full-node: Remove auth req, Core Daemon section

This commit is contained in:
Will Binns 2016-12-24 06:54:32 -06:00
parent f7454228cc
commit a7071a103a

View file

@ -327,45 +327,7 @@ log out. The steps in this section should be performed as the user you
want to run Bitcoin Core. (If you're an expert administrator, you can want to run Bitcoin Core. (If you're an expert administrator, you can
make this a locked account used only by Bitcoin Core.) make this a locked account used only by Bitcoin Core.)
Before using the Bitcoin Core daemon, `bitcoind`, you need to create its From the terminal, type:
configuration file with a user name and password. First create the
`.bitcoin` directory, create (touch) the file, and set the file's
permissions so that only your user account can read it. From the
terminal, type:
mkdir ~/.bitcoin
touch ~/.bitcoin/bitcoin.conf
chmod 600 ~/.bitcoin/bitcoin.conf
Then you can run the command `bitcoind`. It will print output similar
to this:
bitcoind
Error: To use the "-server" option, you must set a rpcpassword in the configuration file:
/home/bitcoinorg/.bitcoin/bitcoin.conf
It is recommended you use the following random password:
rpcuser=bitcoinrpc
rpcpassword=XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
(you do not need to remember this password)
The username and password MUST NOT be the same.
If the file does not exist, create it with owner-readable-only file permissions.
It is also recommended to set alertnotify so you are notified of problems;
for example: alertnotify=echo %s | mail -s "Bitcoin Alert" admin@foo.com
The "rpcpassword" displayed will be unique for your system. You can
copy the rpcuser and rpcpassword lines into your configuration file
using the following commands. Note that in most Ubuntu terminals, you need
to press Ctrl-Shift-C to copy and Ctrl-Shift-V to paste because Ctrl-C
and Ctrl-V have different meanings in a Unix-style terminal.
echo rpcuser=bitcoinrpc >> ~/.bitcoin/bitcoin.conf
echo rpcpassword=XXXXXX >> ~/.bitcoin/bitcoin.conf
(**Warning:** Don't use XXXXXX as your RPC password. Copy the
rpcpassword displayed by bitcoind for your system.)
Now you can start Bitcoin Core daemon for real. Type the following
command:
bitcoind -daemon bitcoind -daemon