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Installing Amber on Fedora

You will find below generic recommendations for installing Amber24 as well as specific instructions tailored for your Fedora version.

Generic installation instructions

About cmake:

Since Amber20, a new installation mechanism is provided that makes use of cmake. A decent version of cmake is needed, therefore it is highly recommended to download and install the cmake executable from the cmake.org website.

About Python:

Many programs within Amber requires a decent version of Python. When configuring Amber, the run_cmake script will check your installation and will most probably recommend to download and install a compatible Python from Continuum IO (via miniconda). It is highly recommended to follow this suggestion and let the run_cmake script install Python inside the Amber tree.

Building with cmake

We highly recommend that you refer to Chapter 2 of the Amber 2024 Reference Manual for detailed instructions on how to install Amber24.

Since Amber20, the build system has move to cmake. A script called run_cmake is available in the amber24_src/build directory. For most users, the options chosen in this script should be OK.

The installation of Amber is performed in two steps: cmake configuration, then building and install:

cd amber24_src/build
# optional: edit the run_cmake script to make any needed changes;
# most users should not need to do this
./run_cmake
# Next, build and install the code:
make install

Fedora 30 & 31

The following command should enable the compilation of Amber on Fedora systems:

dnf -y install tcsh make \
               gcc gcc-gfortran gcc-c++ \
               which flex bison patch bc \
               libXt-devel libXext-devel \
               perl util-linux wget bzip2 \
               bzip2-devel zlib-devel

If you want to install Amber in parallel, you can use OpenMPI through:

dnf -y install openmpi openmpi-devel environment-modules

Then:

module load mpi/openmpi-x86_64

"How's that for maxed out?"

Last modified: May 1, 2024