DOCK 3.8:How to build a release
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This page describes the formal definition of a release of the UCSF DOCK software suite
1. Build pydock3 Python package
- (e.g., build pip-installable wheel file using poetry).
- this can all be done on gimel2
- git clone https://github.com/docking-org/pydock3.git
- cd pydock3
- git submodule update --init --recursive
( you need to authenticate, and you need to have generated token)
- use the generated token as your password
- run poetry, e.g.
- ~isknight/.local/bin/poetry build
- if there is a general python venv ready, use it. Else create new python venv (see below)
- pip install dist/pydock3-0.1.0rc1-py3-none-any.whl
2. Make a fresh and clean dock3 executable
- git clone https://github.com/docking-org/dock3.git
- ssh psi
- bash
- export PATH=/nfs/soft/pgi/current/linux86-64/12.10/bin:$PATH
- source /nfs/home/tbalius/zzz.virtualenvs/virtualenv-1.9.1/myVEonGimel/bin/activate
- source /nfs/soft/pgi/env.sh
- verify that compiler set to pgf95 in Makefiles
- cd into libfgz
- make clean; make
- cd into i386
- make clean; make
1A. (optional) create new python venv
3. Incorporate the fruits of (1) and (2) into DOCK3.8 repository housing an arsenal of scripts (e.g., 3D build scripts, post-processing scripts) that are essential for following the published Nature protocol.
A particular commit of the DOCK3.8 repository formally becomes a particular distribution of UCSF DOCK software when the commit is tagged with the distribution's semantic version (e.g., DOCK3.8 v1.2.0). Note that pydock3 and dock3 are separately versioned from DOCK3.8.