Hi Morten,

Yes, this is a disadvantage of the way mr_rosetta runs for now.  It tries everything, then picks the best.  I can think of two options:

1. Try out phenix.MRage which is optimized to try many things in parallel in MR.  Then take the best one and run mr_rosetta with it.

2. Run separate mr_rosetta jobs for each search model, and when you see one that is working, trash the others.

All the best,
Tom T

On Jul 9, 2013, at 10:41 AM, Morten Grøftehauge wrote:

Dear Phenixbb,

I was wondering if there was any way of getting Rosetta to give up easily and move on to another search model?
Say I have 20 or more equally awful search models. I think there's a possibility that one of them will knock it out of the park (i.e. TFZ > 8). But even if I have Phaser set to fast search I will end up with an exhaustive search because the search models are so bad.

      fast_search_mode= True Run phaser with selection_criteria_rot_value and
                        then if no obvious solution, repeat with cutoff
                        lowered by search_down_percent
      search_down_percent= 25 Used if fast_search_mode=True. Run phaser with
                           selection_criteria_rot_value and then if no obvious
                           solution, repeat with cutoff lowered by search_down_percent 

If I set search_down_percent to 75 does this mean that Phaser will give up easily and move on to the next model? Is this a terrible strategy CPU-time-wise?
I am of course aware that search_down_percent is much more likely to give me the right solution for a given model but in this case there are just so many possible search models.

Cheers,
Morten


--
Morten K Grøftehauge, PhD 
Pohl Group
Durham University
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