Schrodinger
SCHRODINGER
We have 2 Schrodinger license servers
Cluster 0: nis Cluster 2: bet2
Restart Schrodinger License Server
Cluster 0
- 1. Log into nis as root
- 2. you run sh ./restart_schrodinger_guide
- 3. to check, I would check from sgehead1, so you need log in there and run sh ./check_schrodinger.sh
Cluster 2
- 1. Log into bet2 as root
- 2. run systemctl restart schrodinger-licserverd
- 3. To check, you run /export/soft/schrodinger/licserver/bin/lictool status --licsrv-hostport localhost:53001
Renew Schrodinger License
Get Licenses
Both licenses expire on March 15th annually. Schrodinger usually would send John and Brian email with renewal information a month in advanced. If they didn't send out the email, contact licensing@schrodinger.com
Cluster 0 License Renewal
1. Generate the Lic file
Get an email about Schrodinger license keys ready for retrieval.
Click the link near the bottom of the email that said "... use the License Generator form."
In the License Retrieval Assistant, make sure you have the following information for nis:
Host ID: 0015605f526c Machine Name: nis.compbio.ucsf.edu FLEXIm Server Port: 27000
2. Renew License
a. Log in nis as root Copy the license file to nis
3. Check License
Cluster 2 license retrieval
We will be using the key provided in the email, no need to generate a lic file
License type: Server-based License key: <key>
Install License in Cluster 0
Cluster 0, all schrodinger files are located locally on nfshead2:/raid3 but the commands below should be executed on nis as user tdemers.
Make sure that the variable $LM_LICENSE_FILE has port@same_exact_server_name_as_in_license_file. The license.dat file must contain:
SERVER nis.compbio.ucsf.edu 0015605f526c 27000 VENDOR SCHROD PORT=53000
Make sure the port is open in iptables
source /raid3/software/schrodinger/current.sh
Try some combination of the following:
$SCHRODINGER/licadmin STAT -c $SCHRODINGER/license.dat $SCHRODINGER/licadmin REREAD -l $SCHRODINGER/lmgrd.log -c $SCHRODINGER/license.dat $SCHRODINGER/licadmin SERVERDOWN $SCHRODINGER/licadmin SERVERUP -l $SCHRODINGER/lmgrd.log -c $SCHRODINGER/license.dat
Installing Schrodinger on Cluster 0
First you need to go to the website and download the software. You should end up with two files: Schrodinger Worflow … .zip and Schrodinger Suites …..tar scp both these files to the server, to the schrodinger directory. On the server, in the schrodinger directory mkdir MonthYear. cd into that directory Untar the tar file and run the INSTALL script. At the end you’ll see something like this:
*) Licensing You will need one or more licenses before you can run the software you have just installed.
Please note the following information, which you will need in order to generate a license key:
Host ID: 001e0bd543b8 Machine name: nfshead2.bkslab.org
If you are not performing this installation on your license server, you will need the output of:
$SCHRODINGER/machid -hostid
How to setup on you local computer
See page Install Schrodinger Suite in local computer
PyMol
Download and Documentation links
PyMOL Download: http://www.pymol.org/2/#download
AxPyMOL Download: https://pymol.org/dsc/ip/1860/#ax
FAQ: https://pymol.org/2/support.html#faq
Documentation: https://pymol.org/dokuwiki/doku.php
PyMol License
PyMol requires a local lic file in order to activate. This is the path to download to the lic file from cluster
/nfs/soft/schrodinger/pymol_license.lic
Installing Schrodinger 2019 on Cluster 2
The license server is hosted on bet2
Restart License Server
Log into bet2 and become root
cd /export/soft/schrodinger bash ./restart_schrodinger_lic_server.sh
If restart failed, make sure you kill all of the residue schrodinger processes. Then run restart script again.
ps -ef | grep schrod kill -9 <pid>
Install
https://www.schrodinger.com/downloads/releases
Select the Linux 64-bit version. Download it to your local computer first. Then scp the tarball over the nfs-soft in the appropriate directory. Extract the tarball and you'll get a bunch of smaller tarfiles.
