Hai
I would like to know the system requirements for running abinit on my PC.
When I tried to run ground state calculations with nearly 32 atoms on my laptop with an Intel Core 2 Duo processor having 4GB RAM, the calculations are taking longer duration to complete and the system is getting stuck in the meantime. I am not sure of whether the long duration of run is due to insufficient hardware availability.
I wish to know by buying a high-end laptop, Can I do the calculations much faster?
If anyone knows about this, please reply.
Thanks and Regards
Seba
Hardware Requirements for runnung ABINIT
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Please have a look at ~abinit/doc/config/build-config.ac in the source package for detailed and up-to-date information about the configuration of Abinit 8 builds.
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IMPORTANT: when an answer solves your problem, please check the little green V-like button on its upper-right corner to accept it.
Please have a look at ~abinit/doc/config/build-config.ac in the source package for detailed and up-to-date information about the configuration of Abinit 8 builds.
For a video explanation on how to build Abinit 7.x for Linux, please go to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DppLQ-KQA68.
IMPORTANT: when an answer solves your problem, please check the little green V-like button on its upper-right corner to accept it.
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Re: Hardware Requirements for runnung ABINIT
First, the output file will contain a section at the top with an estimate of how much memory the calculation should take. Look for the line that begins "P This job should need less than..." Secondly, in my experience, 32 atoms would be a huge calculation to attempt to run on a laptop. In my work I would be running such a system on a few dozen cores on a cluster. Buying a better laptop will of course run things faster but no laptop in the world will cope effectively with tens of atoms in a DFT calculation. To do systems this big you will really need to get access to some kind of multi-core machine.
Josef W. Zwanziger
Professor, Department of Chemistry
Canada Research Chair in NMR Studies of Materials
Dalhousie University
Halifax, NS B3H 4J3 Canada
jzwanzig@gmail.com
Professor, Department of Chemistry
Canada Research Chair in NMR Studies of Materials
Dalhousie University
Halifax, NS B3H 4J3 Canada
jzwanzig@gmail.com