Auto-loading the
...
JuliaHPC
module
...
On Noctua, the julia
executable is only available after loading a Julia module (see Julia: Getting Started). To use the Julia VS Code extension within a VS Code SSH remote session you must make sure that a Julia module is automatically loaded when the Julia Language Server starts (i.e. when opening or creating a Julia file) or when you open the Julia REPL (i.e. Julia: Start REPL
). This can be done by pointing the extension to a wrapper script which loads the module and then starts julia.
We provide a default wrapper script under /opt/software/pc2/julia/julia_vscode
on Noctua 2 (/cm/shared/apps/pc2/julia/julia_vscode
on Noctua 1) and you should point the Julia VS Code extension to this wrapper by specifying the Julia: Executable Path
(julia.
Specifically, create a file julia_wrapper.sh
with the following contentexecutablePath
) setting.
Note that the default wrapper above automatically loads the latest version of the JuliaHPC
module and, correspondingly, the latest Julia version. If you want to use a specific version, you may point the Julia VS Code extension to version specific wrapper scripts that we provide in the root directory of the module (given by the environment variable $EBROOTJULIAHPC
after you’ve loaded the module). Example: /opt/software/pc2/EB-SW/software/JuliaHPC/1.8.2-foss-2022a-CUDA-11.7.0/julia_vscode
on Noctua 2.
Jupyter notebooks (in VSCode)
Open a terminal and ssh into Noctua 2.
Load the
Julia
orJuliaHPC
module that you want to use, e.g.module load lang/JuliaHPC/1.8.5-foss-2022a-CUDA-11.7.0
.Start
julia
and install theIJulia
package into the default, global environment (i.e.v1.8
in this example case).Afterwards, execute
using IJulia
and useIJulia.installkernel("Noctua 2 JuliaHPC")
.Finally, open VS Code, open a remote session on Noctua 2, and select your custom IJulia kernel when running Jupyter notebook files.
Note: If you plan to use your custom IJulia kernel in our centrally hosted JupyterHub service, use IJulia.installkernel("Noctua 2 JuliaHPC"; env=Dict("JULIA_DEPOT_PATH"=>ENV["JULIA_DEPOT_PATH"]))
.
Julia wrapper: manual approach (not recommended!)
An exemplary julia wrapper script on Noctua 2:
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
#!/bin/bash # ------------------------------------------------------------ export MODULEPATH=/etc/modulefiles:/usr/share/modulefiles || : source /usr/share/lmod/lmod/init/profile if [ -f "/opt/software/pc2/lmod/modules/DefaultModules.lua" ];then export MODULEPATH="$MODULEPATH:/opt/software/pc2/lmod/modules" export LMOD_SYSTEM_DEFAULT_MODULES="DefaultModules" else if [ -f "/usr/share/modulefiles/StdEnv.lua" ];then export LMOD_SYSTEM_DEFAULT_MODULES="StdEnv" fi fi module --initial_load restore # ------------------------------------------------------------ module load lang module load JuliaHPC # or module load Julia exec julia "${@}" |
Afterwards, make the wrapper executable (i.e. via chmod u+x julia_wrapper.sh
) and make the “Executable Path” "Executable Path" setting of the Julia extension (julia.executablePath
) point to this file. (Note: The first block makes the module
command available.)
Using a direnv
environment with the integrated Julia REPL
Modify the script above to the following:
...
This will load the direnv
environment when starting the integrated Julia REPL (and only the JuliaHPC
module when starting the Julia Language Server).
Noctua 1
You can same approach as above but the module related paths are different. Specifically, on Noctua 1 the module part should be
...