Virtual desktops

We provide a range of desktops delivered to your web browser using "virtual desktop infrastructure" (VDI). Choose from a range of pre-configured virtual desktop machines (VMs) ready-built with data science toolkits for a variety of uses.

Target users for this service are data scientists and engineers looking for cloud-based virtual machines, singly or in small clusters, with optional GPU support.

Availability

This service is currently available for University of Edinburgh researchers. You will need to connect from the University network (EdLAN or VPN) to access this service.

Please use the EIDF Application Portal to request access. You can find help and guidance on the process under "Service Access" in the technical documentation hosted on GitHub.

EIDF Application Portal link.

EIDF Portal documentation [external].

VM profiles

EIDF VMs come in a range of sizes and “profiles” which will expand over time. Each profile has a recommended minimum size, depending on the installed software. For the best range of data science tools we recommend Ubuntu Linux version 20.04 as a starting point. 

EIDF desktop services: VM profiles
VM Profile Pre-installed software Min. vCPUs Min. RAM (GB)
Plain Base operating system only. 1 4
Data Science Python and R Data Science Workstation providing Anaconda Python, JupyterLab, R and R Studio and GNU Development Tools 2 4
GIS Python and R Data Science GIS Workstation providing GIS Software, PostgreSQL, R and RStudio, Anaconda Python, R enabled in Juypter Notebook and GNU Development Tools 2 8

VM sizes

We offer VM allocations in a range of sizes for virtual CPU count, RAM and disk space. Our smallest is 1 vCPU and 4GB RAM; the largest is 64 vCPUs and 896GB RAM. You can if you wish split the vCPU/RAM allocation we give you across more than one VM: you could divide a 32 vCPU allocation into 4 x 8 vCPU machines if that was a better fit for your application needs, for instance. You can manage this yourself through the EIDF Portal.

We will ask you to justify your resource requests as part of the application process, particularly for very large VM allocations. Users needing very large memory or CPU counts may find the Ultra2 large memory service is a better option (cf. Links).

User disk storage

VMs come with a default disk size of up to 50GB, but you can request more. We will ask you to justify your resource requests for disk space in the multi-terabyte ranges, but allocations up to several hundred TB fall within the standard service access model.

Technical documentation

More detailed documentation for power users and developers.

Links

Ultra2 large memory service