# ls Schrodinger_Suites_2019-1_Linux-x86_64.tar # tar -xvf Schrodinger_Suites_2019-1_Linux-x86_64.tar Schrodinger_Suites_2019-1_Linux-x86_64/canvas-v3.9-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz Schrodinger_Suites_2019-1_Linux-x86_64/mcpro-v5.3-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz Schrodinger_Suites_2019-1_Linux-x86_64/desmond-v5.7-Linux-x86_64.tar.gz Schrodinger_Suites_2019-1_Linux-x86_64/INSTALL . . . Schrodinger_Suites_2019-1_Linux-x86_64/CHECKSUM.md5
https://www.schrodinger.com/license-installation-instructions
We do not need to untar these individually. The INSTALL script takes care of nearly everything. All we have to do is set the path of where we want the installed programs to go to.
[root@bet ~]# export SCHRODINGER=/export/soft/schrodinger/2019-1/ [root@bet ~]# ./INSTALL
The install script will ask you where you're running your license server. We run the license server on the same server as the installation server so tell the software that it will run on 27008@bet.
Set Environment Files
Notice we set the SCHROD_LICENSE_FILE as '27008@bet'. We do not use the FQDN. This is because the desktops are on the public network (compbio.ucsf.edu) while the cluster is on a private network (cluster.ucsf.bkslab.org). If we use the FQDN, the desktops may recognize the domain but not the cluster and vice versa. Therefore, we will reference the license server as simply 'bet'
env.sh
#!/bin/bash export SCHRODINGER="/nfs/soft/schrodinger/2019-1" export SCHRODINGER_THIRDPARTY="$SCHRODINGER/thirdparty" export SCHRODINGER_PDB="$SCHRODINGER_THIRDPARTY/database/pdb" export SCHRODINGER_UTILITIES="$SCHRODINGER/utilities" export SCHRODINGER_RCP="scp" export SCHRODINGER_RSH="ssh" export PSP_BLASTDB="$SCHRODINGER_THIRDPARTY/database/blast/" export PSP_BLAST_DATA="$SCHRODINGER_THIRDPARTY/bin/Linux-x86/blast/data/" export PSP_BLAST_DIR="$SCHRODINGER_THIRDPARTY/bin/Linux-x86/blast/" export SCHROD_LICENSE_FILE="27008@bet" export LM_LICENSE_FILE="27008@bet" export PATH="${SCHRODINGER}:${SCHRODINGER_UTILITIES}:${PATH}:${SCHRODINGER_THIRDPARTY}/desmond_to_trj"
env.csh
#!/bin/csh setenv SCHRODINGER "/mnt/nfs/soft/schrodinger/2019-1" setenv SCHRODINGER_THIRDPARTY "$SCHRODINGER/thirdparty" setenv SCHRODINGER_PDB "$SCHRODINGER_THIRDPARTY/database/pdb" setenv SCHRODINGER_UTILITIES "$SCHRODINGER/utilities" setenv SCHRODINGER_RCP "scp" setenv SCHRODINGER_RSH "ssh" setenv PSP_BLASTDB "$SCHRODINGER_THIRDPARTY/database/blast/" setenv PSP_BLAST_DATA "$SCHRODINGER_THIRDPARTY/bin/Linux-x86/blast/data/" setenv PSP_BLAST_DIR "$SCHRODINGER_THIRDPARTY/bin/Linux-x86/blast/" setenv SCHROD_LICENSE_FILE "27008@bet" setenv PATH "${SCHRODINGER}:${SCHRODINGER_UTILITIES}:${PATH}:${SCHRODINGER_THIRDPARTY}/desmond_to_trj"
Licensing
Edit the license file line that contains 'SERVER'. For Server, we will put 'this_host' instead of the hostname. This way, the license server will be recognized by any of its DNS hostnames regardless of different domains.
