Howto HiveOS
commands
show hive client agent:
agent-screen
ask for rig id and password again:
firstrun -f
run file manager:
mc
upgrade from console, same as hitting a button on the web:
selfupgrade
do a hard reboot:
sreboot
do a hard shutdown:
sreboot shutdown
show running miner screen:
miner
start currently configured miner:
miner start
stop currently configured miner:
miner stop
show miner log:
miner log
show miner configuration:
miner config
how boot system messages:
dmesg
show last 100 lines from system log:
tail -n 100 /var/log/syslog
show network interfaces:
ifconfig
show wireless adapters
iwconfig
stop any running command:
ctrl+c
detach from screen (miner or agent) to leave it working:
ctrl+a, d
switch between screens if you have second miner running and so on:
ctrl+a, space or ctrl+a, 1,2,3
show logs of various parts (you can try log1 and log2) of the Hive agent
agent-screen log
say hello to server: to refresh IP addresses, configs etc:
hello
check and diagnose your network connection:
net-test
show time and date synchronization settings:
timedatectl
show list of all processes:
top -b -n 1
show hashrate watchdog status and log:
wd status
spin gpu fans from the first card to the last to make it easier to find the required gpu:
gpu-fans-find
show voltage/temperature readings of the motherboard and cpu:
sensors
shutdown psu and boot in 120 seconds:
sreboot wakealarm 120
send a power command to OpenDev watchdog:
/hive/opt/opendev/watchdog-opendev power
send a reset command to OpenDev watchdog:
/hive/opt/opendev/watchdog-opendev reset
expand a linux partition to fill remaining drive space: disk-expand -s list all installed miners:
hpkg list miners
uninstall all miners: hpkg remove miners remove all downloaded nvidia driver packages except currently installed:
nvidia-driver-update --remove
it can help in situations when selfupgrade says hiveos is up to date but actually it isn’t:
selfupgrade --force
show Hive service boot log:
journalctl -u hive --no-pager
show log of xorg server:
journalctl -u hivex --no-pager
write all logs to disk, they will remain after reboots:
logs-on
write all logs to RAM to reduсe USB flash drive wear:
logs-off
send /var/log/syslog file to dashboard:
log='/var/log/syslog'; gzip -c9 "$log" | base64 -w 0 | message file "$(basename "$log")" payload
amd gpu
show amd cards info:
amd-info
show info about amd cards power supply:
amdcovc
show amd cards memory info:
amdmeminfo
show voltage table for AMD GPU 0:
wolfamdctrl -i 0 --show-voltage
nvidia gpu
show recent nvidia gpu errors:
journalctl -p err | grep NVRM
show extended nvidia cards info
nvidia-info
update nvidia drivers:
nvidia-driver-update
download and install latest driver from series 430:
nvidia-driver-update 430
reinstall nvidia-settings only:
nvidia-driver-update --nvs
show nvidia cards info:
nvidia-smi
show core/mem clocks for all the nvidia gpus:
nvtool --clocks