This is the command fsl that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
fsl - analysis tools for FMRI, MRI and DTI brain imaging
DESCRIPTION
FSL is a comprehensive toolkit for the analysis of medical brain imaging data. It
provides tools for data preprocessing, brain extraction, image registration as well as a
broad spectrum of statistical analyses. FSL provides an easy to use GUI.
FSL requires a number of environment variables to be set properly. To achieve this,
please source the config script from /etc/fsl/5.0/fsl.sh. One way to do this
automatically is to add a line containing
. /etc/fsl/5.0/fsl.sh
to the .bashrc file in a users home directory (or a corresponding file for other shells
than bash). You may need to create such a file first.
Alternatively, the Debian package installs symlinks for all FSL tools in /usr/bin that
take care of loading the appropriate configuration automatically. The symlink names are
prefixed with the corresponding FSL version to prevent filename conflicts and allow
multiple version to coexist on the same system. For example, the slicer command is
available as fsl5.0-slicer. Please note that for using FSL tools via these symlinks it is
not necessary to perform the setup procedure describe above. However, this convenience
feature is Debian-specific. Scripts that employ FSL commands and are intended to be shared
with others should rely on unprefixed command names and the FSL environment variable
setup.
The FSL user interface sometimes refers to an FSLDIR. On Debian systems this is
/usr/share/fsl/5.0 for FSL version 5.0.
FSL documentation and online help is provided by the fsl-5.0-doc package.
Questions regarding the usage of FSL or related theory can be posted on the FSL mailing
list (see http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/fsl.html).
PARALLELIZATION
FSL can be configured to submit jobs to a running Sun Gridengine (SGE). While not all
functionality implemented in FSL supports this kind of parallelization, the most demanding
processing tools (e.g. POSSUM and FDT) do.
FSL should be able to use SGE even if the SGE_ROOT environment variable is not set, as in
the case of the Debian package of SGE. To enable batch processing simply set
FSLPARALLEL=1
in the shell where FSL is running. This can be enabled permanently in
/etc/fsl/5.0/fsl.sh
or on a case by case basis.
Use fsl online using onworks.net services