On Sun, Jan 4, 2015 at 2:06 PM, Andrew <andrew.mat...@sydney.edu.au> wrote:
> Hi William,
>
> Is it possible to access beta code and git branches from SMC?

Yes -- one can do 100% full sage development on your own personal copy
of Sage using SMC.  And it's all snapshotted and backed up offsite.

William

>
> Last Year I was running calculations on the combinat server using some
> private git branches. Once I have brushed up the code a little I'd like to
> start these again. I can certainly push this code to trac but it will be a
> while before it is ready for review as I'll have a busy year.
>
> Andrew
>
>
> On Sunday, 4 January 2015 15:23:56 UTC+11, William Stein wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> The computer combinat.math.washington.edu is down... again.  Sort of.
>> It responds to ping requests, but I can't ssh in.
>>
>> I suspect that not a lot of people are actively using it lately, since
>> this is the second time it has gone down for over a week in the last 3
>> months, and nobody (except my student Hao Chen), seems to have
>> noticed.
>>
>> I'm considering doing the following.  I'll shutdown combinat
>> completely, reformat the disk, and set it up as a node of the
>> cloud.sagemath.com (SMC).   It'll still have the amazing 64 cores and
>> huge (192GB) RAM.  However, instead of login in directly to it, people
>> can email me to request that I move a particular SMC project to
>> combinat.  It will then have access to expanded compute resources.
>> The advantage of this, is that it is much easier for me to maintain.
>> In particular, SMC has automated scripts to take care of using cgroups
>> to explicitly limit usage of compute resources by a given project, I
>> have extensive monitoring code in place so I know when things go down,
>> and I everything runs in virtual machines, so when there are problems
>> I can easily fix them in a few minutes remotely.  Also, it's much
>> easier to grant fair usage to projects.    As it is now with default
>> linux on combinat, basically any user can just bring down the computer
>> by using too much memory/disk/whatever, which is probably what
>> happened in this case (I don't know).
>>
>> Thoughts?
>>
>> Obviously, this may be a bit slower and the max memory will be less
>> (as things are in a VM) for specific research-level computations.
>> However, a working computer is way better than a regularly-crashing
>> computer, in my opinion.    Also, given the weeks of downtime that
>> nobody (except Hao) notices, maybe people aren't using combinat at all
>> anyways, due to it being only a remote linux box.   Personally, I
>> think SMC makes using remote Linux boxes much easier.
>>
>> -- William
>>
>> --
>> William Stein
>> Professor of Mathematics
>> University of Washington
>> http://wstein.org
>
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-- 
William Stein
Professor of Mathematics
University of Washington
http://wstein.org

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