![]() AFAIR electrs synched in something like 24h on my RaspiBlitz node while with Fulcrum v1.6.0 it took something around 6x longer to build the index. ![]() I remember that I was a bit puzzled how long it took. Sorry, I don't remember it exactly, but it took maybe around 4-7 days, likely on the longer than shorter side of my guestimate. But with the value of 512, it works just fine. I'm also using RPI 4B 8GB + SSD, plainly running bitcoind and Fulcrum, the -fast-sync value of 5000 and 400 made the app OOM. How long does your initial sync time process take? Do you also use the -fast-sync feature? Syncing Fulcrum took considerably longer than electrs but this is needed more or less only once after initial install of Fulcrum. ![]() I have not been disappointed so far, on the contrary! I don't have enough coding knowledge to do a proper audit, so I had to put some trust and faith into this project. I like the fact that it addresses speed and that you can configure it to your needs even on such low-power platforms as a Raspi. I studied the Github repo of Fulcrum and did some internet research on it. I stumbled over Fulcrum when it was integrated as an experimental feature of RaspiBlitz. I favour data sovereignity, so all I do around Bitcoin and blockchain should be done with my own local data, therefore my own Bitcoin and Lightning node, my own Electrum server, my own local Bitcoinexplorer and local mempool.space instance. You can tweak electrs to some extend, but to me it seems it's not well suited for this OR I never was able to figure it out how to do it with electrs. With electrs when you stumble over Bitcoin addresses with large histories you quickly run into trouble. From time to time I like to do some blockchain analysis or kind of "investigations", nothing professional. My own wallets don't have large histories. Return await self._send_concurrent(message, future, 1)įile "/usr/local/lib/python3.9/dist-packages/aiorpcx/session.py", line 512, in _send_concurrentĭuring handling of the above exception, another exception occurred:įile "/usr/local/bin/electrumx_rpc", line 144, in įile "/usr/local/bin/electrumx_rpc", line 139, in mainįile "/usr/lib/python3.9/asyncio/runners.py", line 44, in runįile "/usr/lib/python3.9/asyncio/base_events.py", line 642, in run_until_completeĪlso, any suggestion of a good web based (or IOS) dashboard that I can use to review the status of my ElectrumX server? Result = await nd_request(method, args)įile "/usr/local/lib/python3.9/dist-packages/aiorpcx/session.py", line 540, in send_request I was only able to see what is the last processed block using Prometheus.īut! finally you become independent and using rpc browser (like ) you may check any address you want.ĮPS requires you to predefine list of addresses you want to browse/monitor (you must set static addresses or x/z/pub).Īnd, finally, I was able to connect Trezor Suite to electrs - I was not able to do the same with EPS.įile "/usr/local/bin/electrumx_rpc", line 120, in send_request ![]() There was no progress, no indication that sync is finished. I am now on electrs (with WSL/Debian), all is fine! DB synchronization took some time, for sure not 15 minutes - I cannot tell how much, because I left computer running and just checked a few hours later. Tested on Raspberry Pi 4 8GB, Ubuntu 21.10 圆4, and 1TB external USB SSD. In rough summary, the test conducted by Sparrowwallet is as follows: Personally, so far I've been only tried using Electrs on my node, and to this date, there haven't been any major issues and fits my usage. The former is a recently dated test compared to the latter.Īnd yea as far as I understand, choosing which implementation suits the best is tied to how's the hardware capability and what the intended use of the server. Lopp: Electrum server performance report. Got interested to seek how the Electrum server performs and found out this article: sparrowwallet: server performance and J. electrs might be best option for personal usage, but i never tried it. But i'm not fan of lighter alternative Electrum Personal Server since you need to enter each master public key (xpub, ypub or zpub) or address manually. I can understand why you think it's overkill for personal usage. But actually that's only a feeling, I don't know that for sure. For local use it may be a bit of overkill. Imho ElectrumX is the most popular for "public" use. But currently ElectrumX is most popular version.
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