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Test Network Connection Between Remote and Instrument Computers » History » Revision 28

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Anchi Cheng, 02/04/2015 09:56 PM


Test Network Connection Between Remote and Instrument Computers

By far the biggest installation problem comes from network connection is block at the microscope/camera computer from the remote computer where the main Leginon program is run. Here is a test to do before trying to start leginon operation at the remote computer. Leginon bulletin board has a thread that has various problems and solutions from users.

Start a Test Launcher on the Microscope Computer

  1. scope> go to the location where Leginon is installed, generally
    C:\Python27\Lib\site-packages\Leginon\
  2. scope> double click on test1.py. You should see something like this:
    INFO localtransport server created at location {'instance': <localtransport.Server object at 0x40e614cc>}
    INFO tcptransport server created at location {'hostname': 'myscope', 'port': 49152}
    INFO <class 'event.SetManagerEvent'> binding added for destination myscope, method <function printData at 0x40e63c34>
    ACCEPTING CONNECTIONS AT:  myscope:49152
    hit enter to kill
    

    **If the line before last says ACCEPTING CONNECTIONS ...., you have an opened port on this host.
     
  3. Write down the name of the hose, in this case "myscope", and the opened port, in this case "49152", and proceed to try to connect to that computer from the remote compute in the next step.

Attempt Connection from the Remote Computer

  1. remote linux computer> go to the location where Leginon is installed, type the following to find the location:
    start-leginon.py -v
  2. remote linux computer> start the 2nd test script with the host name of the microscope computer and its open port
    remote linux computer/Leginon>test2.py myscope 49152
    

    You should see something like this:
    INFO localtransport server created at location {'instance': <localtransport.Server object at 0x2b08e0d43810>}
    INFO tcptransport server created at location {'hostname': 'myremote', 'port': 49152}
    ACCEPTING CONNECTIONS AT:  myremote:49152
    INFO <class 'event.NodeAvailableEvent'> binding added for destination myremote, method <function printData at 0x2b08e0d51c80>
    CONNECTING TO:  myscope:49154
    WARNING localtransport client add failed
    INFO tcptransport client added
    INFO server location set to to {'TCP transport': {'hostname': 'myscope', 'port': 49154}}
    hit enter to kill
    
    INFO handling threaded
    INFO inserted in queue (class NodeAvailableEvent)
    INFO <class 'event.NodeAvailableEvent'> handling destination defcon1, method <function printData at 0x2b08e0d51c80>
    REMOTE CLIENT RESPONDED:  myscope:49154
    

If you get the last line "REMOTE CLIENT RESPONDED" with correct hostname and port, the
connection is fine. You can go to next section to test Leginon run on the remote
computer.

You can ignore the following error message print out in test1.py on the microscope PC when you exit it.

tcptransport.TransportError: No route to host

Problem solving tips

Most likely reason for the failure of the test: FIREWALL

  • The easiest solution is have the involving computers inside the same firewall.

The latter is described in the Leginon bulletin board thread on network problem, Leginon not seeing tecnai host

Another possible reason for the failure of the test: hostname-ip address mismatch

For leginon to communicate through socket, it needs to know the hostname of itself and the other computer it is connected to in both ways. The hostname also need to map properly to the IP address the partner understand as.

If you are on a dynamically assigned domain name system (DNS), this should all be taken care of. However, since the local hosts file overwrites the DNS assignment, you should check if you have a mismatch if you do have problem.

You should therefore check if you have added hosts to the right files on both sides of the connection.

To confirm what python thinks the hosname is on its own computer, run the following in python command line:

import socket
socket.gethostname()

You can also get the IP address with this python command after importing socket like above

socket.gethostbyname(socket.gethostname())

You should also check what one computer think the another's ip address is through socket connection once you know the hostname for the other computer

socket.gethostbyname('hostname_of_the_other_computer')

What if the host IP address obtained from socket.gethostbyname on a computer with multiple network card is not the network that connects to other hosts involved in Leginon

You may need to reorder the network connections so that the appropriate network is the first to access.

< Test Leginon on the Computer Controlling the Microscope | Run Leginon Client on the Instrument Computers >


Updated by Anchi Cheng over 9 years ago · 28 revisions