Page 6 of 6 FirstFirst ... 23456
Results 201 to 226 of 226

Thread: RNA World

  1. #201
    Quote Originally Posted by LAURENU2 View Post
    I really do not know how to give you the info you are asking for.
    If you cancelled them manually, then you will find their names in the message window of the BOINC manager which you could paste in here.

    Quote Originally Posted by LAURENU2 View Post
    All I know Is I Do not want to work on Long WU's
    I see them I abort them And as long as I see them I wi9ll not port mor power here
    I understand. Since my last posting some weeks ago, the WUs are mainly around 1.5 hrs in size with only few exceptions and as I believe these can easily be handled even without checkpointing. More importantly, they do not consume these tremendous amounts of RAM as some earlier batches did.

    Quote Originally Posted by LAURENU2 View Post
    And Michael you avoided the question of
    Have you fixed this Problem yet ?
    So far, checkpointing is there only for x86 Linux as before. As soon as this changes, we will of course announce it.

    Michael.
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - Germany's largest distributed computing community

    - - - - - - - - - -
    RNAs are nanomachines or nanomachine building blocks. Examples: The ribosome, RNase P, the cellular protein secretion machinery and the spliceosome.

  2. #202
    =>Team Joker<= LAURENU2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Chicago IL USA
    Posts
    5,478
    Blog Entries
    1
    Well Michael I just Lost another 250 Hrs of computer time with 8 more Looonng WU,s I aborted
    My Error page on your sight has just doubled in size

    http://www.rnaworld.de/rnaworld/resu...ames=0&state=5

    I am sure you can fine the names of the WU's on the above Page

    Having such long WU' floating around WITHOUT any save points is Not a good thing Michael
    I am sorry to say that If I keep getting the few exceptions as you put it I will flick the switch on RNA Till you get it fixed

  3. #203
    (1) The current run times, i.e. shortest, longest and average you can always look up at any time from our server status page [at present: 0.92 hrs average (0.03 min - 12.61 max)] and then decide whether or not to participate. However, I have seen many projects without any checkpointing and long running WUs while we at least offer checkpointing for x86 Linux. So, given the stability of our project I am currently quite happy with it but of course it always depends on how you like to use your machines.

    (2) As detailed before, we will implement checkpointing on the basis of a functional VM as soon as possible.

    (3) I will consider implementing a run-time selector such that, if possible at all at the BOINC server software's end (that I will have to check), users can select how long the biggest WU is allowed to be. I think this might be a useful compromise at this stage.

    Michael.
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - Germany's largest distributed computing community

    - - - - - - - - - -
    RNAs are nanomachines or nanomachine building blocks. Examples: The ribosome, RNase P, the cellular protein secretion machinery and the spliceosome.

  4. #204
    Quote Originally Posted by LAURENU2 View Post
    Well Michael I just Lost another 250 Hrs of computer time with 8 more Looonng WU,s I aborted
    My Error page on your sight has just doubled in size

    http://www.rnaworld.de/rnaworld/resu...ames=0&state=5
    Hi Laurenu2,
    nobody has access to this url, only you as logged in user. Or I must hack me into your account, which I do not want. So please say at least one ID of an LONG wu.

    yoyo

  5. #205
    =>Team Joker<= LAURENU2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Chicago IL USA
    Posts
    5,478
    Blog Entries
    1
    OK here is a screen shot of one page



    Most were aborted 50% or less a few befor they started

    I'm sorry I have a hatred of Long WU's
    I did one for UD that ran for about 2500 HRS 24/7 and it FAILED
    I was So Pi$$ed off I promised never to do another

    This is also being reported on the RNA forum
    I thought it was also said you FIX or stooped the Long WU's in the Past
    Why are they Back in the system again
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Click image for larger version. 

Name:	RNA.JPG 
Views:	725 
Size:	57.0 KB 
ID:	1278  

  6. #206
    Quote Originally Posted by LAURENU2 View Post
    I'm sorry I have a hatred of Long WU's
    I did one for UD that ran for about 2500 HRS 24/7 and it FAILED
    I was So Pi$$ed off I promised never to do another

    This is also being reported on the RNA forum
    Let me clarify a few things here: A long WU in RNA World does definetely NOT mean that you are at risk of not completing it without errors except of course you abort it manually (you shouldn't have done that because if you hadn't you would have seen that they finish and give credits). I hope the time of error reports as we had in the past is over now. At least, the malfunctional WUs are COMPLETELY out of the queue and, again, the RAM requirements are more than moderate. You need to note, however, that with Windows you will loose your current calculation results if you restart the system due to lack of checkpointing with this OS.

