Minerstat

Syncs crypto mining hardware metrics into your alerts, manages rig configurations across pools, and monitors hash rate drops in real time.

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Why use Ceven?

  1. AI native Minerstat integration

    • Describe the outcome and Ceven picks the right Minerstat calls, fills the parameters, and checks the result.
    • Structured, agent friendly tool schemas so each call runs reliably instead of by guesswork.
    • Rich coverage for reading, writing, and querying your Minerstat data, across all 5 of its actions.
  2. Managed auth

    • Built in OAuth with automatic token refresh and rotation.
    • One place to manage, scope, and revoke Minerstat access.
    • Per user and per environment credentials instead of shared keys.
  3. Agent optimized design

    • Actions are tuned from real success and error rates so reliability climbs over time.
    • Full execution logs so you always know what ran in Minerstat, when, and on whose behalf.
    • The agent pauses and asks when Minerstat is unclear instead of plowing ahead.
  4. Enterprise grade security

    • Fine grained access so you control which agents and people can reach Minerstat.
    • Least privilege by default, read scopes first and only the writes a workflow needs.
    • A full audit trail of every Minerstat action to support review and sign off.

Supported tools

Every action Ceven's agents can run on Minerstat, and when to use it.

Get rig status
Pull current hash rate, temperature, and uptime for a specific miner. Use this to check if a rig is healthy.
Update rig config
Push a new configuration file or change the mining pool for a rig. Use this for pool hopping.
Restart miner
Trigger a remote reboot of the mining software or the entire machine to clear errors.
List all rigs
Pull a complete list of every registered miner in the account to audit fleet size.
Get coin price
Pull the current market price and 24 hour change for a specific cryptocurrency.
Search rigs by name
Query the fleet for miners matching a specific naming convention or group tag.
Get pool statistics
Pull current hash rate and payout data from a specific mining pool.
Change overclock settings
Update core clock or memory clock settings for supported GPU hardware.
Get account balance
Pull the current accumulated balance for the user account across all monitored rigs.
Set alert threshold
Define the temperature or hash rate limit that triggers a notification event.
Get hardware info
Pull the specific model, driver version, and firmware of a mining rig.
List available coins
Pull a list of all coins currently supported by the Minerstat tracking system.
Delete rig
Remove a rig from the monitoring dashboard when hardware is decommissioned.
Get worker details
Pull granular data for a specific worker on a multi GPU rig.
Update group settings
Change the shared configuration for a group of miners at once.
Get API usage
Pull the current number of API calls made to monitor rate limit headroom.

16 actions · scroll to see them all

Frequently asked questions

Ceven implements a smart queuing system to respect Minerstat API limits. Because mining farms can have hundreds of rigs, polling every single one every few seconds would trigger a rate limit block. The agent batches requests and uses a sliding window to ensure we stay within the allowed calls per minute. If the agent detects a 429 Too Many Requests response, it automatically pauses the workflow and uses an exponential backoff strategy to resume once the window resets. This prevents your integration from being throttled while still ensuring that critical alerts for hardware failure are processed with minimal delay.
Yes. You can build a workflow that pulls current coin profitability and compares it against your current Minerstat setup. When a different coin becomes more profitable by a percentage you define, the agent calls the update rig config action to push the new pool address and wallet to your miners. This happens without manual intervention, meaning your hardware always mines the most valuable asset in real time. You can also add a safety check to ensure the new pool is compatible with your specific hardware version before the change is deployed.
No. Ceven only interacts with the Minerstat API to monitor performance and manage configurations. Minerstat itself handles the connection to the pools using the wallet addresses you provide in their dashboard. Ceven never asks for, stores, or transmits private keys or seed phrases. Our access is limited to the operational data provided by the Minerstat API, such as hash rates, temperatures, and rig status. Your funds remain secure because the agent only manages the mining process, not the movement of funds from your wallet.
When a rig stops sending data to Minerstat, the platform marks it as offline. Ceven monitors these status changes via the rig status action. You can configure a workflow that triggers the moment a rig state changes to offline. The agent can first attempt a remote restart if the machine is still reachable via the network. If that fails, the agent can create a ticket in your maintenance system or send an urgent message to your team with the rig name and last known IP address for physical inspection.
Yes. Since Ceven interacts with the Minerstat abstraction layer, it does not matter if you are running Nvidia, AMD, or ASIC hardware. The agent pulls the hardware info to determine what settings are applicable. For example, you can create a workflow that applies a specific overclock profile to only the rigs identified as RTX 3080s while leaving your ASIC machines on their default factory settings. The agent filters the fleet by hardware model before pushing any write actions to ensure stability across a mixed hardware environment.
The delay depends on the Minerstat polling interval and the Ceven workflow trigger. Minerstat updates rig status based on when it last received a heartbeat from the miner. Once Minerstat marks the rig as offline, Ceven can detect this during its next scheduled check or via a webhook if configured. To minimize downtime, most users set up a high frequency check for critical rigs. Because Ceven runs in the cloud, it continues to monitor your fleet 24 hours a day, even when your local management computer is turned off.
Yes. One specific limitation is that remote configuration changes require the Minerstat agent to be running and healthy on the host OS. If the operating system crashes or the network interface fails, the update rig config action will return an error because the command cannot be delivered to the machine. In these cases, the agent will notify you that the remote update failed, indicating that a physical reboot or local manual intervention is required to restore connectivity before the API can manage the rig again.
Ceven can integrate your electricity costs by combining Minerstat data with external inputs. While Minerstat tracks the hash rate and potential revenue, you can feed your local kilowatt hour rate into a Ceven variable. The agent then calculates the real time profit by subtracting the estimated power draw of your hardware from the current mining revenue. If the cost of electricity exceeds the value of the coins being mined, the agent can automatically shut down specific rigs or send an alert to stop mining until the market recovers.

Alternatives to Minerstat

Other tools that solve a similar problem. Ceven supports these too, so you can switch or run more than one at once.

Hive OS logoHive OSNiceHash logoNiceHashKryptex logoKryptex

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Plug Ceven on top of the tools you already run. Connect Minerstat and the rest of your stack, describe the outcome, and its agents handle the work end to end, days of it in minutes.

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