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Amber Herold, 03/16/2010 02:01 PM
Start with existing CentOS 5.3 64-bit installation¶
- Table of contents
- Start with existing CentOS 5.3 64-bit installation
- 3 Download additional software
- 4 MRC PHP Extension Installation and Testing
- 5 Setup MySQL (appiondata) databases
- 6 Compile and setup Appion python programs
- Perform system check:
- Install the package in each folder with commands like these
- python-site-package-path: where the installed python packages went:
- Configure leginon.cfg:
- Names used in the example installation
- Configure sinedon.cfg:
- 5.1 Compile FindEM
- 5.2 Compile Ace2
- 5.3 Compile Radermacher module
- 5.4 Test Appion
- 7 Install webpages (appionweb)
- 8 Install external packages
- 9 Install a PBS job submission system
3 Download additional software¶
3.1 Install the additional package repositories¶
NOTE
There are several additional CentOS repositories that you can install.
These repositories provide additional packages, such as patented software (MP3 players),
closed source applications (Flash plugin, Adobe Acrobat Reader)
and lesser used packages (python numpy, Gnu Scientific Library).
But some repositories install packages over other packages,
which can cause problems and conflicts (ATrpms is bad at this). So I recommend only installing
EPEL and RPM Fusion. Read more here:
CentOS Additional Repositories
3.1.1 Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux (EPEL)¶
- http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/EPEL
- contains a wealth of packages required for appion
.Download repository rpm and install
$ sudo rpm -Uvh http://download.fedora.redhat.com/pub/epel/5/`uname -i`/epel-release-5-3.noarch.rpm
3.1.2 RPM Fusion¶
- http://rpmfusion.org/
- good for mp3 and other patent limited software
.Download repository rpms and install
$ sudo rpm -Uhv http://download1.rpmfusion.org/free/el/updates/testing/5/`uname -i`/rpmfusion-free-release-5-0.1.noarch.rpm $ sudo rpm -Uvh http://download1.rpmfusion.org/nonfree/el/updates/testing/5/`uname -i`/rpmfusion-nonfree-release-5-0.1.noarch.rpm
3.2 Update current packages¶
.Update the updater to make life easier
$ sudo yum -y update yum
.Update all packages
$ sudo yum -y update
NOTE
Download was over 129 MB (in July 2009). If you have a slow internet connection you can setup presto/deltarpms, see this email]
You may want to restart your computer when this completes.
.Install Complete list of additional packages:¶
- python tools: python-tools python-devel
- general applications: subversion ImageMagick grace gnuplot python-matplotlib
- Tilt Picker: wxPython numpy scipy python-imaging
- FindEM: gcc-gfortran compat-gcc-34-g77
- Ace 2: gcc-objc fftw3-devel gsl-devel
- Sinedon: mysql mysql-server MySQL-python
- DBEM: httpd php php-mysql phpMyAdmin
- Xmipp MPI: gcc-c++ openmpi-devel libtiff-devel
- MRC tools: php-devel gd-devel re2c fftw2-devel php-gd
- UCSF Chimera imaging: xorg-x11-server-Xvfb
$ sudo yum -y install \ python-tools python-devel python-matplotlib \ subversion ImageMagick grace gnuplot \ wxPython numpy scipy python-imaging \ gcc-gfortran compat-gcc-34-g77 \ gcc-objc fftw3-devel gsl-devel \ mysql mysql-server MySQL-python \ httpd php php-mysql phpMyAdmin \ gcc-c++ openmpi-devel libtiff-devel \ php-devel gd-devel re2c fftw2-devel php-gd \ xorg-x11-server-Xvfb
If you have an nVidia video card and setup RPM fusion, install the nVidia binary, will speed things up especially for UCSF Chimera
$ sudo yum -y install nvidia-x11-drv
.Clean up packages to save drive space
$ sudo yum clean all
.Re-index the hard drive, this will come in handy later
$ sudo updatedb
.Enable servers on reboot
$ sudo /sbin/chkconfig httpd on
$ sudo /sbin/chkconfig mysqld on
You can further configure this with the GUI and turn off unnecessary items
$ system-config-services
.Reboot the computer
$ sudo reboot
4 MRC PHP Extension Installation and Testing¶
4.1 Build the MRC module¶
Download php_mrc_src_1_5_1.tgz
cd to your php devel directory¶
> cd /usr/include/php/ext/ > mv [downloads]/php_mrc_src_1_5_1.tgz .
