affy & problems with not enough avaliable memory
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@ettinger-nicholas-1549
Last seen 10.2 years ago
Hello all! I have 16 Affy Hg-U133-plus-2 CEL files that I am trying to analyze. I am having difficulties generating expression data because of memory problems. I am working on a Dell desktop running WinXP. I can generate expression values if I use "RMA" but if I try MAS5 or GCRMA or LiWong instead then I consistently get an error message with "Cannot allocate vector of size 169362 Kb." To try to increase available memory I have already done two things: (a) I right-clicked on the R icon and changed the slot marked 'Target' to read ""C:\Program Files\R\R-2.2.0\bin\Rgui.exe" --sdi --max-mem-size=2000M" and (b) I have changed the virtual memory so that the Total Paging File size is 2000MB. Despite these efforts, I still get problems with not enough memory. What can I do? Do I have to normalize all 16 arrays at once? Is it still valid to do them piecemeal? My gut says no. This is getting frustrating.....i don't really have access to a bigger computer that I know of. Suggestions would be very, very welcome!!! Thank you. ---Nick library(webbioc) ##load the relevant packages library(siggenes) library(hgu133plus2) library(annotate) TotalData <- ReadAffy() eset_mas5 <- mas5(TotalData)
affy gcrma affy gcrma • 1.4k views
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Seth Falcon ★ 7.4k
@seth-falcon-992
Last seen 10.2 years ago
Hi Nick, I'm having some deja vu: https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/bioconductor/2006-January/011471.html On 15 Jan 2006, nicholas-ettinger at uiowa.edu wrote: > I have 16 Affy Hg-U133-plus-2 CEL files that I am trying to analyze. > I am having difficulties generating expression data because of > memory problems. I am working on a Dell desktop running WinXP. How much RAM is installed on your system? As Jim previously commented, purchasing more RAM may be the easiest way to get going. > What can I do? Do I have to normalize all 16 arrays at once? Is it > still valid to do them piecemeal? My gut says no. The currently available procedures are intended to normalize a set of arrays all at once. Trust your gut. We have in the works a normalization routine that will work in limited memory environments, but it isn't available yet. + seth
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Kort, Eric ▴ 220
@kort-eric-1483
Last seen 6.7 years ago
United States
A few comments, in no particular order: 1. I follow the recommendations of Choe et al in their article "Preferred analysis methods for Affymetrix GeneChips revealed by a wholly defined control dataset", EXCEPT that I use mas5 instead of RMA specifically because this eliminates the need to normalize all arrays at once. 2. I do my normalization on a 64 bit Linux server so I can allocate > 4GB of memory to the task (4GB being the absolute ceiling of addressable memory using 32bit addresses). As mentioned in another thread, this is a little pricey, although I would say the 64GB RAM recommendation of that thread is excessive (I can do 200 hgu133plus2 chips with 16GB of RAM without much difficulty). Then again, more is more where RAM is concerned. 3. However, if I didn't have a 64 bit machine at my institution, there are various 64 bit machines at institutions near me that I could have used for this sort of periodic normalization. It seems to me that there must be such machines available to many/most/nearly all of us just waiting to be identified. 4. Finally, in concert with Dr. Gentleman's data centralization efforts which he described in an earlier post (see http://www.sgdi.org), it occurs to me that it would be incredibly useful if there was some sort of shared computing resources available to the BioC community. I know our 64bit machine is underutilized 95% of the time, and I imagine this is the case for many of these systems. I envision a 64bit version of "Folding At Home"..."Normalizing at Home"? Or are these just fantastical musings of an idle dreamer? -Eric -----Original Message----- From: bioconductor-bounces@stat.math.ethz.ch on behalf of Seth Falcon Sent: Mon 1/16/2006 7:16 PM To: bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch Subject: Re: [BioC] affy & problems with not enough avaliable memory Hi Nick, I'm having some deja vu: https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/bioconductor/2006-January/011471.html On 15 Jan 2006, nicholas-ettinger at uiowa.edu wrote: > I have 16 Affy Hg-U133-plus-2 CEL files that I am trying to analyze. > I am having difficulties generating expression data because of > memory problems. I am working on a Dell desktop running WinXP. How much RAM is installed on your system? As Jim previously commented, purchasing more RAM may be the easiest way to get going. > What can I do? Do I have to normalize all 16 arrays at once? Is it > still valid to do them piecemeal? My gut says no. The currently available procedures are intended to normalize a set of arrays all at once. Trust your gut. We have in the works a normalization routine that will work in limited memory environments, but it isn't available yet. + seth _______________________________________________ Bioconductor mailing list Bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor This email message, including any attachments, is for the so...{{dropped}}
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Benjamin Otto ▴ 830
@benjamin-otto-1519
Last seen 10.2 years ago
Hi Nick, is this a new call or did I just recieve some delated second copy of your first Thread? If it is indeed a new mail, could you maybe summarize which of the previous suggestions worked with you and which not? Do you still have the problems with GCRMA or is it still MAS5 and LiWong? In addition: * What does the command "memory.limit()" spit out after increasing the max memory size to 2000kb? * Did you try justRMA, justGCRMA and justMas()? regards, Benjamin > -----Original Message----- > From: bioconductor-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch > [mailto:bioconductor-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch]On Behalf Of Ettinger, > Nicholas > Sent: 15 January 2006 20:47 > To: bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch > Subject: [BioC] affy & problems with not enough avaliable memory > > > Hello all! > > I have 16 Affy Hg-U133-plus-2 CEL files that I am trying to analyze. I > am having difficulties generating expression data because of memory > problems. I am working on a Dell desktop running WinXP. I can generate > expression values if I use "RMA" but if I try MAS5 or GCRMA or LiWong > instead then I consistently get an error message with "Cannot allocate > vector of size 169362 Kb." To try to increase available memory I have > already done two things: (a) I right-clicked on the R icon and changed > the slot marked 'Target' to read ""C:\Program > Files\R\R-2.2.0\bin\Rgui.exe" --sdi --max-mem-size=2000M" and (b) I > have changed the virtual memory so that the Total Paging File size is > 2000MB. > > Despite these efforts, I still get problems with not enough memory. > > What can I do? Do I have to normalize all 16 arrays at once? Is it > still valid to do them piecemeal? My gut says no. This is getting > frustrating.....i don't really have access to a bigger computer that I > know of. > > Suggestions would be very, very welcome!!! > > Thank you. > ---Nick > > library(webbioc) ##load the relevant packages > library(siggenes) > library(hgu133plus2) > library(annotate) > > TotalData <- ReadAffy() > eset_mas5 <- mas5(TotalData) > > _______________________________________________ > Bioconductor mailing list > Bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor >
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@henrik-bengtsson-4333
Last seen 6 months ago
United States
Kort, Eric wrote: > A few comments, in no particular order: > > 1. I follow the recommendations of Choe et al in their article "Preferred analysis methods for Affymetrix GeneChips revealed by a wholly defined control dataset", EXCEPT that I use mas5 instead of RMA specifically because this eliminates the need to normalize all arrays at once. FYI: (Exact) quantile normalization can be done so that it only requires *two* arrays to be kept in memory at the same time. This can be done using a two-pass approach, which I believe is what Ben Bolstad have in RMAexpress and others suggest too. It is just a matter of time before it is available in R too. With R packages such as 'affxparser', reading probe signal from CEL files takes fractions of a second, so there is no need to store all probe-level data in memory just because we think it is much faster; it's not. Cheers Henrik > 2. I do my normalization on a 64 bit Linux server so I can allocate > 4GB of memory to the task (4GB being the absolute ceiling of addressable memory using 32bit addresses). As mentioned in another thread, this is a little pricey, although I would say the 64GB RAM recommendation of that thread is excessive (I can do 200 hgu133plus2 chips with 16GB of RAM without much difficulty). Then again, more is more where RAM is concerned. > > 3. However, if I didn't have a 64 bit machine at my institution, there are various 64 bit machines at institutions near me that I could have used for this sort of periodic normalization. It seems to me that there must be such machines available to many/most/nearly all of us just waiting to be identified. > > 4. Finally, in concert with Dr. Gentleman's data centralization efforts which he described in an earlier post (see http://www.sgdi.org), it occurs to me that it would be incredibly useful if there was some sort of shared computing resources available to the BioC community. I know our 64bit machine is underutilized 95% of the time, and I imagine this is the case for many of these systems. I envision a 64bit version of "Folding At Home"..."Normalizing at Home"? Or are these just fantastical musings of an idle dreamer? > > -Eric > > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: bioconductor-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch on behalf of Seth Falcon > Sent: Mon 1/16/2006 7:16 PM > To: bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch > Subject: Re: [BioC] affy & problems with not enough avaliable memory > > Hi Nick, > > I'm having some deja vu: > https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/bioconductor/2006-January/011471.html > > > On 15 Jan 2006, nicholas-ettinger at uiowa.edu wrote: > >>I have 16 Affy Hg-U133-plus-2 CEL files that I am trying to analyze. >>I am having difficulties generating expression data because of >>memory problems. I am working on a Dell desktop running WinXP. > > > How much RAM is installed on your system? As Jim previously > commented, purchasing more RAM may be the easiest way to get going. > > >>What can I do? Do I have to normalize all 16 arrays at once? Is it >>still valid to do them piecemeal? My gut says no. > > > The currently available procedures are intended to normalize a set of > arrays all at once. Trust your gut. > > We have in the works a normalization routine that will work in limited > memory environments, but it isn't available yet. > > + seth > > _______________________________________________ > Bioconductor mailing list > Bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor > > This email message, including any attachments, is for the so...{{dropped}} > > _______________________________________________ > Bioconductor mailing list > Bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor
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