|
Back
Midas
Rome
Roody
Rootana
|
Rome Analyzer Framework |
Not logged in |
|
|
23 Mar 2016, Farrukh Azfar, Info, ROME in online mode using an intermediary machine
|
27 Mar 2016, Ryu Sawada, Info, ROME in online mode using an intermediary machine
|
30 Mar 2016, Farrukh Azfar, Info, ROME in online mode using an intermediary machine
|
31 Mar 2016, Ryu Sawada, Info, ROME in online mode using an intermediary machine
|
04 Apr 2016, Wes Gohn, Info, ROME in online mode using an intermediary machine
|
05 Apr 2016, Ryu Sawada, Info, ROME in online mode using an intermediary machine
|
|
Message ID: 194
Entry time: 05 Apr 2016
In reply to: 193
|
Author: |
Ryu Sawada |
Topic: |
Info |
Subject: |
ROME in online mode using an intermediary machine |
|
|
Dear Wes,
-R is used for starting an interactive session connected to a server.
If you want to see Argus windows, please change <ProgramMode> to 3 (or use "-p 3" comman-line option).
Ryu
Wes Gohn wrote: |
Hi Ryu, here is the method we've followed. I tried to simplify things by connecting to the server directly, so we can skip the port tunnelling. On the server side, in the romeConfig.xml, I set
<SocketServer>
<Active>true</Active>
<PortNumber>9091</PortNumber>
</SocketServer>
I then started rome in batch mode
./midanalyzer.exe -i romeConfig.xml -b
It connects to a running experiment as expected, and is processing data.
On the client machine, I set in romeConfig.xml:
<SocketClient>
<Host>myhost</Host>
<Port>9091</Port>
</SocketClient>
I then start rome using the -R option:
./midanalyzer.exe -R myhost:9091
*****************************************
* *
* MIDAnalyzer *
* *
* generated by the ROME Environment *
* Version 3.2.6 *
* *
*****************************************
Remote session to myhost:9091
midanalyzer [0]
At which point it does establish the socket connection to the server side, but it just sits there (I can establish this because if I run commands at the prompt, I see some errors pop up on my server terminal). How do I open my Argus browser on the client side to see the plots?
Or is there something we're doing that is fundamentally wrong?
Thanks,
Wes |
|