Untar the archive¶
> tar zxvf php_mrc_src_1_5_1.tgz > cd mrc/
Make sure that GD and FFTW 3 devel libraries are installed¶
> phpize > ./configure > make > make install
4.2 Install MRC module¶
Check that mrc.so is in your php extension directory¶
> ls /usr/lib/php/extensions
You should see mrc.so listed.
Make sure that GD and FFTW 3 libraries are installed¶
- edit your php configuration file php.ini to add "mrc.so" extension.
- You might also increase the memory_limit field. It is set to 8M by default. The more the merrier!
- 4kx4k float MRC image is about 64MB
> vi /etc/php.ini
- increase memory
> memory_limit = 256M; Maximum amount of memory
- Create the mrc.ini file
> cd /etc/php.d vi mrc.ini
- add the following lines
; Enable mrc extension module extension=mrc.so
NOTE: If PHP modules are already listed in PHP.ini do the following:
- check extension_dir value
extension_dir = /usr/lib64/php/extensions
- add the following at the end of the [extension section]
extension=mrc.so
Restart your webserver¶
/etc/init.d/apache2 restart
OR
/etc/init.d/httpd restart
4.3 Test the MRC module installation¶
Download this MRC file mymrc.mrc and the following 2 scripts into the same directory to test the PHP mrc extension.Run the scripts with the following commands:
The expected results are shown below. If you get the same images, you've installed the extension properly.
> php -q ex1.php | display
- gd module test result:
> php -q ex2.php | display
- fftw module test result:
5 Setup MySQL (appiondata) databases¶
6 Compile and setup Appion python programs¶
Download Myami.
TODO: Place link to file here!
Install leginon http://emg.nysbc.org/documentation/leginon/bk02ch04s06.php
Perform system check:¶
In addition to the downloads from our svn depository, there are several other requirements that you will get either from your OS installation source, or from its respective website. The system check in the Leginon package checks your system to see if you already have these requirements
cd your_download_area/Leginon-1.6-ALL/Leginon
python syscheck.py
If python is not installed, this, of course will not run. If you see any lines like "*** Failed...", then you have something missing. Otherwise, everything should result in "OK".
Install the package in each folder with commands like these¶
TODO: move these into a single installer, ask Jim
cd /your_download_area/myami/leginon
python setup.py install
cd ../pyami
python setup.py install
cd ../pyScope
python setup.py install
cd ../sinedon
python setup.py install
cd ../numextension
python setup.py install
cd ../libcv
python setup.py install
cd ../imageviewer
python setup.py install
python-site-package-path: where the installed python packages went:¶
Python installer put the packages you installed to its site-packages directory. This enable all users on the same computer to access them. The easiest way to find where your installed package is called by python is to load a module from the package using interactive python command lines like this:
- Start python command line from shell
> python
- Import a module from the package. Let's try sinedon here. All packages installed through the above setup.py script should go to the same place.
python> import sinedon
- If the module is loaded successfully, call the module attribute path (two underscrolls before "path" and two underscrolls after) will return the location of the module it is loaded from
python> sinedon.__path__
RETURNS, For example,
python> <module 'sinedon' from '/usr/lib/python2.5/site-packages/sinedon/__init__.pyc'>In this case, /usr/lib/python2.5/site-packages/ is your python-site-package-path. If you go to that directory, you will find all the packages you just installed.
Configure leginon.cfg:¶
A skeleton (default) configuration file is available:
[python-site-package-path]/Leginon/config/default.cfg
- Copy default.cfg to leginon.cfg.
cp [python-site-package-path]/Leginon/config/default.cfg [python-site-package-path]/Leginon/config/leginon.cfg
- Add a directory for images. The rest is optional.
