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ESO-MIDAS on CD-ROM

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INTRODUCTION

ESO-MIDAS is the acronym for the European Southern Observatory - Munich Image Data Analysis System
which is developed and maintained by the European Southern Observatory.

The ESO-MIDAS system provides general tools for image processing and data reduction
with emphasis on astronomical applications including imaging and special reduction packages for ESO instrumentation at La Silla and Paranal.

This document contains release notes and installation instructions for the $MIDVERS release of ESO-MIDAS. The CD-ROM contains the following products: Please, read this document to find out about features, notes, and TROUBLESHOOTING. It also describes how to install these products from the CD-ROM.

DISTRIBUTION POLICY

The ESO-MIDAS source code and documentation are publicly available in the anonymous ftp account of ESO (ftp://ftphost.hq.eso.org) which is the primary channel of distribution.
On request, ESO-MIDAS is also available on CD-ROM for institutes which have no sufficient internet connection.
The availability of new releases, upgrades and patches is announced through electronic mail to those subscribed to the midas-announce mailing list (see also support) and via the ESO-MIDAS WWW pages.

TECHNICAL SUPPORT AND NETWORK SERVICES

The following official MIDAS support services are available for sending suggestions, comments or to obtain help: Other public services: To subscribe fill out the form on http://www.eso.org/esomidas/midas-mailform.html or send an e-mail to "[email protected]" with the text "subscribe " in the body of the mail

ESO MIDAS DOCUMENTATION

ESO-MIDAS documentation is also included in this CD-ROM in PostScript and HTML format in the directory /cdrom/midas/docs

ESO MIDAS INSTALLATION FROM CD ROM

This section describes installing ESO-MIDAS from the MIDAS release distribution on CD-ROM.
The CD-ROM contains all the ESO-MIDAS sources needed for a full installation, which is applicable for most common Unix platforms, as well as Linux and Mac OS X.

STEP 1 - BEFORE YOU BEGIN

a) Disk Requirements (in kilobytes)
You must ensure that you have enough disk space to install ESO-MIDAS products before you begin. Consult the following table, and add together the disk requirements for each product you are installing:

Products Sources After installation Demo data Calib data
SUN Solaris 5.6 51 159 340 20
SUN Solaris 5.8 51 159 340 20
HP 9000 B.11.00 51 115 340 20
PC/Linux 2.4.18 51 252 340 21
Alpha/Linux 2.2.16 51 340 340 21
Alpha/OSF V4.0D 51 150 340 21
Mac OSX 10.1 / 10.2 51 379 340 20


b) MIDASHOME Directory
The ESO-MIDAS products you are installing will reside entirely within a single directory called MIDASHOME (e.g. /midas or /home/midas) which must be created by you. Before proceeding with the installation, check the disk space available on your system (e.g. with command df), and decide in which filesystem you want to install ESO-MIDAS.

STEP 2 - COPY THE FILES

ESO-MIDAS products are supplied as compressed tar files on the CD-ROM. They are installed by running the installation shell script on a machine with write-access to what will be the MIDASHOME directory. If this machine does not have its own CD-ROM drive, it will need to remotely access a CD-ROM drive somewhere on the network. To install ESO-MIDAS product(s):

a) Login as root.

b) Load the CD-ROM on the machine with the CD-ROM drive. Mount the CD-ROM as an ISO-9660 (High Sierra) filesystem using the appropriate device name and mount command for your architecture. The following table gives suggested device configurations and mount commands for each architecture:

Architecture Device Name Command to Mount CD-ROM drive
Alpha/OSF /dev/rz4a mount -t cdfs -o noversion /dev/rz4a /cdrom
HP 700/800 /dev/dsk/c0t0d0 mount -F cdfs -r /dev/dsk/c0t0d0 /cdrom
SPARC Solaris /dev/dsk/c0t4d0s0 mount -r -F hsfs -r /dev/dsk/c0t4d0 /cdrom
PC Linux /dev/cdrom mount -r -t so9660 /dev/cdrom /cdrom


If the machine with the CD-ROM drive does not have write-access to what will be the MIDASHOME directory, you must now export the /cdrom direc- tory, and mount it on an appropriate machine.

On Solaris and with vold(1) running, the CD-ROM may be automatically mounted as /cdrom.
On Silicon Graphics the CD-ROM might be automatically mounted as /CDROM.
On other systems you may need to create the CD-ROM mount point to /cdrom with the command "mkdir /cdrom".

c) Copy the relevant files
The CD contains compressed tar files for the MIDAS system, the verification package, as well as the FORS1/2 and UVES VLT instrument pipelines. Also the corresponding README files in ASCII format are on the CD. So, for the MIDAS system do:

% cd $MIDASHOME
% cp /cdrom/midas/$MIDVERS.tar.gz .
% gunzip $MIDVERS.tar.gz
% tar xvf $MIDVERS.tar

Once you have copied all files from the CD, you can unmount it using "umount /cdrom"

STEP 3 - DO THE INSTALLLATION

For a full configuration and complete installation of MIDAS with defaults values the following command will work on most system:

% cd $MIDASHOME/$MIDVERS/install/unix
% ./autoconfig

The previous configuration tool 'config' is still available. Use this script if you want to select packages and change defaults.

% ./config

the config script is described in detail in the Postscript file installunix.ps , also stored on the CD.

STEP 4 - TEST THE INSTALLATION (OPTIONAL, BUT RECOMMENDED)

The verification procedures are designed to exercise MIDAS commands and to compare results with internal and correct values. They should stop and report to the operator if they detect any problem with MIDAS commands.
To run the verification procedures, create a temporary directory (e.g.$MIDASHOME/tmp), move in, and enter:

% inmidas
Midas 001> @ vericopy
Midas 002> @@ veriall

STEP 5 - CLEAN UNNECESSARY PACKAGES (OPTIONAL)

The distribution of ESO-MIDAS includes all packages available for MIDAS, but you might not be interested in all of them. If after the installation you want to remove them, to free some disk space, you should use the option "9 - clean MIDAS" available in the "config" script:

% cd $MIDASHOME/$MIDVERS/install/unix
% ./config
....
Select: 9 (clean MIDAS)


You wil get a menu of choices, and for any option you select, confirmation will be requested before it starts removing files.

STEP 6 - ACCESS TO TAPE AND PRINTER DEVICES

System names can be used directly in most MIDAS commands to adress tapes and printer devices. You can also assign logical names to your tape and printer system names by editing the file $MIDASHOME/$MIDVERS/monit/ devices.sh" However the use of printer devices for graphics output (plots) requires the extra editing of the file: $MIDASHOME/$MIDVERS/systab/ascii/plot/agldevs.dat"

TROUBLESHOOTING

This section lists some typical errors and their solutions.
You can execute all actions as a user, except for the last one "7 - Complete installation in your system" which has to be done as root.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

ESO-MIDAS is a copyright protected software product of the European Southern Observatory for the purpose of
Image Processing of Astronomical Data. The word ESO-MIDAS constitutes a Trade Mark.
ESO-MIDAS includes a copyright protected software library for graphic applications known as AGL (Astronet Graphic Library)
developed by the Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri, Firenze (Italy).
ESO-MIDAS is available under the GNU General Public License. This means that the ESO-MIDAS system is available, free of charge and can freely redistributed on certain conditions. These conditions are described in the GNU General Public License, of which a summary is given below.

Copyright (C) 2001 European Southern Observatory (ESO) This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Massachusetss Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.


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