CBCB Software Modules

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Starting in the Spring of 2015, communal CBCB Software has been installed using GNU Modules.

Common Modules

CBCB Software modules are already configured for interactive shells on Red Hat 7 machines - no additional setup is required. The module files are installed in the following location:

/cbcb/sw/RedHat-7-x86_64/common/modules/release/latest

To see see what modules are available:

$ module avail

To add a module to your environment, use module add:

$ module add samtools/0.1.19

Note that you can also specify the software name without the version:

$ module add samtools

Now samtools has been added to your environment:

$ which samtools
/cbcb/sw/RedHat-7-x86_64/common/local/samtools/0.1.19/bin/samtools

Personal Modules

We have created some scripts to assist you with installing software and modules to your personal directory in /cbcb/sw.. We recommend that you use these scripts because this will help us share installed software among other CBCB users.

Run this initialization script to set up your directory structure:

$ /cbcb/sw/RedHat-7-x86_64/common/scripts/init_cbcb_sw_user.sh

This will create a directory for you:

$ tree /cbcb/sw/RedHat-7-x86_64/users/<username>
/cbcb/sw/RedHat-7-x86_64/users/<username>
├── local
├── modules
│   └── <username>
│       └── env
├── module_template
├── README
├── scripts
│   ├── copy_module_template.sh
│   ├── init_install_vars.sh
│   └── install_package.sh
└── src
  • Use the src directory for storing and compiling source code.
  • Use the local directory as the installation prefix.
  • Use the modules directory to store your modulefiles.

See #Installing Software below.

To make use of your personal module file directory, add the following to your ~/.bashrc:

module use /cbcb/sw/RedHat-7-x86_64/users/<username>/modules


Installing Software

Use the install_package.sh script to automatically compile software which uses ./configure; make; make install. The advantage to using this install script is that it will:

  • use the standardized directory structure for personal software installation, and
  • automatically create a module file for the software in your modules directory!


For full details, read the README placed in your home directory. It's also available in the cbcb-sw Gitlab repository.


Setup for non-interactive shells

Modules are already configured for interactive shells, but to use modules with non-interactive shells, add the following to your ~/.bashrc:

. /usr/share/Modules/init/bash
. /etc/profile.d/ummodules.sh

For more information, see the UMIACS wiki.