Sign Up
Log In
Log In
or
Sign Up
Places
All Projects
Status Monitor
Collapse sidebar
home:dirkmueller:Factory
boinc-client
README.SUSE
Overview
Repositories
Revisions
Requests
Users
Attributes
Meta
File README.SUSE of Package boinc-client
##################################################################################################################### Exported from http://boinc.berkeley.edu/wiki/Installing_BOINC on May 15, 2010, see current version online. ##################################################################################################################### Installing BOINC on openSUSE * 1 Basic installation * 2 What the installer does * 3 Verify the installation * 4 Set up your accounts * 5 Optional setup hints * 6 Uninstallation * 7 Known problems Basic installation Installs BOINC Client as a daemon (autostarts the BOINC client at boot time) and puts a BOINC Manager icon on the applications menu. The steps are: 1. Open a terminal, enter |su|, give the root password when prompted. 2. Enter |zypper install boinc-client boinc-manager| (be patient while the BOINC package downloads and installs). 3. Optional: after the installation is finished, enter |/sbin/chkconfig boinc-client on| to have Linux auto-start the boinc-client daemon at boot time. (See Stop or start BOINC daemon after boot page for helpful commands for managing the daemon) What the installer does 1. Creates the daemon script at /etc/init.d/boinc-client. 2. Places the BOINC binaries (boinc-client, boinccmd, boinc-gui and boincmgr) in /usr/bin/. 3. Creates /var/lib/boinc/ for BOINC data files and the slots and projects directories. 4. Names the daemon boinc-client. 5. Creates a user named boinc. For security, boinc owns the BOINC data directory (/var/lib/boinc/) and all the data files and sub-directories it creates in the data directory. Verify the installation 1. If you elected to have Linux start the daemon at boot time (see step 3 in section Basic installation), logout and reboot Linux now and login under your normal user account. 2. If you elected to not have Linux start the daemon at boot time, start the daemon manually with |/sbin/service boinc-client start| 3. Open a terminal and enter |ps aux | grep boinc| to print a partial list of running processes. You should see |boinc-client --dir ...| in that list, if not then something went wrong in the steps above. Set up your accounts To use the GUI to set up your accounts and monitor progress: * Start "boincmgr" on the command line or select Applications -> System Tools -> Boinc Manager from the GNOME menu. * Select Advanced -> Select computer... from the Boinc Manager menu. * Put "localhost" in for "Host name" and the contents of /var/lib/boinc/gui_rpc_auth.cfg for "Password" and hit "OK". If you do only the basic installation as described above, BOINC manager will not be able to automatically connect to the client. To connect the client you will be required to give the GUI RPC password every time you start BOINC manager. That is not a bug, it is a security feature to prevent other users from using the manager to manipulate the client, change your projects, etc. If you don't want to put the password every time you run the BOINC manager, you can: 1. disable the password at all [*not recommended*] To make the GUI passwordless, do "echo > /var/lib/boinc/gui_rpc_auth.cfg" (which replaces the contents of the file with a newline) and then restart boinc-client (with e.g. "/sbin/service boinc-client restart"). 2. *with boinc-client-6.4.7-1.r17542svn and newer* it is enough if you just add your user account into the "boinc" group, e.g. by typing |/usr/sbin/usermod -G boinc -a username| 3. *with older versions* the procedure is a bit more complicated: Boinc (the user named boinc) owns /var/lib/boinc/ and all the files and directories in it so you will not be able to edit those files easily from your regular user account. The steps below add your username to the boinc group and adjust some permissions so that BOINC manager will automatically connect to BOINC client whenever you start the manager from your regular Linux user account. Also you will be able to edit files in the BOINC directory without becoming root. As you type in each command below, substitute your Linux username wherever you see |username|. Enter the following commands in a terminal, as root: 1. |/usr/sbin/usermod -A boinc username| 2. |chmod g+rw /var/lib/boinc| 3. |chmod g+rw /var/lib/boinc/*.*| 4. |ln -s /var/lib/boinc/gui_rpc_auth.cfg /home/username/gui_rpc_auth.cfg| 5. |chown boinc:boinc /home/username/gui_rpc_auth.cfg| Uninstallation As root, in a terminal, enter yum remove boinc-client boinc-manager Known problems boinc-client sometimes has problems connecting to the network, if the network connection comes up after the client has already started. This is a known BOINC bug, which is filed as #707. In the meantime, you can fix this by restarting boinc-client. On the command line as root, do "/sbin/service boinc-client restart". Alternatively, from the GNOME menu, you can choose System -> Administration -> Services and then stop and start the boinc-client service.
Locations
Projects
Search
Status Monitor
Help
OpenBuildService.org
Documentation
API Documentation
Code of Conduct
Contact
Support
@OBShq
Terms
openSUSE Build Service is sponsored by
The Open Build Service is an
openSUSE project
.
Sign Up
Log In
Places
Places
All Projects
Status Monitor