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Run these commands from the installer context of mytonctrl:

status

Purpose: Inspect whether required TON services and credentials are in place, and review the current node arguments. Syntax
Behavior
  • Checks for the presence of validator, mytoncore, console, and liteserver artifacts under /var/ton-work and reports each as enabled/disabled.
  • Loads the active node argument list (from set_node_argument) and prints every flag with its stored values.
  • Does not modify any files, making it safe to rerun as a health check.

set_node_argument

Purpose: Add, update, or remove TON validator/validator-engine command-line arguments. Syntax
Behavior
  • Requires at least the argument name (for example, --archive-ttl, -M, --add-shard).
  • When additional values are provided, they are concatenated and passed to the helper script set_node_argument.py, which edits /etc/ton/validator-engine.conf-style settings.
  • Use -d as the final flag to delete the argument instead of setting a value.
  • Runs with root privileges to ensure the validator configuration is writable.
Examples

enable

Purpose: Provision or activate bundled components such as the validator console, liteserver, or auxiliary services. Syntax
Behavior
  • Accepts one of the codes listed below and invokes the corresponding setup routine through mytoninstaller -e enable<code>.
  • If you enable the TON HTTP API (THA), the installer first generates a local liteserver config by running clcf automatically.
  • All routines run with elevated privileges because they create system users, service units, configuration files, or keys.
Supported codes Example

update

Purpose: Rerun enablement routines for installed components to pull updates or repair their configuration. Syntax
Behavior
  • Shares the same code list and internal handler as enable, but intended for repeat executions when you need to refresh binaries or regenerate configs (for example, after package updates).
  • update JR is the common shorthand for reinstalling or updating the JSON-RPC service.
  • Requires the same elevated privileges as enable because it delegates to the same installer events.
Example

plsc

Purpose: Print the current liteserver configuration JSON. Syntax
Behavior
  • Reads the configuration produced by GetLiteServerConfig (typically /usr/bin/ton/local.config.json) and prints it as pretty JSON.
  • Useful for verifying that liteserver keys, ports, and peers match expectations after running enable LS or clcf.

clcf

Purpose: Create or refresh the liteserver local configuration file. Syntax
Behavior
  • Fetches the latest init block via TON API; if unavailable, falls back to the bundled global.config.json.
  • Base64-encodes the init block and invokes mytoninstaller -e clc -i <base64> under the specified user (defaults to the installer’s current user).
  • Writes /usr/bin/ton/local.config.json and related liteserver files so that services like TON HTTP API can start.
Examples
Purpose: Display the active ls-proxy configuration file. Syntax
Behavior
  • Reads /var/ls_proxy/ls-proxy-config.json (via get_ls_proxy_config) and prints it in formatted JSON.
  • Allows quick inspection of proxy targets after running enable LSP.

create_ls_proxy_config_file

Purpose: Placeholder for generating an ls-proxy config file. Syntax
Behavior
  • Outputs TODO because the implementation is not there yet.
  • Use print_ls_proxy_config or edit /var/ls_proxy/ls-proxy-config.json manually until this command is implemented.

drvcf

Purpose: Rebuild config.json for the validator engine using existing key material (dangerous recovery). Syntax
Behavior
  • Calls DangerousRecoveryValidatorConfigFile, which scans /var/ton-work/db/keyring, recent election dumps, and mytoncore settings to reconstruct validator, liteserver, control, DHT, and ADNL entries.
  • Prints the reconstructed configuration and any unused keys so you can review the output before applying it manually.
  • Intended for disaster recovery scenarios; it does not overwrite files automatically.

setwebpass

Purpose: Set or change the password for the MyTonCtrl web administration (JSON-RPC) interface. Syntax
Behavior
  • Runs /usr/src/mtc-jsonrpc/mtc-jsonrpc.py -p, prompting for the new password and updating the credential store.
  • No arguments are accepted; rerun whenever you need to rotate web admin credentials.