Skip to end of metadata
Go to start of metadata

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 12 Next »

About Us & About You

Your Instructor

Anna is a member of the new Center for Biomedical Research Support (CBRS), which is home to a number of core facilities: GSAF, Proteomics/Mass Spec, Microscopy, Crystallography, Mouse Genetic Engineering....

  • Anna Battenhouse, Associate Research Scientist, abattenhouse@utexas.edu
    • BA English literature, 1978, Carleton College
    • Commercial software development 1982 – 2007
      • Texas Instruments, Motorola ...
      • lots of software development experience but limited Unix/Linux
    • Joined Iyer Lab 2007 (functional genomics)
      • “retirement career”
      • began to appreciate Linux & bash (slowly)
    • BS Biochemistry, 2013, UT
    • Affiliations as of summer 2017:
      • Biomedical Research Computing Facility (BRCF)
      • Bioinformatics Consulting Group (BCG)
      • Marcotte lab (proteomics)

The Biomedical Research Computing Facility is the CBRS core facility that supports local research computing.

Your TA

  • Benni Goetz, Associate Research Scientist, benni@utexas.edu 
    • BS Math and Physics, Duke University
    • MS Math, UT Austin
    • Affiliations:
      • Bioinformatics Consulting Group (BCG)
      • Genome Sequencing and Analysis Facility (GSAF)
    • Enthusiastic about:
      • Differential geometry
      • Python
      • Large, gregarious, tusked mammals

About You

Tell us a bit about yourself, such as:

  • your lab
  • research interests
  • computational background, including any programming languages you use
  • why you're interested in advanced bash scripting

Setup

You'll be using the BRCF "GSAF POD", a set of 3 compute servers attached to a large, shared storage server.

Accounts

We have set up 50 "student" accounts, named student01 , student02 ... student50 . Let's each pick one...

The super-secret password for all these accounts is:  AdvancedBash-Training


These credentials are active for the next few days, but will be de-activated at the end of this week (Friday April 26).

Servers

With this account you can ssh into one of the following servers (please divide yourselves among them):

  • gsafcomp01.ccbb.utexas.edu
  • gsafcomp02.ccbb.utexas.edu
  • gsafcbig01.ccbb.utexas.edu

For example:

ssh student50@gsafcomp02.ccbb.utexas.edu

Tip

If your terminal has a dark background, the default shell colors can be hard to read. Execute this line to display directory names in yellow (and put it in your ~/.profile login script)

export LS_COLORS=$LS_COLORS:'di=1;33:'

Desktop file browsing

You can connect your Mac or Windows laptop to your Home directory using the Samba network file system protocol. Once this is set up, you can use your favorite desktop code editing GUI to open/edit/save files to your home directory.

Tip

Make sure you save script files with Unix/Linux line endings ( linefeed only, not carriage_return + linefeed as is the Windows default).

On Windows

  • Bring up Windows Explorer (e.g. Ctrl- <Windows key> )
  • Select This PC → Computer tab → Map network drive
  • In the Map Network Drive dialog box
    • Select a drive letter (e.g. W: )
    • In the Folder text box, enter: \\gsafstor01.ccbb.utexas.edu\users
    • Check the Connect using different credentials checkbox
    • Select Finish
    • In the Enter network credentials dialog
      • Enter your student account name and password AdvancedBash-Training
      • Select OK
  • You should now see a users (\\gsafstor01.ccbb.utexas.edu) (W:) item under This PC in Windows Explorer

On Macs

  • Bring up the Finder
  • Select  Finder → Go → Connect to Server... (or just type  ⌘-K )
  • In the text box up top, enter: smb://gsafstor01.ccbb.utexas.edu/users
  • Click on Connect
  • Select Registered User
  • Enter your student account name and password AdvancedBash-Training
  • You should have a new window open with the contents of the Samba share. It will also be listed under Locations in the Finder sidebar




  • No labels