    Quote Originally Posted by LAURENU2 View Post
    I thought it was also said you FIX or stooped the Long WU's in the Past
    Why are they Back in the system again
    As said above, they are not back in the system and the problematic ones have indeed been deleted from the work queue. Still, some WUs are long runners. But that really is a minority. You need to understand that RNA World unlike other projects where e.g. a fixed number of MD simulations are computed over and over again is a project with very heterogenous WUs. And this will remain. But, anyway, I think I gave enough of explanations concerning all this. It ultimately is up to you what you like to support and what not.

    Michael.
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - Germany's largest distributed computing community

    - - - - - - - - - -
    RNAs are nanomachines or nanomachine building blocks. Examples: The ribosome, RNase P, the cellular protein secretion machinery and the spliceosome.

  7. #207
    =>Team Joker<= LAURENU2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Chicago IL USA
    Posts
    5,478
    Blog Entries
    1
    This statement may not be true

    Quote Originally Posted by Michael H.W. Weber View Post
    Let me clarify a few things here: A long WU in RNA World does definitely NOT mean that you are at risk of not completing it without errors except of course you abort it manually
    Michael.

    I saw WU's in my systems that listed 244hrs
    What if it ran for 9 days Power fails start over
    run for 7 more days again and bam another power outage
    are you WU's OK to rum for 20 or 30 days ?

    Or what about the little guy who does not work 24/7 and shuts down there PC overnight
    it would be a endless loop for them with out save points until your projects aborts it
    and then gives them a new Long Wu to wast there time on

    I want to support your project But I think a WU that runs for more then 4 hrs with out even 1 save point is risky
    And one that rum for 24 hrs I do Not want to do even if they have save points
    I am sorry Michael I made a promise to myself 10 years ago Not to do Long WU's
    Thats why I just aborted 600 to 700 hrs of my computer time
    I hope this makes you understand how strongly I feel about this matter of Long WU's
    Last edited by LAURENU2; 05-19-2010 at 11:03 AM.

  8. #208
    Free-DC Semi-retire gopher_yarrowzoo's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    Knoxville, TN
    Posts
    3,985
    Quote Originally Posted by LAURENU2 View Post
    This statement may not be true
    Or what about the little guy who does not work 24/7 and shuts down there PC overnight
    it would be a endless loop for them with out save points until your projects aborts it
    and then gives them a new Long Wu to wast there time on

    I want to support your project But I think a WU that runs for more then 4 hrs with out even 1 save point is risky
    And one that rum for 24 hrs I do Not want to do even if they have save points
    QFA Lauren - I currently don't do RNA World I was thinking about it but I am a little guy who don't run BOINC 24/7 on my main PC and well my backup PC is getting used more as my Main PC needs a major overhaul now.. So I wouldn't want to have to abort days of work if there are no save points - I mean how can that work I run multiple projects on both machines what happens when they switch projects - same thing it starts from 0 again?
    I need to run windows as I have software I use for work on my home pc so I can do remote reseting of the systems we got and to see where the problem lies.
    Semi-retired from Free-DC...
    I have some time to help.....
    I need a new laptop,but who needs a laptop when you have a phone...
    Now to remember my old computer specs..


  9. #209
    I checked this 189,000s workunit http://www.rnaworld.de/rnaworld/work...p?wuid=1015952 from LAURENU2 list. You see on the workunit page that this one is estimated with 318,000s runtime on the reference system. There is already one result finished for this wu, which needed 206,000s.

    I checked also this http://www.rnaworld.de/rnaworld/work...p?wuid=1015891, which you aborted after 111,000s. This is estimated with 402,000s (4d 15h) on the reference system and finished by one host after 117,000s.

    Yes, they are long, but not 10 days.

    Maybe your Boinc DCF (duration correction factor) is to high and therefore the remaining time is so high. This time anyway is mysterious calculated by Boinc client.

    yoyo

  10. #210
    =>Team Joker<= LAURENU2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Chicago IL USA
    Posts
    5,478
    Blog Entries
    1
    Yes Yoyo I did abort 1 or 2 that were 90% complete and a run time of 50 & 95 hrs
    It has to do with the promise I made to myself read above

    The 10 days came from the est time of a WU listed here that I aborted
    !0 days or 1 day the same looping thing can happen without Save points

    What is holding you back from having SAVE POINTS
    It Seems like most all other BOINC have them
    You just tell it to save every 10 Min

    I know nothing about a (duration correction factor) Boinc is a stock install with no tweaking

  11. #211
    Quote Originally Posted by yoyo View Post
    I checked this 189,000s workunit http://www.rnaworld.de/rnaworld/work...p?wuid=1015952 from LAURENU2 list. You see on the workunit page that this one is estimated with 318,000s runtime on the reference system. There is already one result finished for this wu, which needed 206,000s.

