RE: SPAM: Interactive Control of NONMEM runs
Paolo:
What you say is correct regarding signal files being created. However, the sig
program should still work in linux. The source code of sig.exe is sig.f90 in
../util of the nonmem installed directory, and you can see that it produces
those files. In linux, the syntax is somtething like:
./sig next
or
./sig next ~/nonmem/
Where the second argument is your run directory, in case you are not executing
the sig program from the run directory.
Robert J. Bauer, Ph.D.
Vice President, Pharmacometrics, R&D
ICON Development Solutions
7740 Milestone Parkway
Suite 150
Hanover, MD 21076
Tel: (215) 616-6428
Mob: (925) 286-0769
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.iconplc.com
Quoted reply history
-----Original Message-----
From: Paolo Denti [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, May 28, 2012 4:54 AM
To: Bauer, Robert
Cc: Fidler,Matt,FORT WORTH,R&D; nmusers
Subject: Re: SPAM: [NMusers] Interactive Control of NONMEM runs
Thank you both for your help,
I feared that Perl was capturing the keyboard commands, and the sig.exe
would sadly not help in my case, because I wanted to use the function in
a Linux environment.
But after playing with sig.exe a bit, I realized that all it does is
creating a file that gives the signal. So by creating the file manually,
you can override the whole process.
All you need to do is finding the directory where NONMEM is running
(NM_run1 in PSN) and manually create an empty file with a different name
according to the desired action. Here's a list:
Print toggle (monitor estimation progress):
print.sig
Paraprint toggle (monitor parallel processing traffic):
paraprint.sig
Next (move on to next estimation mode or next estimation):
next.sig
Stop (end the present run cleanly):
stop.sig
Subject print toggle:
subject.sig
The function I wanted is "Next". NONMEM grinds a couple if iterations
more and then it terminates nicely as if the maximum number of function
evaluations had been reached.
I hope this info can help others too.
Thank you,
Paolo
On 2012/05/25 17:57, Bauer, Robert wrote:
> You should read the next several paragraphs in the guide, stating how you can
> alternatively control NONMEM if the control keys do not work in certain
> environments. This is done using the sig.exe program supplied with NONMEM.
>
>
> Robert J. Bauer, Ph.D.
> Vice President, Pharmacometrics, R&D
> ICON Development Solutions
> 7740 Milestone Parkway
> Suite 150
> Hanover, MD 21076
> Tel: (215) 616-6428
> Mob: (925) 286-0769
> Email: [email protected]
> Web: www.iconplc.com
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
> Behalf Of Fidler,Matt,FORT WORTH,R&D
> Sent: Friday, May 25, 2012 11:26 AM
> To: Paolo Denti; nmusers
> Subject: RE: SPAM: [NMusers] Interactive Control of NONMEM runs
>
> I believe Perl Speaks NONMEM runs
>
> -> Perl which calls
> -> NONMEM
>
> Therefore, I think all the control-codes from the console are sent to the
> Perl process, not the NONMEM process. Currently, the work-around is to run
> NONMEM directly.
>
> However, it is theoretically possible to look at the execute code and add a
> patch that monitors key behaviors(via Perl's ReadKey)
> http://search.cpan.org/dist/TermReadKey/ReadKey.pm You just need to figure
> out what the control characters are: http://www.perlmonks.org/?node_id=710306.
>
>
> Matt.
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
> Behalf Of Paolo Denti
> Sent: Wednesday, May 23, 2012 5:57 AM
> To: nmusers
> Subject: SPAM: [NMusers] Interactive Control of NONMEM runs
>
> Hello everyone,
> In the NONMEM 7.2 guide, I found this interesting section:
>> I.11 Interactive Control of a NONMEM batch Program
>> A NONMEM run can now be controlled to some extent from the console by
>> issuing certain
>> control characters.
>> Console iteration printing on/off during any Estimation analysis
>> (ctrl-J from console NONMEM,
>> Iterations button from PDx-POP).
>> Exit analysis at any time, which completes its output, and goes on to
>> next mode or estimation
>> method (ctrl-K from console, or Next button in PDx-POP).
>> Exit program gracefully at any time (ctrl-E or Stop button).
>> Monitor the progress of each individual during an estimation by
>> toggling ctrl-T. Wait 15
>> seconds or more to observe a subject's ID, and individual objective
>> function value. It is also
>> good to test that the problem did not hang if a console output had not
>> been observed for a long
>> while.
> It seems like there is a feature to interact with a NONMEM run and
> interrupt it but still get the results in a neat way, which would be
> very useful, especially with long runs.
>
> I've tried using CTRL+K, but I had no luck. I am using the execute
> script of Perl Speaks NONMEM to run my models, so maybe console commands
> (except CTRL+C) get filtered away. Any experience from anybody in the
> group? Is this feature working when running NONMEM directly, without a
> wrapper like PSN? Any workaround?
>
> Any help would be greatly appreciated.
>
> Thank you,
> Paolo
>
> --
> ------------------------------------------------
> Paolo Denti, PhD
> Junior Lecturer
> Division of Clinical Pharmacology
> Department of Medicine
> University of Cape Town
>
> K45 Old Main Building
> Groote Schuur Hospital
> Observatory, Cape Town
> 7925 South Africa
> phone: +27 21 404 7719
> fax: +27 21 448 1989
> email: [email protected]
> ------------------------------------------------
>
>
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