Hi Jonathan, This is a good suggestion, but as you kind of guessed it's not completely trivial, particularly for the "best" matching choices where the results of multiple attempted matches have to be compared to each other in a thread-safe manner. It's certainly not impossible though. I will open a feature-request ticket for this enhancement. It may be more likely to get into Chimera 2 than Chimera 1 though, since I will have to make changes to the MatchMaker code as I port it to Chimera 2 anyway. --Eric On Sep 8, 2014, at 8:31 AM, Jonathan Sheehan <jonathan.sheehan@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi-
I'm a huge fan of Chimera, and I frequently need to superimpose a dozen or more comparative models onto a template protein using MatchMaker. At present, one cannot even rotate the view until all matches have completed, which can take a few minutes on a single core.
Based on old messages[1], it sounds like you might be "interested in allowing use of multiple cores for specific compute intensive tasks," and this seems to me like a good candidate. This use case involves many matches, which I think are completely independent of one another. Also, these models have identical length and sequence, so the runtimes should be fairly close to one another (although that wouldn't necessarily be true in the general case).
I'm sure that adding multi-threading to a tool is not trivial, but it seems as though this feature might have a high "bang for the buck" on today's multicore machines.
Thanks for considering it, -Jonathan
1. E.g. http://www.cgl.ucsf.edu/pipermail/chimera-users/2011-January/005901.html
-- Jonathan Sheehan, Ph.D. Computational Structural Biology Vanderbilt Univ. Ctr. for Struct. Biol. 5137 MRB3, 465 21st Avenue S. Nashville, TN 37232-8755 615-936-2516 _______________________________________________ Chimera-users mailing list Chimera-users@cgl.ucsf.edu http://plato.cgl.ucsf.edu/mailman/listinfo/chimera-users