    I checked also this http://www.rnaworld.de/rnaworld/work...p?wuid=1015891, which you aborted after 111,000s. This is estimated with 402,000s (4d 15h) on the reference system and finished by one host after 117,000s.

    Yes, they are long, but not 10 days.
    Well, I see. His machines really picked the biggest ones that remained in the system (and will remain in the future as well for analyses of other organisms).

    Quote Originally Posted by LAURENU2 View Post
    What is holding you back from having SAVE POINTS
    It Seems like most all other BOINC have them
    You just tell it to save every 10 Min
    No, you do not 'just tell it to save'. If you want checkpoints (i.e. 'save points') then you need to write (or re-write) the entire code of your science application de novo. I have explained this many times (even in our FAQ). Most scientific applications that run on high performance clusters are not desiged to have checkpointing. With RNA World, we run such software and it is technically impossible to change the code to write the checkpoints: it would have to be re-written completely with a different design. Moreover, it is a waste of time to do this for all the implemented and the many, many upcoming software modules in the future. I know other DC projects have checkpoints, but these usually have one single science core client and the entire system was from the very beginning designed to run as a DC system - that is a completely different starting situation compared to what we are dealing with at RNA World. Hence, we thought about methods to develop a universal checkpointing, i.e. 'writing save points' at the system level to apply it to exactly these applications which do not allow for checkpoing generally - and these applications are undoubtedly the majority. This poses a different problem, namely that you require admin rights to save the entire RAM content to disk (it would be as if you send your laptop to sleep mode). Would you grant admin rights to a DC project? No. See, and that's the problem. We now have decided to use a virtual machine approach within BOINC. But that project is not yet complete.

    Quote Originally Posted by LAURENU2 View Post
    I know nothing about a (duration correction factor) Boinc is a stock install with no tweaking
    Yes, and as this stock install it has problems known for long. One is this DCF issue which means that the run time estimate BOINC displays in the form of your progress bar is adjusted by (your stock install) BOINC manager depending on how much your machines spends on tasks different from the BOINC tasks. If you play a game while RNA World computes, this gaming is at cost of RNA World WU progress. BOINC detects that and re-calculates the remaining run time. As such a neat idea. In practice, however, when you stop playing, BOINC takes a long time to re-adjust this correction (factor). As a result, it displays run-time estimates that are far too high. And this is exactly what happened with you RNA World WU. One could say that BOINC actually 'betrayed' you in telling you the wrong run time estimate.

    Well, I think it should all be a bit clearer now. For me it is clear that running RNA World on machines that do not run 24/7 is a problem as long as we do not have checkpointing. And please note that I am by no means 'angry' or so because you have put forward some criticism here. The only thing I can do about this is trying to explain why we do the things we actually do and why some things are not yet implemented.

    Michael.
    Last edited by Michael H.W. Weber; 05-20-2010 at 05:57 AM.
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - Germany's largest distributed computing community

    - - - - - - - - - -
    RNAs are nanomachines or nanomachine building blocks. Examples: The ribosome, RNase P, the cellular protein secretion machinery and the spliceosome.

  12. #212
    =>Team Joker<= LAURENU2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Chicago IL USA
    Posts
    5,478
    Blog Entries
    1
    Well thank you Michael
    That was a vary clear and explanation of how RNA works within BOINC
    And I know you are not upset Nor am I upset It is just that I can't Do Long WU's
    And was worried about the 8/5 user's stuck in a Loop

    As for the DCF only 3 PC's out of the 60 I run here are used by people the 58 are only doing DC 24/7
    And the 3 do not run RNA because they need a reboot from time to time

    I will continue to Run RNA but I will keep a eye out for long WU's and send them back to you Like this one

    2473870 1059802 12 May 2010 21:06:46 UTC 17 May 2010 13:36:43 UTC Aborted by user 327,886.09 296,718.66 1,285.62

    I know thats a lot of points to flush but my word is my honor

  13. #213
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - Germany's largest distributed computing community

    - - - - - - - - - -
    RNAs are nanomachines or nanomachine building blocks. Examples: The ribosome, RNase P, the cellular protein secretion machinery and the spliceosome.

  14. #214
    Hi guys, so the conference turns out to be a remarkable success. We have met a lot of people that are very interested in our project. Even better, we have acquired new collaboration partners that can help us in experimentally validating our computetaional results on a broader scale. Also, posters presented by independently working groups indicate that we are absolutely on the right track with our analyses. So, I am quite confident that we will soon make it for the first publication in a scientific journal. Moreover, we have scheduled the next conference presentation of RNA World which will take place in September in Dresden/Germany. Details on that at a later time.

