f7301c3563
Ain't nobody got time for link/cmake skullduggery.
This reverts commit
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blockchain_converter.cpp | ||
blockchain_dump.cpp | ||
blockchain_export.cpp | ||
blockchain_import.cpp | ||
blockchain_utilities.h | ||
blocksdat_file.cpp | ||
blocksdat_file.h | ||
bootstrap_file.cpp | ||
bootstrap_file.h | ||
bootstrap_serialization.h | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
cn_deserialize.cpp | ||
fake_core.h | ||
README.md |
Monero Blockchain Utilities
Copyright (c) 2014-2016, The Monero Project
Introduction
The blockchain utilities allow one to convert an old style blockchain.bin file
to a new style database. There are two ways to upgrade an old style blockchain:
The recommended way is to run a blockchain_export
, then blockchain_import
.
The other way is to run blockchain_converter
. In both cases, you will be left
with a new style blockchain.
For importing into the LMDB database, compile with DATABASE=lmdb
e.g.
DATABASE=lmdb make release
This is also the default compile setting on the master branch.
By default, the exporter will use the original in-memory database (blockchain.bin) as its source.
This default is to make migrating to an LMDB database easy, without having to recompile anything.
To change the source, adjust SOURCE_DB
in src/blockchain_utilities/bootstrap_file.h
according to the comments.
Usage:
See also each utility's "--help" option.
Export an existing in-memory database
$ blockchain_export
This loads the existing blockchain, for whichever database type it was compiled for, and exports it to $MONERO_DATA_DIR/export/blockchain.raw
Import the exported file
$ blockchain_import
This imports blocks from $MONERO_DATA_DIR/export/blockchain.raw
(exported using the blockchain_export
tool as described above)
into the current database.
Defaults: --batch on
, --batch size 20000
, --verify on
Batch size refers to number of blocks and can be adjusted for performance based on available RAM.
Verification should only be turned off if importing from a trusted blockchain.
If you encounter an error like "resizing not supported in batch mode", you can just re-run
the blockchain_import
command again, and it will restart from where it left off.
## use default settings to import blockchain.raw into database
$ blockchain_import
## fast import with large batch size, database mode "fastest", verification off
$ blockchain_import --batch-size 20000 --database lmdb#fastest --verify off
Import options
--input-file
specifies input file path for importing
default: <data-dir>/export/blockchain.raw
--output-file
specifies output file path to export to
default: <data-dir>/export/blockchain.raw
--block-stop
stop at block number
--database <database type>
--database <database type>#<flag(s)>
database type: lmdb, berkeley, memory
flags:
The flag after the # is interpreted as a composite mode/flag if there's only one (no comma separated arguments).
The composite mode represents multiple DB flags and support different database types:
safe, fast, fastest
Database-specific flags can be set instead.
LMDB flags (more than one may be specified):
nosync, nometasync, writemap, mapasync, nordahead
BerkeleyDB flags (takes one):
txn_write_nosync, txn_nosync, txn_sync
## Examples:
$ blockchain_import --database lmdb#fastest
$ blockchain_import --database berkeley#fastest
$ blockchain_import --database lmdb#nosync
$ blockchain_import --database lmdb#nosync,nometasync
$ blockchain_import --database berkeley#txn_nosync
Blockchain converter with batching
blockchain_converter
has also been updated and includes batching for faster writes. However, on lower RAM systems, this will be slower than using the exporter and importer utilities. The converter needs to keep the blockchain in memory for the duration of the conversion, like the original bitmonerod, thus leaving less memory available to the destination database to operate.
Due to higher resource use, it is recommended to use the importer with an exported file instead of the converter.
$ blockchain_converter --batch on --batch-size 20000