SERVER this_host 80c16e65897d 27008
Licensing configuration Troubleshooting
Note from a call with Schrodinger's support team on 04/07/2020 -Khanh
1. License directory
/opt/schrodinger/licenses/ $SCHRODINGER/licenses/
The first, release-independent location is preferable, but a common issue is that '/opt' is local to each machine, while '$SCHRODINGER' is on a shared filesystem. One solution is to always put all license files in '$SCHRODINGER/licenses/', which then needs to be copied whenever you upgrade to a new release. Since you already had the full license file in '/opt/schrodinger/licenses/' on the server, Schrodinger suggested an alternative configuration:
- The full license file in '/opt/schrodinger/licenses/' on the server, which is readable only by the server. When you get a new licenses, the Configure Schrodinger Software program, run on the license server, should install the file in the '/opt' location.
- A client file (whose sole purpose is to point to the license server) in '/nfs/soft/schrodinger/licenses/', with a symlink set up so software being run on Linux client machines will find it when looking in the Schrodinger installation.
When you upgrade to a new Schrodinger release, you just need to create a new symlink in that directory. Nothing needs to change with the installed license files.
$ ln -s /nfs/soft/schrodinger/licenses $SCHRODINGER/licenses
2. Client Machines
Please make sure that you have Pulse Secure from UCSF installed in your machine
MAC users The client license is typically found in this vi /Library/Application\ Support/Schrodinger/licenses/
$ vi /Library/Application\ Support/Schrodinger/licenses/80_client_bet.lic SERVER bet.compbio.ucsf.edu ANY 53000 USE_SERVER
Test the license by running
$ /opt/schrodinger/suites2019-4/utilities/lictest -d MAESTRO_MAIN
PLEASE NOTE: Schrodinger app launcher doesn't work on Catalina yet, you need to start the software from command line
Linux users
https://www.schrodinger.com/kb/972?original_search=licadmin%20start
It is better to setup license on command line
vi /opt/schrodinger/licenses/80_client_bet.lic SERVER bet.compbio.ucsf.edu ANY 53000 USE_SERVER
$SCHRODINGER/licadmin INSTALL -c /opt/schrodinger/licenses/80_client_bet.lic
Schrodinger Hosts & Queue Config Files
The schrodinger.hosts file exists within the schrodinger current installation directory. schrodinger.hosts contains the list of queues available for schrodinger to use. The first host entry should just be a localhost entry to allow users to run Schrodinger on their local machine. Other host entries will contain information such as what queue to use, how many processors are available, what GPUs exist, if parallelization is enabled, etc.
schrodinger.hosts file
Name: gimel-sge host: gimel queue: SGE qargs: -q gpu.q -pe local %NPROC% -l gpu=1 tmpdir: /scratch processors: 32 gpgpu: 0, nvidia gpgpu: 1, nvidia gpgpu: 2, nvidia gpgpu: 3, nvidia parallel: 1 Name: gimel2-sge host: gimel2 queue: SGE qargs: -q gpu.q -pe local %NPROC% -l gpu=1 tmpdir: /scratch processors: 32 gpgpu: 0, nvidia gpgpu: 1, nvidia gpgpu: 2, nvidia gpgpu: 3, nvidia parallel: 1 name: gimel2-n923q host: gimel2 queue: SGE qargs: -q n-9-23.q -pe local %NPROC% tmpdir: /scratch processors: 80 parallel: 1
Since we use opengrid engine, we must configure the queue config file that exists for SGE. This file is located in the $SCHRODINGER/queues/SGE/config.
QPATH=/usr/bin/ QPROFILE=/nfs/ge/ucsf.bks/cell/common/settings.sh QSUB=qsub QDEL=qdel QSTAT=qstat LICENSE_CHECKING=yes
Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting: License checking failing on desktops
We had an issue where our license server was running with ideal conditions yet some of our desktops failed to locate the license when Schrodinger software was started. The license check programs would pass and clear but the software would fail during license check. This can be caused by DNS routing issues. We had a case where Campus IT had added additional DNS servers to the DHCP configuration which meant that our DNS server located at 169.230.26.93 would get pushed away. While on a desktop, try to verify the contents of your file /etc/resolv.conf. It should look something like this:
server 169.230.26.93 server 128.218.254.10 server 128.218.254.40 search desktop.ucsf.bkslab.org ucsf.bkslab.org bkslab.org compbio.ucsf.edu ucsf.edu
If it does not look like this, let the sysadmin know!