    Michael.
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - Germany's largest distributed computing community

    - - - - - - - - - -
    RNAs are nanomachines or nanomachine building blocks. Examples: The ribosome, RNase P, the cellular protein secretion machinery and the spliceosome.

  15. #215
    We have released an OSX client today.

    Michael.
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - Germany's largest distributed computing community

    - - - - - - - - - -
    RNAs are nanomachines or nanomachine building blocks. Examples: The ribosome, RNase P, the cellular protein secretion machinery and the spliceosome.

  16. #216
    Quote Originally Posted by Michael H.W. Weber View Post
    We are currently working on reorganizing the CMSEARCH application into two variants of which one will run a combined package of many very small WUs while the other runs the rest (the default CMSEARCH) WUs. With this we intend to achieve three goals. First, the combination of many tiny WUs into one package tremendously reduces the client-server communication load: a big relieve for our server which will make it significantly more stable even during team challenges and races. Second, the packaged WUs will write a checkpoint after each completed sub-WU. Third, because the users will be allowed to opt in or out for each of these two CMSEARCH variants there will be much more flexibility at the user's end to control maximum CMSEARCH runtimes.
    Michael.
    @tm a few of the old cmsearch-wu are in the pipeline and after that the project can do final changes. (choice: long runners or the shorties )
    new apps with more performance are out for MAC OS 10.4 +, Linux and Win.
    also we need urgend testers with MAC OS 10.4 and 10.5 with intel 64bit.
    ( best you write directly here: http://www.rechenkraft.net/phpBB/viewforum.php?f=74 )
    happy crunching

    ps: you can see how many tiny wu are in a archive:
    cms_GA-p[DZ-Lin64s]_7_Desulfitobacterium-hafniense-Y51_AP008230........
    here are 7 in one archive.
    can be over 100 or 1000.
    Last edited by Norman; 03-28-2011 at 11:18 AM.
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - THE german distributed computing community !

  17. #217
    yoyo has doubled some old wus, to get these archives finished. But this means, that these tasks got the same HR class as the existing ones.
    So some HR-classes are now blocking the send queue and must be send first, before you get new work.
    a few more 32-bit linux are helpful.
    Last edited by Norman; 03-29-2011 at 11:54 AM.
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - THE german distributed computing community !

  18. #218
    any problems, bugs or suggestions?
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - THE german distributed computing community !

  19. #219
    =>Team Joker<= LAURENU2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Chicago IL USA
    Posts
    5,478
    Blog Entries
    1
    Quote Originally Posted by Norman View Post
    any problems, bugs or suggestions?
    Yes saving checkpoints

  20. #220
    hehe
    Oooh yes! that's a big request from me.
    A man developing it and I hope as soon as possible done.
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - THE german distributed computing community !

  21. #221
    Hello!
    We will kill the remaining 10 introns WU likely.
    The users will get full credits for the terminated work.
    The runtimes can then be placed finaly in short (s) and long-XXL.
    The few introns are then again under XXL.
    When it happens there are also news to be read on the project's site.
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - THE german distributed computing community !

  22. #222
    the introns should now have been broken off from the project and the user have get their credits.
    Now is the separation of short (S) and long (XXL) is underway as it was being considered.

    edit:
    The remaining introns were canceled and credits should have been granted or are there still.
    if this is not the case is please to announce.
    Next, the cmsearch XXL adapted so that it functions as the S.
    a few test-WU will follow and the introns are again redistributed among XXL.
    WU-generator is also adapted for the big yet.
    Right now, the XXL a test app (so who wants to allow)
    Last edited by Norman; 04-07-2011 at 03:28 PM.
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - THE german distributed computing community !

  23. #223
    our database is crashed again and will repaired soon as possible..
    sorry.
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - THE german distributed computing community !

  24. #224
    database crash is over and now the new virus-WU are in the serverpipeline
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - THE german distributed computing community !

  25. #225
    it seems to be a little bit unclear for users about xxl and s and what they do/we mean.
    so we have modified the apps-name to:

    cmsearch XXL (large) 1.0.2
    cmsearch S (small) 1.0.2

    and we hope itīs now easy to understand what we mean with xxl and s
    is it better ?! any suggestion ?
    http://www.rechenkraft.net - THE german distributed computing community !

  26. #226
    Ancient Programmer Paratima's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
    Location
    West Central Florida
    Posts
    3,296
    Yes. Now how can I tell BOINC that I do NOT want to run the XXL types?

    *EDIT: Never mind - set preferences on your site. Fixed.
    Last edited by Paratima; 08-17-2011 at 01:29 PM.
    HOME: A physical construct for keeping rain off your computers.

Page 6 of 6 FirstFirst ... 23456

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •