Typical Observing Modes
The following are a reiteration of the standard observing modes that
will usually be used. Much of this is a repeat of the previous pages.
Fringe Test
Fringe tests will be done during both a specially scheduled
slot 1-2 hours before an normal experiment, and during normal
tapes and disk based experiments. The VSIC should be connected to the
S2 C2a output using the BG2 adapter (unless, of course, the fringe test
is for a disk based recording experiment). Disk capacity is generally
not enough to retain the data for an entire 12 hour experiment, and
certainly not enough for saving the data from a full VLBI session. The
disks should be cleaned regularly. Its is suggested that all data
recorded only for fringe testing is saved into a directory
specifically ear-marked for fringe testing to reduce the chance of
deleting data from disk based experiments and making it easier to clean
up old data. Some of the recorders have multiple RAID sets. It may be
worth using one disk for all fringe tests and the other for experiments
for which the data needs to be saved. It is recommenced that a file
name prefix consisting of the experiment code and station code is
always used (e.g. -o vt131ax_Ho). The recorder should be started at the
start of the scheduled experiment by the observers at the telescope
and run continuously for the entire
experiment unless otherwise instructed. To preserve disk space
compressed recording should always be used for parallel S2 recording
(the maximum data rate
coming through the S2 is 128 Mbps, half the normal data rate of the
VSIB). Use compress mode -c ooxx for S2 "x" modes and mode -c oxox for
"a" modes. The actual fringe testing will be run remotely. Typically
usage would be:
>
cd /data/disk1
> mkdir Fringe_May05
> cd Fringe_May05
> vsib_record -t 12h -c ooxx -o v131ax_Ho
Please to not delete all fringe test data immediately at the end of
an experiment. If is often useful to run a fringe test up to a couple
of hours after the end of an experiment. The perl program diskclean.pl
(part of the RtFC package) is a useful way of stopping the disks
filling up to much. Calculate how long fringe test data can be cached
based
on the available disk space (128 Mbps = 16 MB/sec, so for example if
200 GB of diskspace is available you can store 200000/16 seconds or 3.5
hours). Diskclean.pl can then be told to delete files older than this
age. This is the advantage of running all fringe tests from the same
directory. Be sure to never record disk based experiments into the same
directory as they will be deleted! Typical usage would be:
>
cd /data/internal/Fringe_May05
> diskclean.pl -age 4h
Disk recording
Most disk recordings will require the VSIC to be connected directly to
the DAS S2 output to allow 256 Mbps recording rates. If for some reason
the experiment does requires lower data rates, it may be possible to
record the data through the S2. Read the observers wiki for specific
instructions in this case. These recording should be stored in a
directory created specifically for this experiment, just using the
experiment name is recommended. The file prefix should include the
experiment name and telescope code (e.g. -o vt01i1_Pa). Typical useage
would be:
>
cd /data/removable
> mkdir vt01i1
> cd vt01i1
> vsib_record -t 5h -o
vt01i1_Cd