Troubleshooting: Job Fails to Submit & Status is 'Fizzled Out'
A job that fails to submit successfully from the desktop is caused by a lack of passwordless SSH. You need to have an ssh-key enabled between your desktop and the SGE head nodes (gimel/gimel2). Please see: http://wiki.docking.org/index.php/SSH_public_key_authentication for the Linux section and set the remote_host as either gimel or gimel2.
Troubleshooting: D-Bus Errors
We had a period where our jobs were dying upon submission. We would get this strange error message:
process 23478: arguments to dbus_move_error() were incorrect, assertion "(dest) == NULL || !dbus_error_is_set ((dest))" failed in file dbus-errors.c line 278. This is normally a bug in some application using the D-Bus library. D-Bus not built with -rdynamic so unable to print a backtrace Fatal Python error: Aborted
It turns out, this was due to SELinux being on. As a temporary workaround, I have disabled SELinux on hosts that were experiencing this issue. We'll need to dig deeper in /var/log/audit/audit.log to diagnose what was wrong. RESOLVED: http://wiki.docking.org/index.php/SELinux_notes
Troubleshooting: All processes go onto the same GPU
When we submit GPU jobs via Maestro/Desmond, we can choose the number of GPUs we use in the run. However, when we first did this while declaring that we wanted four GPUs to be used in a process, Schrodinger would allocate the four separate processes all on the same GPU. To address this, we have to log into the GPU nodes and set the GPUs into exclusive mode. This means that no more than one process would run on a GPU at a time.
$ nvidia-smi -c 3
Found on this webpage: https://www.schrodinger.com/kb/1834
Troubleshooting: Ligprep fails "FATAL: Error: in replying to 'JPROXYPORT'"
This is related to a firewall issue. The complete error message looks like this:
FATAL: Error: in replying to 'JPROXYPORT <submit host> <user> "/mnt/nfs/soft/schrodinger/2019-1"' - dial tcp gimel2:32971: connect: no route to host
Schrodinger is trying to connect to the submission host via port 32971. We did not set the JPROXYPORT in the schrodinger.hosts file so it seems to pick a random port along the 32000 and above. On gimel, we've previously had these ports opened for web applications. After I opened up the same ports on gimel2's iptables rules, then it appears fine.
02/22/2021 Schrodinger changed their JPROXYPORT to 34800
Troubleshooting: Ligprep's multi-process jobs only finishes a single process
Ligprep jobs get sent to a compute node to begin. We've been sending ligprep jobs that would utilize six additional parallel processes under six sub-jobs. Unfortunately, when we first tried, only the head process would spawn but non of the sub-jobs would get submitted. This happened because of the way Schrodinger tries to spawn additional subprocesses. The head job would run on a compute node and then try to contact an SGE submit host (gimel,gimel2) via SSH. If you do not have passwordless SSH enabled, the job would fail to spawn sub-jobs. What you need to do is create an ssh-key in your home directory that would solely be used when an SSH connection is initialized between a compute node and gimel/gimel2. Since your home directory is NFS-mounted across all nodes on the cluster, you only need to create an ssh-key and append the public key to your authorized_keys file under .ssh.
$ ssh-keygen (follow steps and don't make a password) ### (name your key 'compute_to_gimel') ### $ cat ~/.ssh/compute_to_gimel.pub >> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys $ vi ~/.ssh/config Host gimel gimel2 IdentityFile ~/.ssh/compute_to_gimel
This way, the process on the compute node can successfully contact the SGE submission hosts and spawn additional subprocesses.
Troubleshooting: FATAL -88: Could not check out a license for mmlibs version 5.7.
This error means that the clock in the node is off. To fix it, you need to enable ntpd and sync it with reliable ntp servers (ie pool.ntp.org)
yum install ntp systemctl stop ntpd timedatectl set-timezone America/Los_Angeles ntpdate pool.ntp.org systemctl start ntpd systemctl enable ntpd