Examples, with test-cases, and a useful place for testing
To run, first build FALCON and its dependencies, and set-up your environment. (See FALCON-integrate in GitHub.) Then:
make run-ecoli
We do not recommend piping the output, since if you need to stop early (with Ctrl-C aka KeyboardInterrupt), your program might be killed before it has time to qdel
the outstanding jobs.
One way to set-up your environment is to use Python virtualenv. Before running these examples, activate your virtualenv in your shell or via FALCON-integrate.
These are "files of filenames". Since they are in the repo, they should be relative paths. (Relative to the current directory when they are used. But that is wrong. It should be relative to their own location. TODO)
The repo source is lightweight because it contains symlinks instead of the contents of large files. These are managed by git-sym.
This separates big-file caching from revision-control. There are several alternatives:
Relying on git-sym, symlinks to the data are stored in data/
sub-directories. The files should point (relatively) into .git_sym/
, which contains more symlinks to a cache directory. git_sym.makefile
should include a rule to produce files for those symlinks.