Difference between revisions of "Math Computing Cheat Sheet"

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; Not so good for
 
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Revision as of 16:31, 1 May 2015

Email

Task URL Your email addresses Remarks
create account https://calmail.berkeley.edu/manage/account/create_account jane.doe@berkeley.edu
  • requires CalNet Authentication
  • you have to accept the terms of service
  • your @math address is created by department
access email http://bmail.berkeley.edu
  • jane.doe@berkeley.edu
  • jdoe@math.berkeley.edu
  • requires CalNet Authentication
  • accept the terms of service at first time
  • both addresses point to the same Gmail box
  • you can make jdoe@math.berkeley.edu default

Web

Task URL Remarks
read department web pages http://math.berkeley.edu
  • no authentication required
edit your official page /people/path-to-your-page
  • replace path-to-your-page with the path to your page, e.g. faculty/jane-doe
  • requires CalNet Authentication
  • click on Edit tab of the page you own
  • upload photo, add link, etc.
create/edit your personal page /~your-unix-login
  • replace your-unix-login with your Unix login name, e.g. jdoe
  • create public_html folder in your Unix home
  • create/edit index.html file in the above folder
  • make sure the file/folder permissions are right
  • read more in the Webpage Guide

Printing

Public Printers

Queue Name Location Maker & Model Printer Queue URL
958_large 958 Evans Hall Canon iR-ADV 8295 http://printserver.math.berkeley.edu:631/printers/958_large
958_small 958 Evans Hall Canon iR-ADV 6275 http://printserver.math.berkeley.edu:631/printers/958_small
1002 1002 Evans Hall HP LaserJet M602 http://printserver.math.berkeley.edu:631/printers/1002
838 838 Evans Hall HP LaserJet M603 http://printserver.math.berkeley.edu:631/printers/838
744 744 Evans Hall HP LaserJet P4515 http://printserver.math.berkeley.edu:631/printers/744

Printing Tasks

Task Commands Remarks
print a document from a GUI application (e.g. standalone PDF reader)
  • press Ctrl-P (in Unix or Windows)
  • press Command-P (in MacOS)
  • select the queue name from the above list of public printers
  • send large jobs to one of Canon printers
  • use two-sided printing option (save trees)
  • sometimes, a (malformed) PDF document won't print from the web browser, but prints OK from a standalone PDF viewer (e.g. Adobe Reader)
print a document from Unix command line
  • lpr -P queue file
  • replace queue with the queue name from the above list of public printers
  • replace file with the file path of the document to print
check the print queue status from Unix command line
  • lpq -P queue
  • replace queue with the queue name from the above list of public printers
cancel the job from Unix command line
  • lprm job
  • replace job with the job number from the above output of lpq command
  • you have to own the job in order to able to cancel it
add a printer to personal Windows computer
  • go to Add Network Printer dialogue
  • use the URL from the above list of public printers
  • use a proper Postscript driver (see remarks)
  • do not use PCL printer drivers, use Postscript drivers instead
  • it is recommended to install the HP universal Postscript driver for the above HP printers
  • it is recommended to install the Canon Postscript (PS3) driver for the above Canon printers
add a printer to personal Mac computer
  • go to the list of printers in System Preferences
  • click on + sign
  • click on the IP tab
  • select IPP protocol
  • type printserver.math.berkeley.edu in Address
  • type printers/queue in Queue
  • type queue in Name
  • select Generic Postscript Printer
  • click on Add button and check the Duplex Printing Unit
  • click on OK button
  • replace queue with the queue name from the above list of public printers
  • it is recommended to replace the Generic Postscript driver with a more specific one from the print server itself
  • for example:

Network

Network Type URL Remarks
CalVisitor public WiFi http://ist.berkeley.edu/airbears/calvisitor
  • no authentication required
  • no encryption (public network)
  • limited network service: Web and VPN only
AirBears2 private WiFi http://ist.berkeley.edu/airbears
  • requires authentication (AirBears2 key)
  • set or view the key here (requires CalNet Authentication)
  • encrypted (secure) network
eduroam private WiFi http://ist.berkeley.edu/airbears
  • requires (eduroam) authentication
  • UC Berkeley insiders may use their AirBears2 key
  • visitors may use their home institution eduroam credentials
  • encrypted (secure) network
Ethernet wired http://www.net.berkeley.edu/dhcp/
  • requires MAC address registration
  • student personal computers are not eligible for wired network access
  • faculty and long term visitors may send the office number and MAC address of their computer to request@math.berkeley.edu (it takes about 15 min to complete the request upon receiving your email)
  • alternatively, register your computer campus wide via IST network device registration page (registering a MAC address does not mean an immediate access to the network — please be patient)

Public Unix Servers

Name Resources Purpose Remarks
login.math.berkeley.edu 8 CPU cores, 12GB RAM SSH gateway
Good for
  • Unix shell command line interface (CLI)
  • Text editing, emailing, Tex/LaTeX writing
  • Worldwide AFP and SFTP access to file server
  • Access to personal web pages ~/public_html
Not so good for
  • Any serious computing
  • Graphics user interface (GUI)
beyonce.math.berkeley.edu 8 CPU cores, 32GB RAM Virtual desktop (thin client server)
Good for
  • Ubuntu graphics user interface (GUI) access
  • Internet browsing, emailing, Tex/LaTeX writing
  • Interactive scientific computing
  • Access to commercial scientific software
  • Worldwide GUI access (via NX client)
Not so good for
  • High performance computing
keira.math.berkeley.edu 8 CPU cores, 32GB RAM Virtual desktop (thin client server)
Good for
  • Ubuntu graphics user interface (GUI) access
  • Internet browsing, emailing, Tex/LaTeX writing
  • Interactive scientific computing
  • Access to commercial scientific software
  • Worldwide GUI access (via NX client)
Not so good for
  • High performance computing
appsa.math.berkeley.edu 64 CPU cores, 256GB RAM High performance computing
Good for
  • Parallel computing
  • Non-interactive computational jobs (via screen utility)
  • CLI access to scientific (including commercial) software
  • Application programming: C/C++, Fortran, Python, R, etc.
  • Temporary storage of massive computational data
Not so good for
  • GUI computing
  • Supercomputing