Message boards : Number crunching : Problems and Technical Issues with Rosetta@home
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Sid Celery Send message Joined: 11 Feb 08 Posts: 2117 Credit: 41,140,182 RAC: 15,917 |
I shut down R@H on all my computers and have switched to covid research on World Community Grid. Absolutely no problems keeping all threads busy doing constructive work. Much better environment I run WCG Open Pandemics too, but as I've said before, it really is useless, seemingly checking things that no-one wants to know and having produced nothing of any interest to anyone. Covid is my top priority too, but I'm glad when other tasks come down. It's good to keep busy, but in that case, doing nothing - or anything else - may actually be the better option from all I can glean |
Greg_BE Send message Joined: 30 May 06 Posts: 5691 Credit: 5,859,226 RAC: 0 |
Yeah I got 4.2 stuff now as well. I still don't get why it refuses to run Python. |
Greg_BE Send message Joined: 30 May 06 Posts: 5691 Credit: 5,859,226 RAC: 0 |
I shut down R@H on all my computers and have switched to covid research on World Community Grid. Absolutely no problems keeping all threads busy doing constructive work. Much better environment You want COVID join SiDock. 100% covid. |
Falconet Send message Joined: 9 Mar 09 Posts: 353 Credit: 1,227,479 RAC: 3,710 |
I shut down R@H on all my computers and have switched to covid research on World Community Grid. Absolutely no problems keeping all threads busy doing constructive work. Much better environment If you don't like OPN, perhaps you could run the Mapping Cancer Markers instead. |
Greg_BE Send message Joined: 30 May 06 Posts: 5691 Credit: 5,859,226 RAC: 0 |
[quote]I shut down R@H on all my computers and have switched to covid research on World Community Grid. Absolutely no problems keeping all threads busy doing constructive work. Much better environment You want COVID join SiDock. 100% covid. Question: Then what is Open checking with the COVID 19.7.21? https://www.worldcommunitygrid.org/about_us/article.s?articleId=715 |
robertmiles Send message Joined: 16 Jun 08 Posts: 1232 Credit: 14,269,631 RAC: 2,588 |
[snip] Currently, all of my computers are fully occupied doing Covid or cancer research on WCG, SI-Dock or TN-Grid or climate research on CPDN. When Rosetta has work again it will take it’s fair share of the cores available - it was the same when TN-Grid stopped supplying work and when SI-Dock stopped supplying work and when I cocked up my settings and couldn’t get CPDN work. I used to do TN-Grid, until a computer failure lost the information for doing so. Could you mention their website, so I can connect my new computer to the project? |
Falconet Send message Joined: 9 Mar 09 Posts: 353 Credit: 1,227,479 RAC: 3,710 |
[snip] Tn-Grid - https://gene.disi.unitn.it/test/index.php The new Rosetta 4.20 work seems to be a small batch. Queued tasks increased to 2.85 million from around 2.28 million. Won't last long. |
Grant (SSSF) Send message Joined: 28 Mar 20 Posts: 1673 Credit: 17,596,129 RAC: 22,414 |
The new Rosetta 4.20 work seems to be a small batch. Queued tasks increased to 2.85 million from around 2.28 million. Won't last long.And not as long as you might think- the average processing time for the current Rosetta 4.20 Tasks is roughly 2 hours, a quarter of the default Target CPU run time. So we're chewing through the work around 4 times faster than usual. Grant Darwin NT |
Sid Celery Send message Joined: 11 Feb 08 Posts: 2117 Credit: 41,140,182 RAC: 15,917 |
I shut down R@H on all my computers and have switched to covid research on World Community Grid. Absolutely no problems keeping all threads busy doing constructive work. Much better environment I run all sub-projects on WCG. While Rosetta was out of work I still have a remaining 108 WCG tasks to complete, only 13 of which are OPN thankfully |
Sid Celery Send message Joined: 11 Feb 08 Posts: 2117 Credit: 41,140,182 RAC: 15,917 |
I shut down R@H on all my computers and have switched to covid research on World Community Grid. Absolutely no problems keeping all threads busy doing constructive work. Much better environment Nothing of any use or interest to anyone from what I can make out. I thought this was solved by everyone else in the world in the first few weeks. No-one's trying to bind to the spike any more, are they? They've been aiming at close binding to the RBD of the spike for the last 18 months, which they've also pretty much achieved. Maybe they're explaining it very badly or I'm understanding it very badly (entirely possible) |
Sid Celery Send message Joined: 11 Feb 08 Posts: 2117 Credit: 41,140,182 RAC: 15,917 |
The new Rosetta 4.20 work seems to be a small batch. Queued tasks increased to 2.85 million from around 2.28 million. Won't last long.And not as long as you might think- the average processing time for the current Rosetta 4.20 Tasks is roughly 2 hours, a quarter of the default Target CPU run time. Yes. I took a quick look and all the completed tasks I can see all end after 100 decoys exactly. Pretty sure this is a simple mistake - it happened once before a few years ago and they just increased the limit of decoys so the tasks could make at least the default runtime. I've just pointed it out. I've also made the exaggerated (and not entirely true) claim that discussion of Vbox tasks here has degenerated into asking how it can be uninstalled at the earliest possible moment. While knowing that some people are running it successfully, istm this is a distinction without much of a difference. I haven't gone into any details as I'm ignorant of any, but I leave it to them how they go about improving matters, as whatever's happening atm is far from acceptable to almost everyone. It'll be a bad thing if the decoy limit causes Rosetta 4.20 tasks to run out so quickly all we have left to do is moan a lot more about Vbox/Python tasks |
robertmiles Send message Joined: 16 Jun 08 Posts: 1232 Credit: 14,269,631 RAC: 2,588 |
