Public Seti Queues (STICKY)
Can we make this a stick thread, and post all the public SetiQ's in here. Some of the seti'ers are new and If they are competing in the gaunlet, they need to be prepared for more server outage (with berkeley its possible).
Address Owner
http://137.99.182.54:5517/ AKM
http://63.174.126.44:5517/ Dinc
http://www.irishguys.org:5517/ Col. Forbin
http://gms8994.dyndns.org:5517/ Darkness Productions
http://goobland.dyndns.org:5517/ Goob
http://jdaw.cjb.net:443/ Jdaw's on port 443
http://jdaw.cjb.net:5517/ Jdaw's on Port 5517
http://kulish.com:5517/ Ancala
http://setiqueue.mypc.nu:5517/ Pjotr
http://vankalker.no-ip.com:5517/ Mick Foley
http://setiq.new-swankton.net:5517/ Russell Hansen
It is very simple to use a queue, just add a -proxy switch like this
C:\seti\seti.exe -verbose -proxy http://www.dbestern.com:5517
or if you use SetiSpy, which I use
Edited by IronBits :D
Caching units on a Linux system
This is too good to pass up, nor lose.
Plagarised from:
http://forums.teamphoenixrising.net/...ad.php?t=10076
:notworthy MrTFWitt :D
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Code:
Caching units on a Linux system
Create an account for seti processing if you havent done so already.
Either use linuxconf or the following lines will do it
groupadd seti
useradd -g seti -d /home/seti -s /bin/ksh -c "Seti User" -m seti
passwd seti
The next thing to do is put the setiathome binary in the right place
cp setiathome ~seti
If you have already run seti on this system you will have a user_info.sah.
copy that into the same directory
cp user_info.sah ~seti
If not you will have to do a login as a returning user to create one
su - seti
./setiathome -login
Right so thats a userid and a working install of seti,
now we need to create the cache and leech some units.
Setup script
Code:
#!/bin/bash
cd ~seti
if [ ! -f setiathome -o ! -f user_info.sah ]
then
echo expected to find setiathome and user_info.sah in this directory
exit 1
fi
Proxy=www.adventurevision.com:5517
Clients=20
i=0
while [ "$Clients" -gt "$i" ]
do
dirname=`echo $i|awk '{printf("sc%2.2d",$1)}'`
if [ -d ~seti/$dirname ]
then
if [ ! -f ~seti/$dirname/work_unit.sah ]
then
cd ~seti/$dirname
../setiathome -stop_after_xfer -proxy $Proxy
fi
else
echo Creating ~seti/$dirname
mkdir ~seti/$dirname
cp user_info.sah ~seti/$dirname
cd ~seti/$dirname
../setiathome -stop_after_xfer -proxy $Proxy
fi
i=`expr $i + 1`
done
Cut and paste the above into a file
save the file as setup and type chmod u+x setup to set the execute bit.
There are a couple of lines you can change
Proxy= If you are on NTL pick a proxy that lets you see Berkeley !
Clients= 99 is the maximum unless you change the awk statement.
Now your cache is chocka with units its time for some crunching.
Cut and paste the following into a file called runit saved in the seti users directory
Code:
#!/bin/bash
cd ~seti
while :
do
for unit in `find . -name work_unit.sah`
do
cd `dirname $unit`
echo Starting on `pwd`
~seti/setiathome -stop_after_process
cd ~seti
done
sleep 10
donethen type chmod u+x runit
Launch this with nohup ./runit & and it will keep running after you logoff.
<edit>
To run at boot time add the following to /etc/rc.local
su - seti -c "nohup /home/seti/runit &"
</edit>
Uploading units can be done with this snippet
Code:
#!/bin/bash
cd ~seti
Proxy=www.adventurevision.com:5517
for unit in `find . -name result.sah`
do
cd `dirname $unit`
echo Sending `pwd`
~seti/setiathome -stop_after_xfer -proxy $Proxy
cd ~seti
done
Right those that are still awake will be asking about progress checking.
This will tell you a bit more detail on completed units and time per unit.
Nowt flash as laziness was setting in when I did this bit.
Code:
#!/bin/ksh
for file in `find . -name state.sah` `find . -name wtemp.sah`
do
cpu=`grep "^cpu=" $file |cut -d "=" -f2|cut -d"." -f1`
prog=`grep "^prog=" $file |cut -d "=" -f2`
if [ ! -z ${cpu} ]
then
time=$cpu
hours=`expr $time / 3600`
time=`expr $time - \( 3600 \* $hours \)`
mins=`expr $time / 60`
time=`expr $time - \( 60 \* $mins \)`
secs=$time
timestring=`echo $hours $mins $secs |awk '{printf("%2.2d:%2.2d:%2.2d\n",$1,$2,$3 )}'`
echo $file $timestring $prog
fi
done
All feedback welcome, I've tested most of this but not from square one
on a clean build like many of you will be doing.
Oh and I used Redhat 7.2 with the INSTALL EVERYthing button selected.
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Last edited by MrTFWitt : 07-10-2002 at 21:35.
:cheers: Thanks!