Hi Steve,
The 64-bit did indeed finish :). Forgive me for being unfamiliar with
the way that contrast_mgr works, but is there a reason why it needs
to keep information about all of the contrasts in memory at the same
time? Would it be possible to compute each contrast independent of
the others?
Cheers,
Dara
On Aug 30, 2006, at 12:05 AM, Steve Smith wrote:
> Hi - with such a huge number of EVs and contrasts it is possible
> that such a large amount of RAM is required, yes, which would
> explain why contrast_mgr cannot complete on a 32-bit system. You
> didn't say whether the 64-bit run did finish in the end? It may
> have been "idle" because of a large amount of swapping - you may
> want to increase your RAM and SWAP.
>
>
> Cheers, Steve.
>
>
>
> On 30 Aug 2006, at 07:58, Dara Ghahremani wrote:
>
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> In using Feat to estimate a large model (31 EVs, 37 contrasts), I
>> get an "uncaught exception!" error when running the contrast_mgr
>> command on the 32-bit version of 3.3.7, but not when using the 64-
>> bit version on the same computer (running SUSE Linux
>> 2.6.16.21-0.13-smp).
>>
>> We've noticed that the 64-bit version uses a lot of virtual memory
>> (5GBs) while the CPU is idle. here is the "top" output:
>>
>> PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
>> 21214 dara 18 0 5147m 2.7g 756 D 0 75.9
>> 0:34.53 contrast_mgr
>>
>> Is the allocation of 5GBs of RAM an artifact of the 64 bit code or
>> does it just reflect the size of the analysis?
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Dara
>>
>> ----------------------------------------------------------------
>> Dara Ghahremani, Ph.D.
>> Poldrack Lab
>> Psychology Department
>> Franz Hall, UCLA
>> Los Angeles, CA 90095-1563
>> ----------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> -----
> Stephen M. Smith, Professor of Biomedical Engineering
> Associate Director, Oxford University FMRIB Centre
>
> FMRIB, JR Hospital, Headington, Oxford OX3 9DU, UK
> +44 (0) 1865 222726 (fax 222717)
> [log in to unmask] http://www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/~steve
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