figure, I achieved it with a highly optimized configuration on a Raspberry Pi 4B. It's actually quite easy to do, it just took a while to tweak everything until I found a configuration that works well on mainnet. I've made all of those details available in my setup guide if you'd like to try replicating it.
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Reducing linux swapiness to 10 from default of 60 greatly reduces disk I/O and CPU usage.
For what it's worth, I have the users set it to 6 in my Raspberry Pi guide. I also have them set vm.vfs_cache_pressure=10 (a related setting that controls how frequently your inode cache gets invalidated).
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Rocketpool node on RasPi for additional security
To setup Rocketpool on the Raspberry Pi I temporarily plugged it into the router for internet acces and used the RasPi setup guide, leaving out the Eth1 & Eth2 client installation parts and instead putting in the IP address of the staking machine on the internal network. Generating the node wallet is of course done after unplugging. Since the node and watchtower services only need RPC access to the two Ethereum clients and no full internet access this works quite well. The only thing that has to be done manually whenever you create a new minipool (which probably won't be very often) is to copy the keystore files generated by Rocketpool onto the staking machine running the validator. Either via ssh onto the staking machine (temporarily open the port) or via USB stick.
- Which ETH 2.0 client to choose?
- What exactly is RPL? Is it different than rETH? and how does it relate to Rocket Pool staking?
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2021: What's a good approach to increase your ETH hodling
see here: https://github.com/jclapis/rp-pi-guide
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A note from our sponsor - SaaSHub
www.saashub.com | 5 May 2024
Stats
Basic rp-pi-guide repo stats
13
31
0.0
over 2 years ago
jclapis/rp-pi-guide is an open source project licensed under Apache License 2.0 which is an OSI approved license.
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