Qsar: Difference between revisions
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You may now use an SSH portal and a browser proxy add-on such as SwitchyOmega to remotely connect to the localhost website. If you don't know how to do so, follow the relevant guides on this wiki or ask a lab member. | You may now use an SSH portal and a browser proxy add-on such as SwitchyOmega to remotely connect to the localhost website. If you don't know how to do so, follow the relevant guides on this wiki or ask a lab member. | ||
[[Category:Serge]] | |||
Latest revision as of 20:44, 9 July 2026
Synopsis
This guide will detail the installation and usage of Qsar (https://github.com/syedzayyan/qsar-in-browser) on cluster 7.
Last updated on July 9th, 2026. Things may change with time, so don't trust this guide after a long time has passed.
Installation and Running
First, clone the Qsar repo off of github into your chosen folder and cd into it.
git clone https://github.com/syedzayyan/qsar-in-browser.git
cd qsar-in-browser
Then, create a new conda environment followed by a nodejs installation after loading anaconda3.
ml anaconda3
conda create -n qsar
conda activate qsar
conda install conda-forge::nodejs
Finally, install the dependencies and run the website.
npm install
npm run dev
This will start qsar on http://localhost:3000 of the machine that you've started it on.
You may now use an SSH portal and a browser proxy add-on such as SwitchyOmega to remotely connect to the localhost website. If you don't know how to do so, follow the relevant guides on this wiki or ask a lab member.