Dear Xin, Le lundi 22 février 2010 à 09:53 -0800, xin wei a écrit : > hi, Kevin and K.Elo: > thank you for the suggestion. Can you be more specific on these? (like how > exactly get into x-switch or man ssh). I am totally ignorant about linux and > SSH....:( Memory limitation forces me to switch from windows to Linux > cluster.....
\begin{SemiOffTopic} While you may not believe it now, that is a reason for rejoicing rather than grieving :-) Unix is a bit like sex : uncomprehensible and possibly frightening to the young/ignorant, extremely enjoyable and almost indispensable to the mature person ... and source of severe withdrawal syndrome if/when it becomes unavailable (some employers have strange ideas about the set of tools their employees are allowed to use) ! You've been warned... \end{SemiOffTopic} <AsbestosLongjohns> Your problem seems to have (almost) nothing to do with R *per* *se*, but with your ability to use it on a *remote* computer. This problem should be discussed with your *local* friendly help. To the best of my knowledge, neither the R help list nor its "members" are subsidized by psu.edu's sponsors (Penn State, right ?) to provide basic computer use tutoring to its students ; consequently, this list is *definitely* *NOT* the right place for this. But ... Nonwhistanding my own advice, I'll take the time to try to answer you, in the (futile?) hope that future beginning students, after *reading* the Posting Guide, following its advice and searching the list, will find this answer, thus avoiding overloading our reading bandwith *again*... That's also why I rephrased the "subject" of your post. </AsbestosLongjohns> I suppose that the simplest solution (namely fitting "enough" memory on your present Windows machine) is deemed impossible. The fun begins... Now, to work with R, you need only a *text* connection to your server. It is enough to use function creating graphs ... as files that you can later display on your Windows machine. That's what ssh does : terminal emulation (plus the ability to copy files back and forth, via scp (which you *will* need), plus a way to create so-called tunnels and redirections... But that's a horse on an entirely different color (an elephant, actually:)). If you want "real-time" graphics displayed by the R interpreter, you need, indeed, to use the "-X" switch to ssh. but that is *not* *enough* : your Windows machine *must* be fitted with software accepting commands emitted by the server's R interpreter and obeying them to actually create the image ; that is something called "an X server" (yes, server : in this case, your windows machine offers a "displaying service", that your R interpreter uses for displaying your graph, thus becoming a client of your server). Installing such a beast under Windows is (was ?) neither easy nor (usually) cheap. There *are* free (in both meanings of this word) X server implementations for Windows (most notoriously Cygwin/X and Xming), but, as far as I know, none of them is "easy" to install for the uninitiated : to do this, you must understand what you are doing, which implies (partially) mastering the X window system, which is ... complicated, to put it mildly. You'd better seek *informed* help around you on this one. I am aware of a handful of commercial implementations claiming to be "easy to install", but canot emit any opinion of them : the price tag is enough to give me pause... Another option (to be discussed with your server's manager) is to display on your Windows machine the image of a "virtual" X session started on the server. Such a solution, which has a couple of implementations (variants of VNC, variants of RDP) might be quite preferable if your network connection is slow/unreliable : X eats bandwidth like there's no tomorrow... I find VNC quite useful on the limited-bandwith connections that I use almost daily. But, may well be that the *simplest* solution would be to install Linux on your own machine (dual boot for a first time...) : X is the native windowing interface on this system, and won't have a bit of trouble serving your R client : it comes *already* configured to do so. Nowadays, installing Ubuntu is probably *simpler* than setting Xming| Cygwin/X up properly. Again, seek local help to discuss this option. The downside of this solution is that, while your machine runs Ubuntu, it won't run Windows, thus cutting you off the Windows software you already know, which might disrupt your workflow. The *upside* of this solution is *also* that, while your machine runs Ubuntu, it won't run Windows, thus cutting you off the Windows software you already know and giving you a big incentive to try alternative, quite possibly better, solutions. That form of accelerated weaning might be more or less traumatic but might *enormously* boost your understanding of your tools. After all, Unix has been compared to the Tao for a reason... :-). If your major has anything to do with mathematics, science or engineering|technologies, it would be smart to at least consider this seriously. In short, you should discuss your options (memory, X server, VNC/RDP, Linux) with your *local* friendly help. Again, the R help list is *definitely* *NOT* the right place for learning about the care and feeding of computers. HTH, Emmanuel Charpentier preparing to be shot at dawn by the list police... ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.