SubatomicPhysics: Difference between revisions

From Alliance Doc
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 6: Line 6:


The CCenv that is setup for regular users can create conflicts with some of the setups from these repositories as standard libraries are provided from the Compute Canada soft.computecanada.ca CVMFS repository which uses Nix and Easybuild to provide access rather than having the software installed on the base OS of the compute nodes.
The CCenv that is setup for regular users can create conflicts with some of the setups from these repositories as standard libraries are provided from the Compute Canada soft.computecanada.ca CVMFS repository which uses Nix and Easybuild to provide access rather than having the software installed on the base OS of the compute nodes.
For ATLAS users, there are pages housed on the TRIUMF twiki that should be helpful
* https://twiki.atlas-canada.ca/bin/view/AtlasCanada/ComputeCanadaTier3s
* https://twiki.atlas-canada.ca/bin/view/AtlasCanada/Containers

Revision as of 20:01, 23 August 2019

Subatomic and High Energy Physics Software[edit]

This page is maintained by the Compute Canada Subatomic Physics National Team and was last updated August 23, 2019.

Many of the subatomic experimental physics groups are relying on CVMFS repositories from CERN or the Open Science Grid and specific repositories for each experiment.

The CCenv that is setup for regular users can create conflicts with some of the setups from these repositories as standard libraries are provided from the Compute Canada soft.computecanada.ca CVMFS repository which uses Nix and Easybuild to provide access rather than having the software installed on the base OS of the compute nodes.

For ATLAS users, there are pages housed on the TRIUMF twiki that should be helpful