Forum Coordinators: Kalypso
Carrara F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 05 6:06 am)
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Use something like VMWare or VirtualPC. Carrara will only see one processor, but you can suspend the virtual machine at will and save it to disk. After that you just shut down your host OS. Power comes on, you boot up, start VMWare and it will pick up where you left off. For something like rendering, VMWare will actually run pretty fast, my test showed it at nearly 100% native speed when just rendering. Good luck, Eric Winemiller Digital Carvers Guild 3D plug-ins for Carrara http://digitalcarversguild.com
Eric Winemiller
Digital Carvers Guild
Carrara and LightWave
plug-ins
I am quite sure if you use "batch render" you could resume the render . I had a situation were my power went out and I could resume my render once I restarted my machine. If you were running on battery backup then you could pause the render, shut off your machine ,wait for the power to come back ,then start up machine and carrara and press "resume". Regards Mike
In the Render Room instead of choosing RENDER like you normaly do. (Hitting Render button on bottom left of screen.) Hit the BATCH QUEUE Tab (Bottom Left of screen). From there look to the right where it says ADD (hit this button)and browse through your files to find the file you wish to render. Set up the scence (Rendering Parts) as normal and then hit the LAUNCH button. If the power goes out simply hit the PAUSE button and then shut down. Carrara will save up to the latest square it was working on or in animation it will save up to the latest rendered image in the sequence. This way there will be no worries about losing your image.
The batch will save what you want if you tell it too. You can set it up in the original file or you can change all the render settings including where the final product will be saved when you setup a file in the batch processor. If you modify the render settings in the batch processor, none of the original render settings in the file will get changed. The batched render job will render with all the new settings you apply for batch only which would include what and where the final render is to be stored. It's pretty spiff. -Kix
-Kix
Outstanding thread. Thanks to everyone! gigashadow: I knew about the batch render....I suppose the term "batch" through me off the path, considering I am not rendering a "batch" of graphics. I was rendering one piece, hence not investigating an option labeled for another event(s). But suffice it to say, I've given it a go, and although the lights haven't gone out to prove the point, it obviously does solve my personal puzzle. 8)
I'd also suggest if you are doing an animation to batch render but do it in sequence bitmaps( or whatever format you want) for an animation. For one it renders faster, because its rendering a single frame, then starting over basically. Plus if you need to stop, and things get screwy (power goes off, you spill soda on your keyboard) you can always start from the last frame rendered without having to worry if its been saved. Brian Hinton
Just as a final note, Most of my big renders are done in batch while I'm asleep. I do all the development with render settings in "test" mode and then I set it up in batch mode, jack up the settings and go to bed. That way I when I open the file, the "test" settings are still saved so my working environment is always available. The big final job doesn't go any faster if I'm sitting around watching so I do something else. -Kix
-Kix
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Okay, here's the scenerio. I'm rendering some rather large pieces for music packaging. I was 20 hours into it, and as usual our power went out, my battery backup can only go so long on this Dual Athlon, and I lost the render. Is there a way to setup a render so that if I lost power I can pause it, save the progress and power down within my 20 minute window? Or is there a setup where I can ensure if I'm not around, and Florida Progressive fails I'm not SOL? Damn salt air. Any thoughts would be appreciated.