About Providing Storage
Providing Storage on Sia
Providing storage on Sia means contributing your excess storage space to the Sia network. You're helping to keep data where it belongs – safely in the hands of those who uploaded it, the renters.
You also earn Siacoins, the cryptocurrency that powers the Sia network. Siacoins can be used to purchase your storage space or converted to other cryptocurrencies or fiat on crypto exchanges.
Storage providers are a critical part of the ecosystem. You are contributing to the decentralized network that is the heart of Sia. Providing storage is also a more technical process than renting, and while anyone can reasonably easily set it up, there's a lot you'll want to know to maximize your setup.
Pricing
As a host, you set your prices. There are a lot of specific price points you can control:
Storage Price: The base price for your storage per TB/month.
Contract Fees: A small, one-time fee per contract to cover network transaction costs.
Upload/Download Bandwidth Price: Your price for upload or download bandwidth to and from your host per TB.
Collateral: The amount of Siacoins you will lose if you don't fulfill the rental contract per TB/month.
Contracts
Storage contracts are one of the most essential features of the Sia network. They allow the entire Sia ecosystem to work trustlessly – they form blockchain-enforced contracts between you and the people who rent your storage space that is automatically fulfilled.
Earn Siacoins
As a storage provider, you're part of a marketplace where you compete with other storage providers for renter contracts. Competition should drive prices down, and demand should drive prices up. The goal is a market where people can upload their data with maximum security, minimum cost, and at fair rates that provide revenue to the storage providers.
Fees
As a storage provider, you earn Siacoin for the storage space that you sell. But you also put up collateral to create additional incentives for storage providers to be good and sustain a reliable network.
Having collateral incentivizes storage providers to be online and to keep their renter data intact. Storage providers that go offline or lose data lose their collateral, and hosts that stay online and keep data safe get their collateral back.
Storage Provider Scoring
Your storage provider score is one of the most critical factors determining how you'll fare as a storage provider. This is based on several metrics – some that you can directly affect, some that improve or diminish over time based on your performance.
Sia is a decentralized network - the code to evaluate these scoring metrics is contained within each renter's Sia instance. For that reason, each Sia renter you encounter scores storage providers independantly, so you may be scored differently among different renters. As a storage provider, you do not have one overall score across the Sia network but many scores with many renters based on the metrics described below. Any website or service that benchmarks your storage node can only show you a score based on their own metrics, which may differ from what a renter comes up with.
Specific Metrics
Collateral to storage provider uptime is a vital metric. It would be best if you were online when people try to get their data, and since that might be any time, you should be online all the time. You're allowed negligible downtime to address minor maintenance issues like restarting for updates, which could include approximately 14 hours per month.
In general, you should plan for your storage node computer to be turned on and online 24/7. If you can't commit to this, you shouldn't try to provide storage on the Sia network.
Warning: If you go offline for too long (less than 80% uptime) or lose renter data (by deleting it or experiencing a hardware failure), you can lose money by losing your collateral for active contracts. You can also become responsible for SiaFund fees for each contract.
Below are the exact amounts your score will change based on your uptime percentage. Greater than 98% uptime results in no penalty, the 14 hours a month explained above (2% of 720 hours in a month = 14 hours).
100%
1.0
None
98%
1.0
None
95%
.91
-10%
90%
.51
-50%
85%
.16
-85%
80%
.03
-97%
We could include more values in this table, but there's not much point. If you can't maintain a minimum of 95% uptime, becoming a storage provider is not for you.
Third-Party Storage Provider Scoring
We have an incredible community building on Sia. Third-party sites can develop their methods for scoring storage providers based on various metrics. For example, Sia Central has developed a Host Browser, which allows you to browse and compare storage providers.
These benchmarks differ from the core Sia protocol but are still helpful and may be used to help monitor and improve your storage node over time.
Once you've started providing storage, you'll probably want to keep an eye on your storage node score and see how you might be able to improve your node's ranking.
Getting Started with hostd
Contributing your storage space couldn't be any simpler by using Sia's hostd
software!
Start providing storage on Sia with the official hostd
software and exploring our step-by-step Setting up hostd guide.
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