Thanks for answers. It is a symbolic program. I will try to install
maxima in a home dir.
> Is this a symbolic or a numerical program?
>
> If numerical, have you added all suitable modedeclare's and compiled
> it? That will give 10-100x speedup. If that is still not fast enough,
> you can output it as Fortran code using the fortran or f90 commands
> and run the resulting program on your own machine or on a server.
>
> If it is a symbolic program, it's not clear what a standalone
> executable is -- you'll need garbage collection, simplification, etc.
> I don't believe there is any straightforward way to build Maxima with
> just some of its standard modules. Of course, you could always
> install Maxima on the server.
>
> Though high-end servers do run code faster than the cheapest laptops,
> the difference these days is not that huge, maybe 10x.
>
> -s
>
> On Mon, Jul 9, 2012 at 8:53 AM, David Billinghurst <dbmaxima at gmail.com
> <mailto:dbmaxima at gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> On 9/07/2012 5:44 PM, Dmitry Shkirmanov wrote:
>
> Hello, list. I have a maxima program that needs a lot of time
> to perform the calculations. It our organization there is
> access to fast corporative server, that can perform this
> calculations in a appropriate time. This server have a linux
> operating system, but does not have maxima installed. So
> question is: is it possible to compile maxima program and
> create standalone executable, that does not need maxima
> installed to run?
>
>
> yes and no. Some lisps can compile a maxima executable and gcl
> does this by default. However, the executable almost certainly
> needs access to additional files in the installation.
>
> It is possible to install maxima into a non-system directory on
> the server, for example under your home directory. This may be an
> option for you.
>
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