Example of the configuration that you should set: (Here we assume your leginon database is named "dbemdata", and Leginon log into the database as a user named "usr_object" with no password set).
[Images]
path: your_storage_disk_path/leginon
Names used in the example installation¶
From this point on, you will need to enter database user names for different configuration files and settings. These are NOT Leginon user names but what is required by MySQL database interaction. Consistent names are essential. In the example shown here, the leginon database is called "dbemdata", the project database is called "projectdata". The MySQL user name are the same, "usr_object", and in this case without a password.
Configure sinedon.cfg:¶
TODO: Consider moving this after we setup Mysql username.
Sinedon is designed to be able to interact with multiple databases. It can be configured at global or user level.
- An example configuration file is available at:
/your_download_area/Leginon-1.6-ALL/sinedon/examples/sinedon.cfg
- Configurations for all users should be placed at the following path:
[python-site-package-path]/sinedon/sinedon.cfg
- Modify host,db,user,passwd to what is used. Note that the user here is the MySQL user Leginon uses to communicate with the database for all Leginon users. For Leginon that uses Project database, set the following:
[global]
host: your_database_host
user: usr_object
passwd:[projectdata]
db: projectdb[leginondata]
db: leginondb
- Add database configuration if you intend to use grid-inserting robot. The Robot2 module uses the database to communicate to the robot. Applications that carries the name "Robot" requires this to be set. In general, using the same database as the general leginon database is fine.
[robot2]
db: leginondb
5.1 Compile FindEM¶
- Goto appion/findem folder to make findem.exe
- Compile the libraries and binary
$ make
- Test findem.exe to see if it runs
$ make test
WARNING
Only if the first part fails, you must add the path to libg2c.so library file.
Otherwise skip to next section.
- locate libg2c.so library file
$ ls /usr/lib/gcc/`uname -i`-redhat-linux/3.4.6/libg2c.so
$ locate libg2c.so
- Edit Makefile with location of libg2c.so
$ nano Makefile
- Example: EXLIBS=-L/usr/lib/gcc/i386-redhat-linux/3.4.6/ -lg2c
- Re-compile
5.2 Compile Ace2¶
The 64 bit Ace2 binary is already available in the myami/bin directory.
Test it by changing directories to myami/bin and type the following commands:
$ ./ace2.exe -h $ ./ace2correct.exe -h
Notice the help display.
If this does not work or you wish to compile it yourself follow the instructions here. NOTE: ace2 typically requires fftw 3.2 or greater. This is significantly faster than 3.1 (which is distributed with CentOS). There is a FFTW_WISDOM_ONLY flag in Image.m that can be commented in if you are using fftw 3.2 or greater. *TODO: Can we have the make file detect which version is installed?* * Goto myami/appion/ace2 * compile the libraries and binary * test to see if program runs $ make $ ./ace2.exe -h $ ./ace2correct.exe -h $ mv -v ./ace2*.exe ../bin
5.3 Compile Radermacher module¶
- Goto appion/radermacher
- compile the libraries and binary
$ python ./setup.py build
- install module globally
$ sudo python ./setup.py install
- test installed module
$ python
>>> import radermacher >>> <Ctrl-D>
5.4 Test Appion¶
- Go into the appion directory
- Add myami to PYTHONPATH if myami is built locally (in home directory)
TODO: what does this mean?
$ export PYTHONPATH="/your-complete-path-to-myami:$PYTHONPATH"
- Add appion to PYTHONPATH
$ export PYTHONPATH="/your-complete-path-to-myami/appion:$PYTHONPATH"
TODO: Consider moving appionlib so you only need to set one path.
