/oofem

OOFEM is free finite element code with object oriented architecture for solving mechanical, transport, fluid and multiphysics problems.

Primary LanguageC

OOFEM.org

OOFEM is parallel, object-oriented finite element code for solving mechanical, transport and fluid mechanics problems. Build Status

Copyright

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

Copyright (C) 1993 - 2017 Borek Patzak

Getting Started

What is here

The source directory tree holds source code to the OOFEM package.

  OOFEM_TOP_DIR
  |
  |-- doc - contains the "User's guide", sources to generate "Reference manual", 
  |         documents describing the input file specifications, element and
  |         material libraries, and other useful documents. 
  |
  |-- src - source files of all oofem modules
  |   |
  |   |-- oofemlib - sources of the core part of OOFEM, the OOFEMlib module.
  |   |
  |   |-- sm       - sources of structural analysis module.
  |   |
  |   |-- tm       - sources of transport problem module.
  |   |
  |   |-- fm       - sources of fluid mechanics module.
  |   |
  |   |-- dss      - includes the sources for Direct Sparse Solver (DSS),
  |   |              contributed by R. Vondracek)
  |   |
  |   |-- main     - contains the sources of main() and implementation of some 
  |                  global functions for oofem, oofeg.
  |
  |-- tools   - sources for several utility programs.
  |
  |-- tests   - contains several tests, which are useful to verify
  |             the program functionality.
  |
  |-- bindings - holds sources to generate OOFEM bindings to Python programming language.

Pre-requisites

  • The oofem requires the CMake cross-platform build system and C++ compiler with STL support (Standard Template Library).

  • The oofem contains interface to IML++ library. It is the C++ templated library of modern iterative methods for solving both symmetric and non-symmetric linear systems of equations, written by Roldan Pozo. It can be downloaded from http://math.nist.gov/iml++/.

  • The graphical post-processor (oofeg) requires the ELIXIR and Ckit libraries by Petr Krysl (http://www.multires.caltech.edu/~pkrysl/), to be installed. They provide X-windows graphics support. The version of Elixir to be used with OOFEM is likely to be not compatible with the original version maintained by the Petr Krysl. The compatible Elixir version is available at oofem home page (http://ksm.fsv.cvut.cz/oofem/oofem.html). The Ckit library can be obtained at the same location.

  • Parallel support for distributed memory requires MPI library to be installed. If you do not have any, we recommend to use Open MPI. This is a freely available, high-performance, and portable implementation of MPI (http://www.open-mpi.org/).

  • For high performance linear solvers, OOFEM can use PETSc, SuperLU, MKL Pardiso or Pardiso-project.org solvers.

  • For high performance eigenvalue solvers, oofem uses SLEPc. The toolkit can be downloaded from SLEPc project home page (http://www.grycap.upv.es/slepc).

  • XML parser is supported through tinyXML2 library. The library is required for the CEMHYD3D model and can be downloaded from its git repository (https://github.com/leethomason/tinyxml2)

  • The reference manual can be generated automatically from the sources. You can use it to generate documentation of your classes, too. To do this, you have to install doxygen documentation system (http://sourceforge.net/projects/doxygen/) and the Graph visualization toolkit (http://www.research.att.com/sw/tools/graphviz/)

  • To build the element library, material library, and oofem input manuals from the sources the latex and latex2html packages are required.

  • The compiled Reference Manual itself is not included in release due to its size. It can be accessed online from oofem home page.

Installation

Quick instructions for UNIX:

  • unpack sources
  • create an out-of-tree build directory
   mkdir -p ~/build/debug
  • configure the target
   cd ~/build/debug; cmake PATH_TO_OOFEM_SOURCES

where PATH_TO_OOFEM_SOURCES is the path to OOFEM source directory, created in step 0 (~/oofem-2.2, for example).

  • compile OOFEM
  make

Running the tests

To run the tests, go to your build directory and run ctest

ctest

Additional instructions

Instead of cmake you can use ccmake which uses an ncurses interface, or cmake-gui for a GUI. Use the command make help for a list of all targets.

You can find detailed installation (including installation on Windows) instruction on OOFEM wiki (http://www.oofem.org/wiki/doku.php?id=installation)

To get support check out oofem wiki (www.oofem.org/wiki) and oofem forum (www.oofem.org/forum) as well.

Running oofem and oofeg

The oofem program prints out the available options when run without any option. To run a specific job, you can enter

oofem -f input_file_name

To run oofeg (graphic post-processor), you need job context file (created by oofem, for example using -context option). To run oofeg, enter

oofeg -f input_file_name

There are few useful oofeg key-bindings:

Fast viewing

  • B1 = window
  • Ctrl B1 = pan
  • Ctrl B2 = zoom
  • Shift B2 = fit all (only active drawing window will be affected)
  • Ctrl Shift B1 = rotate
  • B3 = done

Selection

  • B1 = select
  • Ctrl B1 = select window
  • Shift B1 = select nearest point (confirm by B1 or select next one by Shift B1)
  • B2 = accept
  • B3 = reject

Further information

Please consult oofem home page (http://www.oofem.org) for more documentation, manuals and new versions.

Authors

See the list of contributors who participated in this project.

Acknowledgments

http://www.oofem.org/doku.php?id=en:funding