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I obtained was passed down to me by email from various experts whom I had to contact regularly in order
to get the necessary help to run a scan. The following should provide a complete set of notes which I used in order to run a scan (which scan for now does not matter, how the various scans differ will
be described in another note) on a ROD in SR1. If something is missing feel free to consult me, or
suggest the documentation be updated. This original note was written in December 2008/January 2009 and, as
such, by the time you are reading this, things may have changed/simplified/moved-on.

What you will need and how to get it

  • CERN (nice/afs) account: I assume if you are reading this you probably have one already. If not

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  • check with your group leader or a group member in order to follow the procedures of obtaining the account.
  • SR1 account: In order to do this the only way I know of is to send a private

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  • email to two individuals, paolo.morettini@cern.ch and nicoletta.garelli@cern.ch. They will

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  • ensure you have an account setup and are able to use it. The username and password should be the same

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  • as for your nice account.
  • Point 1 account: Not entirely necessary for what we will cover in this note but quite

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  • important to have taken care of if you will be doing other things such as shifts etc. This is done via EDH (like applying for the CERN GSM phone and booking training etc is done).
  • Computer with X11 forwarding enabled.

Introduction

I will provide here only those details and commands to run a scan. There may be minimal detail
of what is actually happening when you execute the commands but for the most part I leave such
description for later tutorials. The important lessons to learn from this are the tools required to
perform a given scan, which commands to execute and how/where to execute them. The aim is to
provide enough detail such that practically any user could perform these scans without expert supervision.                                                                                                                                   Clearly some level of expertise is required to interpret the results of the scan and perform some higher level procedures.

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  The instruction of using FSM in ToothPix is here:
  https://twiki.cern.ch/twiki/bin/view/Atlas/ToothpixWiki-Image Removed>ToothPix Manual
 
  The ToothPix FSM is the user interface for turning on and off the detector. The link above explains how to turn on and off ToothPix and perform
  actions therein. Additional expert information is provided on this page. For the most part, performing scans and tests one will not need to turn on
  and off the detector, so it is more than likely that this information will not be required but it is good to be familiar with it all.

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Crate 1
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