While transferring data over a web application such as Open OnDemand, or over a client such as Cyberduck are easy-to-use, they are difficult to automate within a compute job. However, in some use cases, people may want to transfer data, run some computation on that data, transfer it back and so on. These type of tasks can be accomplished using the command line interface (CLI) on MedicineBow. There are many CLI options to use including the previously discussed Globus CLI, scp, SFTP, and rsync which will all work on MedicineBow, but in this module we will only discuss rclone due to it’s ability to work with desktops, HPC, and cloud storage systems as well as it’s ability to be multi-threaded to facilitate faster transfers.
Headers and Sections
Each sections should start with a header of ‘Heading 1’. This helps to make sure that the Table of Contents operates like an agenda. Also it helps when we “advance a slide” it jumps to the top of the section. Each section should be limited in length to no more than 14 lines of straight text to ensure that when presenting it can be viewed as a “Slide”.
This is 14 lines A.K.A the End.
Code Examples
Two Column Tables are nice ways to separate content/ Background info along with a code example on the same “Slide”. Please notice the table width. This should stop scroll bars from appearing
| Please use the "code snippet" in the + button when creating code examples. Also please do not go past the width of the table. This is to prevent scroll bars appearing This is the Max number of code lines to show on an example |
Straight Code - No context
Limit to 16 lines in the example. This is the end
Same Thing With Images
Two Column Tables are nice ways to separate content/ Background info along with an image example on the same “Slide”. Please notice the table width. This should stop scroll bars from appearing
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Alternatively No Table
Finally The End
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