[snip] Thanks - my new computer is now connected. |
Grant (SSSF) Send message Joined: 28 Mar 20 Posts: 1673 Credit: 17,596,129 RAC: 22,414 |
I've also made the exaggerated (and not entirely true) claim that discussion of Vbox tasks here has degenerated into asking how it can be uninstalled at the earliest possible moment.In many cases people need it for other projects, so them leaving Rosetta is generally their chosen option. If the project gave the option (as most other projects do with multiple applications) to select what applications to run & not run, it would be an easy fix. But since that option isn't available, leaving Rosetta is the easiest fix. Grant Darwin NT |
Sid Celery Send message Joined: 11 Feb 08 Posts: 2117 Credit: 41,140,182 RAC: 15,917 |
I've also made the exaggerated (and not entirely true) claim that discussion of Vbox tasks here has degenerated into asking how it can be uninstalled at the earliest possible moment.In many cases people need it for other projects, so them leaving Rosetta is generally their chosen option. I didn't mean that, but only because I assumed that people who were successfully running Vbox64 tasks elsewhere were the few who are running it ok here too. Is that not right? (I'm struggling to follow which people have which problems). I was really talking about me and those others with similar problems to me. It was only really sarcasm from me and tbh I shouldn't have written it. Anyway, bygones. I'll let them look at what they have to do to get <something> both less resource-intensive and running more successfully before I try it out again - if ever. |
Grant (SSSF) Send message Joined: 28 Mar 20 Posts: 1673 Credit: 17,596,129 RAC: 22,414 |
From the comments i've seen, some of people that are having issues with Python work here aren't having issues running work on other projects that require the use of VirtuaBox.I've also made the exaggerated (and not entirely true) claim that discussion of Vbox tasks here has degenerated into asking how it can be uninstalled at the earliest possible moment.In many cases people need it for other projects, so them leaving Rosetta is generally their chosen option. The two main issues i've noticed- The huge requirements (7.5GB of RAM per Task) for Python work, and Tasks that never end (some that appear to get to the point of being initialised, then no processing actually gets done, while there are others that get close to finishing, then get no further even after a couple of days), resulting other Tasks not being done until the problem ones are aborted by the user (if they happen to notice that there is a problem). Grant Darwin NT |
gemini8 Send message Joined: 25 Feb 12 Posts: 5 Credit: 3,021,303 RAC: 4,880 |
Status: Zeitüberschreitung - keine Antwort. I see, that's what you call it if you send work that runs for more than three days on a Ryzen 7 3700X. Haven't been monitoring the machine before today. This morning the task still wanted to go for 28 seconds, now it's down to half of that. Unfortunately I don't think it will finish without a real error, and the server already calls it an error anyway. So, time for canceling. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Greetings, Jens |
gemini8 Send message Joined: 25 Feb 12 Posts: 5 Credit: 3,021,303 RAC: 4,880 |
Wiped Rosetta from my Boinc directory. Set Boinc to use less disk space. Hopefully, there's not enough space left for that Python stuff. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Greetings, Jens |
Jim1348 Send message Joined: 19 Jan 06 Posts: 881 Credit: 52,257,545 RAC: 0 |
I see a lot of people wasting a lot of time. That is what happens when forums don't have any input from the project scientists, or at least knowledgeable administrators to keep things straight. https://boinc.bakerlab.org/rosetta/forum_thread.php?id=6893&postid=103232#103232 The comments just descend into trivia. I am out, until someone can confirm that the pythons are working correctly, and I can select them. I don't expect it for at least a couple of months at this rate, if ever. Lots of luck. PS - The periodic unavailability of the regular Rosettas tells me that they don't have enough work to keep everyone supplied. They have more crunchers than they need. Good for them. PPS - My Ryzen 3900X's work quite nicely on Folding, though they don't need nearly so much memory. But they are superbly good at informing you what they are doing, with a description of every work unit that is sent out. |
Greg_BE Send message Joined: 30 May 06 Posts: 5691 Credit: 5,859,226 RAC: 0 |
I see a lot of people wasting a lot of time. That is what happens when forums don't have any input from the project scientists, or at least knowledgeable administrators to keep things straight. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PS - The periodic unavailability of the regular Rosettas tells me that they don't have enough work to keep everyone supplied. They have more crunchers than they need. Good for them. Because a lot of our work is now going to the AI Neural network. I think that is where the majority of the work will go in the future. This project will turn into the same as BOINC TAC out of Texas. They are a supercomputing project and things that don't fit their super computer get sent out to home systems. |
Jim1348 Send message Joined: 19 Jan 06 Posts: 881 Credit: 52,257,545 RAC: 0 |
Because a lot of our work is now going to the AI Neural network. I pointed that out about a year ago when MIP on WCG (which uses Rosetta) went in-house. They didn't need the crunchers any more. And that is probably true for the regular Rosettas. That is why I am disappointed that the pythons don't work, and they have made no attempt that they have told us about to fix it. If you have a lot of memory, you should be able to do them. Maybe it is just a side project for them? I don't know how important it is. |
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Number crunching :
Problems and Technical Issues with Rosetta@home
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