Contributed by cyberinfrastructure professionals (researchers, research computing facilitators, research software engineers and HPC system administrators), these resources are shared through the ConnectCI community platform. Add resources you find helpful!
pip stands for "pip installs packages". It's the go-to package manager for Python, allowing developers to install, update, and manage software libraries and dependencies used in Python projects. With just a few commands in your terminal or command prompt, pip makes it effortless to fetch libraries from the Python Package Index (PyPI) and integrate them into your projects. This guide will walk you through the basics of pip, from installation to advanced package management.
Below is a link for a book that focuses on how to use "sf" and "terra" packages for GIS computations. As of 5/1/2023, this book is up to date and examples are error free. The book has a lot of information but provides a good overview and example workflows on how to use these tools.
This tutorial introduces the use of Containers using the Charliecloud software suite. This tutorial will provide participants with background and hands-on experience to use basic Charliecloud containers for HPC applications. We discuss what containers are, why they matter for HPC, and how they work. We'll give an overview of Charliecloud, the unprivileged container solution from Los Alamos National Laboratory's HPC Division. Students will learn how to build toy containers and containerize real HPC applications, and then run them on a cluster. Exercises are demonstrated using the ACES cluster, a composable accelerator testbed at Texas A&M University. Students with an allocation on the ACES cluster can follow along with the ACES-specific exercises.
This is a resource for researchers and students looking to on-board onto the c3ddb cluster at MGHPCC. In the code section, there are example job submission scripts for the different queues on c3ddb.
Hour of Cyberinfrastructure (Hour of CI) is a nationwide campaign to introduce undergraduate and graduate students to cyberinfrastructure and geographic information science (GIS).
The Biopython Tutorial and Cookbook website is a dedicated online resource for users in the field of computational biology and bioinformatics. It provides a collection of tutorials and practical examples focused on using the Biopython library.
The website offers a series of tutorials that cover various aspects of Biopython, catering to users with different levels of expertise. It also includes code snippets and examples, and common solutions to common challenges in computational biology.
A comprehensive collection of NERSC developed training and tutorial events, offered on regular schedules. All sessions are archived, including slide decks, video recordings, and software examples as are available. Some examples of past training and tutorial topics are listed below
Deep Learning for Sciences Webinar Series
BerkeleyGW Tutorial Workshop
VASP Trainings
Timemory Software Monitoring Tutorial, April 2021
HPCToolkit to Measure and Analyzing GPU Applications Performance Tutorial
Totalview Tutorial
NVidia HPCSDK - OpenMP Target Offload Training
Parallelware Training Series
ARM Debugging and Profiling Tools Tutorial
Roofline on NVIDIA GPUs
GPUs for Science events
3-part OpenACC Training Series
9-part CUDA Training Series
Proxmox Virtual Environment is a hyper-converged infrastructure open-source software. It is a hosted hypervisor that can run operating systems including Linux and Windows on x64 hardware.
This is the official University of Oxford FSL group lecture page. This includes information on upcoming and past courses (online and in-person), as well as lecture materials. Available lecture materials includes slides and recordings on using FSL, MR physics, and applications of imaging data.
Iterative Programming takes place when you can explore your code and play with your objects and functions without needing to save, recompile, or leave your development environment. This has traditionally been achieved with a REPL or an interactive shell. The magic of Jupyter Notebooks is that the interactive shell is saved as a persistant document, so you don't have to flip back and forth between your code files and the shell in order to program iteratively.
There are several editors and IDE's that are intended for notebook development, but JupyterLab is a natural choice because it is free and open source and most closely related to the Jupyter Notebooks/iPython projects. The chief motivation of this repository is to enable an IDE-like development environment through the use of extensions. There are also expositional notebooks to show off the usefulness of these features.