Turns out the problem was trying to run the 32-bit version of chimera on a system where only the 64-bit OpenGL setup was completely installed.
Switching to the 64-bit version of chimera solved the problem.
-- Greg
The glxinfo output looks good. I'll work with you off the mailing list on this.
-- Greg
On 2/28/2017 11:07 PM, Hui Shi wrote:
HuiHi Greg,Thanks again for your reply! I'm attaching a file of the glxinfo result here, named glxinfo_output.
On Tue, Feb 28, 2017 at 10:45 PM, Greg Couch <gregc@cgl.ucsf.edu> wrote:
I am interested in the whole output. Not all of it is necessary -- I'm mostly interested in the lines that start with OpenGL and in the table at the end that describes the framebuffer configurations that are supported. It's easier to just send the whole thing.
-- Greg
On 2/28/2017 6:37 PM, Hui Shi wrote:
HuiDo you need the rest of the result? It is a really long one. I feel like it is better to keep it short in the mailing list.Hi Greg,Thank you for you reply!
I have glx-utils-8.2.0-3.el7.x86_64 installed. And the glxinfo command gave a very long list, for the first few lines, it gave this:
name of display: :0
display: :0 screen: 0
direct rendering: Yes
server glx vendor string: NVIDIA Corporation
server glx version string: 1.4
On Tue, Feb 28, 2017 at 6:26 PM, Greg Couch <gregc@cgl.ucsf.edu> wrote:
Most reported chimera bugs are due to faulty graphics drivers. So that is a good starting point.
The first thing to try is to confirm that the graphics driver is installed properly. If you don't have the glxinfo program installed yet, install the glx-utils package. Then run glxinfo and send me the output. If it fails to run, then you need to fix the graphics driver installation. It it succeeds, then I'll have something to go by.
HTH,
Greg
On 2/28/2017 4:55 PM, Hui Shi wrote:
______________________________Hi there,
Sorry for bothering you guys! I’m wondering if someone can help me to resolve the problem I have here.
I’ve recently installed chimera-1.11.2 under CentOS 7 system. And I have a Nvidia GeForce TURBO-GTX1080 graphic card on my computer with NVIDIA driver Version 375.39 installed.
But when I run issue the chimera command thought the terminal, an error message “Segmentation fault (core dumped)” was thrown out. I googled this problem and found in a previous message of chimera-users that this should be a problem of driver issue. Also, on the “benchmarks” link of chimera, GeForce GTX 1080 has been tested under Windows with NVIDIA 368.81 driver version.
I could not find this driver version for 64-bit Linux system. Since I have already installed the newer driver version (375.39), I would think this should work.
Any suggestions on how to deal with problem? Thanks a lot in advance!
Hui
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--
--------Sincerely,Hui
--
--------Sincerely,Hui
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