- Run the test script
$ ./check.sh
NOTE
You can ignore EMAN, MATLAB, and UCSF Chimera errors at this point
7 Install webpages (appionweb)¶
Refer to Web server side installation
Install MRC Tools¶
Compile MRC tools¶
- Go to your php devel directory and untar the archive
- If unsure where it is, use info.php to find it under extension_dir
$ cd /usr/include/php/ext/ $ sudo mkdir mrc $ sudo chmod 777 mrc $ sudo chown $USER mrc
- Unpackage MRC Tools from http://emg.nysbc.org/software/mrctools/
$ tar zxvf ~/php_mrc.tgz $ cd mrc/
- Compile and install the MRC module
$ phpize $ ./configure $ make $ sudo make install
Configure PHP for MRC Tools¶
- Edit your php configuration file php.ini to add "mrc.so" extension.
$ sudo nano /etc/php.d/mrc.ini
- add mrc.so to extensions
; Enable mrc extension module extension=mrc.so
- To test MRC tools, go to this website:
http://emg.nysbc.org/software/mrctools/mrc_so.php
Configure PHP¶
- increase the memory limit, EM images are big 64MB:
memory_limit = 256M; Maximum amount of memory
- Turn error display on:
display_errors = On
error_reporting = E_ALL & ~E_NOTICE
- restart the webserver
$ sudo /sbin/service httpd restart
Install DBEM and project php source¶
Please consult the other Install guide
Configuration¶
configure apache¶
- allow REMOTE_HOST lookups in apache
$ sudo nano /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
- turn HostnameLookups to On
HostnameLookups On
- restart the webserver
$ sudo /sbin/service httpd restart
configure project_1_2, dbem_1_5_1, and dbem_1_5_1/processing¶
Please consult the other Install guide
Initialize database tables from the web tools¶
Please consult Create a test project and processing database
Potential problems¶
Firewall settings¶
You may need to configure your firewall to allow incoming HTTP (port 80) and MySQL (port 3306) traffic:
$ system-config-securitylevel
Security-enhanced linux¶
Security-enhanced linux may be preventing your files from loading. To fix this run the following command:
$ sudo /usr/bin/chcon -R -t httpd_sys_content_t /var/www/html/
see this website for more details on SELinux
8 Install external packages¶
Please follow individual package installation instruction provided with them
Compile Xmipp for OpenMPI¶
- For more info, see http://xmipp.cnb.csic.es/twiki/bin/view/Xmipp/InstallingTheSoftware
- Go into Xmipp source directory
- Find openmpi directory
$ locate libmpi.so
/usr/lib/openmpi/1.2.7-gcc/lib/libmpi.so
- Setup Xmipp to use openmpi by changing three lines in SConstruct
$ cp SConstruct SConstruct.orig
$ nano SConstruct
opts.Add('MPI_INCLUDE', 'MPI headers dir ', '/usr/lib/openmpi/1.2.7-gcc/include/') opts.Add('MPI_LIBDIR', 'MPI libraries dir ', '/usr/lib/openmpi/1.2.7-gcc/lib/') opts.Add('MPI_LIB', 'MPI library', 'mpi')
- Compile
$ sudo mpi-selector --yes --system --set `rpm --qf '%{NAME}-%{VERSION}-gcc-%{ARCH}\n' -q openmpi`
$ export PATH=$PATH:/usr/lib/openmpi/1.2.7-gcc/bin
$ ./scons.configure
you should see the line:
* Checking for MPI ... yes
$ ./scons.compile
9 Install a PBS job submission system¶
You'll need to install a Portable Batch System for job submission, such as TORQUE . I know Torque comes with Fedora 10, but not CentOS.
- An RPM is available in the EPEL testing section
$ sudo yum -y --enablerepo=epel-testing install torque
or another way to get packages
$ wget http://centos.karan.org/el5/extras/testing/`uname -i`/RPMS/torque-2.1.9-1.el5.kb.`uname -i`.rpm $ sudo yum -y localinstall --nogpgcheck torque-2.1.9-1.el5.kb.`uname -i`.rpm $ #sudo rpm -Uhv torque-2.1.9-1.el5.kb.`uname -i`.rpm
After installing torque it needs to be configured. Sorry, we have no documentation for configuring torque at this time. You may try http://www.clusterresources.com/products/torque-resource-manager.php
Updated by Amber Herold almost 15 years ago · 49 revisions