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Chia Autostart (Linux)
Running Chia as a service has several benefits, the main one being this always ensures your node / farm is running. Example given: When your farm reboots unexpectedly the service will auto start your farm after boot. You can also use this to autostart your node or harvester (change the startup script accordingly).
Step 1 - Create a Chia startup script
Use your prefered editor to create the following text file and save it (eg: startfarm.sh)
Note: Replace {USERNAME} with the name of the user having Chia installed.
#!/bin/bash /usr/bin/env bash -c 'cd /home/{USERNAME}/chia-blockchain && . ./activate && chia start farmer' 2>/dev/null
After saving use chmod +x startfarm.sh
to set the correct permissions. You can now execute the script to test if this starts up your farm: ./startfarm.sh
.
Step 2 - Create the Chia service
Create the Chia service: sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/chia.service
and paste the following service:
Note: Replace {USERNAME} (3x) with the name of the user having Chia installed.
[Unit] Description=Chia Service [Service] Type=forking RemainAfterExit=no User={username} WorkingDirectory=/home/{username}/chia-blockchain ExecStart=/home/{username}/startfarm.sh Restart=always [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target
Step 3 - Enable the Chia service
You should now be able to see the service running sudo systemctl status chia
:
$ sudo systemctl status chia ● chia.service - Chia Service Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/chia.service; disabled; vendor preset: enabled) Active: inactive (dead)
- Enable the service by running:
sudo systemctl enable chia
- Start the service by running:
sudo systemctl start chia
When you reboot the system, Chia should automatically start up.