Changes for page 02. Installing PyNN - Linux
Last modified by adavison on 2022/10/04 13:53
From version 43.1
edited by annedevismes
on 2021/10/19 09:10
on 2021/10/19 09:10
Change comment:
There is no comment for this version
To version 41.1
edited by annedevismes
on 2021/10/19 08:54
on 2021/10/19 08:54
Change comment:
There is no comment for this version
Summary
-
Page properties (1 modified, 0 added, 0 removed)
Details
- Page properties
-
- Content
-
... ... @@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ 37 37 **Slide** listing learning objectives 38 38 ))) 39 39 40 -In this tutorial, I will guide you through setting up PyNN, together with the Brian 2,NEST,andNEURON, and simulators, on a Linux environment. Note that we have a dedicated version of this tutorial for other environments, such as Mac OS, Windows, and EBRAINS Jupyter Lab.40 +In this tutorial, I will guide you through setting up PyNN, together with the NEST, NEURON, and Brian 2 simulators, on a Linux environment. Note that we have a dedicated version of this tutorial for other environments, such as Mac OS, Windows, and EBRAINS Jupyter Lab. 41 41 42 42 (% class="box successmessage" %) 43 43 ((( ... ... @@ -123,7 +123,7 @@ 123 123 You might be required to run the above command every time you open a new terminal window. Check that the terminal command prompt indicates the name of your virtual environment to confirm that you have indeed activated it. 124 124 ))) 125 125 126 -Now that we have our project's virtual environment setup, we are ready to install PyNN and other simulators. In general, it is advisable to install the various simulators (especially NEURON and NEST) prior to installing PyNN, because PyNN will then auto compile NEURON's NMODL fles and NEST's extensions during installation. In this tutorial, we will adopt this approach and begin by installing the simulators. For the purposes of this tutorial, we will demonstrate the installation of Brian2, NE ST, and NEURONsimulators.126 +Now that we have our project's virtual environment setup, we are ready to install PyNN and other simulators. In general, it is advisable to install the various simulators (especially NEURON and NEST) prior to installing PyNN, because PyNN will then auto compile NEURON's NMODL fles and NEST's extensions during installation. In this tutorial, we will adopt this approach and begin by installing the simulators. For the purposes of this tutorial, we will demonstrate the installation of Brian2, NEURON, and NEST simulators. 127 127 128 128 (% class="box errormessage" %) 129 129 ((( ... ... @@ -168,7 +168,7 @@ 168 168 169 169 We will now move on to install the NEST simulator. Unlike Brian 2, NEST is not a Python package and therefore, it cannot be installed via the 'pip' command. 170 170 171 -At the time of creating this tutorial, the latest version of NEST is v3.1. This is currently supported by PyNN v0.10, and it is likely that other versions of NEST arepotentially incompatible with this version of PyNN. The installation is done by first adding the PPA repository for NEST and updating apt, followed by the installation of NEST itself.171 +At the time of creating this tutorial, the latest version of NEST is v3.1. This is currently supported by PyNN v0.10, and it is likely that other versions of NEST will potentially be incompatible with this version of PyNN. The installation is done by first adding the PPA repository for NEST and updating apt, followed by the installation of NEST itself. 172 172 173 173 (% class="box infomessage" %) 174 174 ((( ... ... @@ -186,7 +186,7 @@ 186 186 \\(% style="color:#000000" %)nest 187 187 ))) 188 188 189 -This will display the NEST banner, which mentions the version amongst other info. Here, as we can see, we have now installed NEST v3.1 on our system. Next,let'sverify that this is indeed accessible via Python.189 +This will display the NEST banner, which mentions the version amongst other info. Here, as we can see, we have now installed NEST v3.1 on our system. Let us next verify that this is indeed accessible via Python. 190 190 191 191 (% class="box infomessage" %) 192 192 (((