Hi Nitish,

In my case, changing the gcc from 4.8.1 to a higher version also stopped attempts by the compiler to connect. You could try this as an easy fix before going through the makefiles. Good luck!


On Tue, Oct 30, 2018 at 10:04 AM Nitish Arya <nitiesharya@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear Amitvikram,

Thank you for your response. I already disabled the third party build options and kept the tarballs of all the dependencies in the ThirdParty folder as you have mentioned. The problem is that the installer tries to connect to the internet and I think my system curl is not allowing it; at that point, the installation crashes down. I am manually disabling the connect options from all the individual makefiles. I have made through some part of the installation and I hope I will get it done soon. Thank you for your support.


Sincerely,
Nitish

On Tue, Oct 30, 2018 at 7:09 PM Amitvikram Dutta <amitvdutta23@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Nitish,
Did you turn off the BUILD_THIRDPARTY options on the ccmake screen?
I had a similar problem. I placed a ThirdParty folder containing the tarballs of all the thirdparty dependencies in the NEKTAR_SRC directory (which contains the build dir) and turned off the options that I mentioned above. That worked for me.

Sincerely,

On Tue, Oct 30, 2018 at 9:23 AM Amitvikram Dutta <amitvikram.dutta@uwaterloo.ca> wrote:
 

From: nektar-users-bounces@imperial.ac.ukOn Behalf OfNitish Arya
Sent: October 30, 2018 8:21:04 AM (UTC-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)
To: nektar-users@imperial.ac.uk
Subject: [Nektar-users] Nektar++ installation in a cluster

Hello.
 
I am planning to use APE solver included in the nektar framework. I have to configure the MPI using Intel MPI which is available in the cluster, while dependencies are installed using an internet connection. The internet connection is only available at the head node in which I am unable to invoke the Intel MPI. So it means that I have to compile the dependencies separately. I tried compiling the ThirdParty dependencies separately but when I compiled Nektar, it was again searching for the dependencies via http or https ( both of the protocols are also not working ).

Is there any way I can install Nektar without the installer searching for the dependencies in the internet.


Sincerely,
Nitish
--

Amitvikram Dutta

Graduate Research Assistant

Fluid Mechanics Research Lab

Multi-Physics Interaction Lab

University of Waterloo

_______________________________________________
--

Amitvikram Dutta

Graduate Research Assistant

Fluid Mechanics Research Lab

Multi-Physics Interaction Lab

University of Waterloo