# Various test vectors ## mainnet_alt.json For easier testing the difficulty is maximally increased in the first (and only) retarget period, by producing blocks approximately 2 minutes apart. The alternate mainnet chain was generated as follows: - use faketime to set node clock to 2 minutes after genesis block - mine a block using a CPU miner such as https://github.com/pooler/cpuminer - restart node with a faketime 2 minutes later ```sh for i in {1..2015} do faketime "`date -d @"$(( 1231006505 + $i * 120 ))" +'%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'`" \ bitcoind -connect=0 -nocheckpoints -stopatheight=$i done ``` The CPU miner is kept running as follows: ```sh ./minerd --coinbase-addr 1NQpH6Nf8QtR2HphLRcvuVqfhXBXsiWn8r --no-stratum --algo sha256d --no-longpoll --scantime 3 --retry-pause 1 ``` The payout address is derived from first BIP32 test vector master key: ``` pkh(xprv9s21ZrQH143K3QTDL4LXw2F7HEK3wJUD2nW2nRk4stbPy6cq3jPPqjiChkVvvNKmPGJxWUtg6LnF5kejMRNNU3TGtRBeJgk33yuGBxrMPHi/44h/0h/0h/<0;1>/*)#fkjtr0yn ``` It uses `pkh()` because `tr()` outputs at low heights are not spendable (`unexpected-witness`). This makes each block determinisic except for its timestamp and nonce, which are stored in `mainnet_alt.json` and used to reconstruct the chain without having to redo the proof-of-work. The timestamp was not kept constant because at difficulty 1 it's not sufficient to only grind the nonce. Grinding the extra_nonce or version field instead would have required additional (stratum) software. It would also make it more complicated to reconstruct the blocks in this test.