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Neil Voss, 05/13/2010 09:34 AM
Install SPIDER¶
Install documentation at wadsworth.org¶
the Wadsworth Institute provides detailed documentation on how to install SPIDER on various systems. Below we cover a our way to get it working on your system.
Download SPIDER binary from wadsworth.org (250 MiB)¶
Most of our SPIDER scripts were originally designed around SPIDER v14 and v15, but we are diligently working toward compatibility with SPIDER v18. That said you are probably best off using the newest version of SPIDER (v18.10 as of May 2010) and then reporting any bugs to us.
Extract the archive¶
tar -zxvf spiderweb.18.10.tar.gz
The archive will create 3 folders: spider, spire, and web. At this time only the spider program is used within Appion, you can safely ignore web and spire.
Install SPIDER¶
- Copy the spider folder to global directory:
sudo mv -v spider /usr/local/
- Next, you need to determine which version of the spider binary you need to use on your system.
cd /usr/local/spider/bin ls spider* spider_linux spider_linux_mp_intel64 spider_linux_mp_opt64 spider_osx_64_pgi spider_linux_mp_intel spider_linux_mpi_opt64 spider_osx_32_pgi
- From the wadsworth.org site:
binary file system information spider_linux AMD/Intel 32 (single processor) spider_linux_mp_intel AMD/Intel 32 (multiple processors) spider_linux_mp_opt64 AMD Opteron 64 (multiple processors) spider_linux_mp_intel64 Intel xeon 64 (multiple processors) spider_linux_mpi_opt64 AMD Opteron 64 (for MPI use) spider_osx_32_pgi Intel Apple 32 bit (multiple processors) spider_osx_64_pgi Intel Apple 64 bit (multiple processors)
- Additionally you run the UNIX file command on an individual program to determine its type
file spider_linux_mp_intel64 spider_linux_mp_intel64: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, AMD x86-64, version 1 (SYSV), for GNU/Linux 2.6.4, statically linked, for GNU/Linux 2.6.4, not stripped
- If you are unsure, use:
spider_linux_mp_intel
for 32bit Intel/AMD systemsspider_linux_mp_opt64
for 64bit Intel/AMD systems
- After you determine which spider to use create a link to that file in /usr/local/bin:
sudo ln -sv /usr/local/spider/bin/spider_xxxxx /usr/local/bin/spider
Set environmental variables¶
For BASH
, create an spider.sh and add the following lines:¶
export SPIDERDIR=/usr/local/spider export SPMAN_DIR=${SPIDERDIR}/man/ export SPPROC_DIR=${SPIDERDIR}/proc/ export SPBIN_DIR=${SPIDERDIR}/bin/
For C
shell, create an spider.csh and add the following lines:¶
setenv SPIDERDIR /usr/local/spider setenv SPMAN_DIR ${SPIDERDIR}/man/ setenv SPPROC_DIR ${SPIDERDIR}/proc/ setenv SPBIN_DIR ${SPIDERDIR}/bin/
And then add it to the global /etc/profile.d/ folder¶
sudo cp -v spider.sh /etc/profile.d/spider.sh sudo chmod 755 /etc/profile.d/spider.sh -or- sudo cp -v spider.csh /etc/profile.d/spider.csh sudo chmod 755 /etc/profile.d/spider.csh
You may need to log out and log back in for these changes to take place.
Test SPIDER¶
- Execute the program:
spider bat/spi
\__`O O'__/ SPIDER -- COPYRIGHT ,__xXXXx___ HEALTH RESEARCH INC., ALBANY, NY. __xXXXx__ / /xxx\ \ VERSION: UNIX 18.10 ISSUED: 03/23/2010 / \ DATE: 13-MAY-2010 AT 09:32:42 Results file: results.bat.0 Running: spider .OPERATION:
EN D
**** SPIDER NORMAL STOP ****
Updated by Neil Voss over 14 years ago · 24 revisions